A young British officer resigns his post when he learns of his regiment's plan to ship out to the Sudan for the conflict with the Mahdi. His friends and fiancée send him four white feathers as symbols of what they view as his cowardice. To redeem his honor, he disguises himself as an Arab and secretly saves their lives.
Heath Ledger
Harry Faversham
Wes Bentley
Jack Durrance
Kate Hudson
Ethne Eustace
Djimon Hounsou
Abou Fatma
Alex Jennings
Colonel Hamilton
Michael Sheen
William Trench
Lucy Gordon
Isabelle
James Cosmo
Col. Sutch
Angela Douglas
Aunt Mary
Daniel Caltagirone
Gustave
Mohamed Bouich
Sudanese Storyteller
Campbell Brown
Dervish Ansar
Andy Coumbe
Colonel Other Regiment
Karim Doukkali
Egyptian Orderly
Megan Hall
Millie
James Hillier
Drunken Corporal
Nick Holder
British Lion
Alexandra Kabi
Woman in Red Veil
Julio Lewis
Saadi
Craig McDonald
Wounded Captain
Lionel Mahop
Dervish Captain
Richard Manlove
British Corporal
Kris Marshall
Edward Castleton
Manar Mohamed
Youssef
Marouazi Mohammed
Dervish Sniper
Nider Mohamed
Mullah
Anna Diafe Ndiaye
Dinka Slavegirl
Medoune Ndiaye
Gentle Faced Porter
Deobia Oparei
Idris-Es-Saier
Mohamen Mehdi Ouazanni
Hassan
Charles Pemberton
Impressario
Rupert Penry-Jones
Tom Willoughby
Tim Pigott-Smith
General Feversham
Mohamed Quatib
Ibrahim
Laila Rouass
Maya
Hugh Ross
Regimental Priest
Thioumbe Samb
Dinka Slavegirl
Mark Tonderai
Egyptian Orderly
Alek Wek
Aquol
Alex Zorbas
Egyptian Orderly
Bruce Lawrence
British Soldier
Rhidian Bridge
British Soldier (uncredited)
Gary Bunn
British Soldier (uncredited)
Christian Coulson
Drummer Boy (uncredited)
James Embree
British Cavalry Officer (uncredited)
Natalie Hallam
High Class Lady (uncredited)
Hugo Hedley
British Troop (uncredited)
Serena Lorien
Crying Widow (uncredited)
Cassie Newby
Period Dancer (uncredited)
Benjamin Uttley
General Wolseley's Aide-de-Camp (uncredited)
Director
Shekhar Kapur
Novel
A.E.W. Mason
Screenplay
Michael Schiffer
Screenplay
Hossein Amini
May 21, 2019
6
***Brits fighting Sudanese rebels in 1884 with Heath Ledger, Wes Bentley and Kate Hudson***
Based on the novel by A.E.W. Mason, a greenhorn British regiment in 1884 is commissioned to Egyptian-ruled Sudan to fight Mahdi rebels. A young officer, Harry (Heath Ledger), unexpectedly resigns and is shamed as a coward by his three best friends (e.g. Wes Bentley) and fiancée (Kate Hudson). After the negative fallout he goes to Sudan undercover to hopefully redeem his honor.
"The Four Feathers" (2002) is similar to Victorian-Brits-fighting-in-Africa flicks like “Zulu” (1964) and “Khartoum” (1966), but I prefer this one as it’s just more compelling and is a quality modern production (I’ve never seen the old-fashioned 1939 version).
There are a lot of gems to mine here, like Harry’s individualism in the face of great social pressure to conform. His reasoning is simple: He never wanted to be a soldier and only took the commission to please his gung-ho militarist father. Besides, how is what’s happening in the Sudanese desert relevant to him and the British in the first place? Why should he risk dying or losing a limb for this dubious purpose? One of the best parts is Harry’s growing friendship with Sudanian Abou Fatma (Djimon Hounsou).
Unfortunately, the movie’s hampered by two problems: The mechanics of the plot sometimes drive the characters and it doesn’t feel natural or real. For instance, when Harry easily joins the Mahdi rebels and is later seen riding toward the British regiment it’s serious “Yeah, right” territory. Another problem is that, from the main battle forward the movie doesn’t allow itself to breath and seems like it’s in a rush, like it doesn’t have the confidence to slow down and tell the story because it’s worried about fitting into a 2-hour timeframe and pleasing those with ADHD.
If you can get past those two hitches, this is a worthy historical adventure flick.
The film runs 2 hours, 12 minutes and was shot in England and Morocco.
GRADE: C+/B-
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$35,000,000.00
Revenue:
$29,882,645.00