Khartoum

Khartoum                                            5 stars

This is the last movie I saw in the theater before the Coronavirus shut down all the movie theaters in the state. Khartoum is the 1966 film that tells of the 1884 conflict in Sudan that occurred between the British led Egyptians and Sudanese against a Muslim army led by Muhammad Ahmad.  At the time Egypt was part of the British Empire and Ahmad was determined to take Egypt and the entire Arab world away from the Western powers and rule it himself.  I remember hearing the story of General Gordon and his doomed quest to keep the Egyptians and Sudanese from falling victim to the madman at the city of Khartoum on the Nile River.  In a purely political move the British Prime Minister, Gladstone knew he could not defend the city so he sent General Gordon, a hero in the eyes of the Sudanese, to the city to effect an evacuation of the city’s population, so that if he failed the blame would not fall on the British government.  The film brings these events to the big screen telling it as an epic tale aided with scenes involving hundreds of extras and a wide colorful screen.  The film stars the legendary Charlton Heston as General Gordon and Laurence Olivier as the evil and very tanned Ahmed.  These stars along with supporting cast of Richard Johnson and Ralph Richardson bring some of the most dramatic dialogue I’ve seen of the era.  One can compare it to the truly epic Lawrence of Arabia to give you an idea.  There is action too involving some well produced armed conflict in the desert, but the main attraction is the story itself.  It’s mainly about a man’s quest to do the right thing in the face of unbeatable odds.  I am really glad I finally got the chance to see it.  I don’t know when I will get the chance to go to the theaters again, unfortunately.