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The Vikings

Mightiest Of Men... Mightiest Of Spectacles... Mightiest Of Motion Pictures!
1958 | 115m | English

(16867 votes)

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Popularity: 2 (history)

Details

Einar, brutal son of the viking Ragnar and future heir to his throne, tangles with clever slave Eric, for the hand of a beautiful English maiden.
Release Date: Jun 11, 1958
Director: Richard Fleischer
Writer: Calder Willingham, Edison Marshall, Dale Wasserman
Genres: Adventure, Action, History
Keywords based on novel or book, norway, scandinavia, vikings (norsemen), epic, unknown father, slave, swashbuckler, one eyed man, sailing ship, one armed man, technicolor, british monarchy, northumberland, wolves, 9th century, falconry, half-brothers, abducted fiancée
Production Companies United Artists, Curtleigh Productions, Brynaprod S.A.
Box Office Revenue: $20,311
Budget: $5,000,000
Updates Updated: Aug 09, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Kirk Douglas Einar
Tony Curtis Eric
Ernest Borgnine Ragnar
Janet Leigh Morgana
James Donald Lord Egbert
Alexander Knox Father Godwin
Maxine Audley Enid
Frank Thring Aella
Eileen Way Kitala
Edric Connor Sandpiper
Dandy Nichols Bridget
Per Buckhøj Bjorn
Almut Berg Pigtails (uncredited)
Peter Capell Minor Role (uncredited)
Bill Cummings Viking Warrior (uncredited)
Kelly Curtis Young Girl (uncredited)
Peter Douglas Young Boy (uncredited)
Georges Guéret Viking Warrior (uncredited)
Rico López Viking Warrior (uncredited)
Marco Perrin Extra (uncredited)
Paul Préboist Extra (uncredited)
Orson Welles Narrator (voice) (uncredited)
Name Job
Calder Willingham Screenplay
Edison Marshall Novel
Elmo Williams Second Unit Director, Supervising Editor
Neville Smallwood Makeup Artist
Dale Wasserman Adaptation
Bill Kirby Production Manager
Franco Ferrara Conductor
John O'Gorman Makeup Artist
Vasco Reggiani Hairdresser
Julien Derode Production Manager
Walter Wottitz Second Unit Director of Photography
Gabriella Reggiani Hairdresser
André Smagghe Assistant Director
Joseph de Bretagne Sound
Richard Fleischer Director
Jack Cardiff Director of Photography
Harper Goff Production Design, Producer's Assistant
Mario Nascimbene Original Music Composer, Music Arranger
Jacques Planté Production Manager
John Sullivan Stunt Double
Jack Hirshberg Unit Publicist
Lutz Hengst Production Manager
Peter Berling Sound Assistant, Translator
Gordon K. McCallum Sound Mixer
Marc Hyams Clapper Loader
Jack Cooper Stunts
Eddie Powell Stunts
James Devis Focus Puller
David Sharpe Stunt Double
Georges Guéret Stunts
Christian Ferry Location Manager
Claude Carliez Fight Choreographer
Gerard Schurmann Orchestrator
Lucie Lichtig Continuity
Bill Cummings Stunts
George Pink Camera Technician
Eddie Fowlie Property Master
Henri Guégan Stunts
Ken Buckle Stunts
Name Title
Jerry Bresler Producer
Janet Leigh Executive Producer
Lee Katz Associate Producer
Tony Curtis Executive Producer
Kirk Douglas Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 24 40 17
2024 5 32 46 17
2024 6 27 60 14
2024 7 22 43 13
2024 8 20 43 12
2024 9 12 19 8
2024 10 17 34 10
2024 11 14 24 7
2024 12 15 27 8
2025 1 17 30 11
2025 2 11 15 3
2025 3 4 11 1
2025 4 2 4 1
2025 5 2 5 1
2025 6 2 4 1
2025 7 2 3 1
2025 8 2 3 1
2025 9 2 4 2
2025 10 2 3 2

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 9 921 956
Year Month High Avg
2025 6 346 530

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Reviews

John Chard
8.0

Rugged pillaging in the offering. Unknown to both men, warrior Einar and disgraced slave Eric, are in fact half-brothers. As the kingdom of Northumbria becomes ripe for the taking, both men, with a fancy for Princess Morganna, are heading for the revelation right in amongst their bitter rivalry. ... Kirk Douglas (Einar) and Tony Curtis (Eric) would both re-team for Spartacus two years after this sword and sandal swasher had hit the screens in 1958. That Spartacus is considerably a better film all told is a given, but The Vikings stands up well as an entertaining precursor to that Thracien slave classic. Based on the novel of the same name written by Edison Marshall, The Vikings makes up for what it lacks in authenticity with sheer gusto enhanced sword swishing adventure. These Vikings may not totally convince as mead swigging, women chasing, pillagers of England, yet running along side Mario Nascimbene's terrific score and Jack Cardiff's excellent photography (the Norway location scenes are breath taking), it doesn't take much for the discerning genre fan to get swept away in it all. Douglas and Curtis give it a good blast, while Janet Leigh as Morganna perks her breasts out and actually becomes believable as a lady lusted after by two rough and ready ruffians. However, The Vikings doesn't sit up in the top echelons of swords and sandals pictures, something which irked both Douglas and director Richard Fleischer and caused them to hold each other responsible during the following years. With bad weather, injuries to actors and even a strike by Norwegian oarsmen to contend with, it was a far from easy shoot. Casting those issues aside, one tends to think that Douglas' ire was warranted, for Fleischer was clearly the wrong choice for the piece. He chooses to go for a more genial, almost comic book approach, which sadly loses what earthy grit and grime feel the film needed once Orson Welles' splendid opening narration had set things up for a bodice ripping sword slashing epic. The director isn't found lacking with his action sequences though. With the likes of Fantastic Voyage, 20000 Leagues Under The Sea & 10 Rillington Place on his CV, he clearly was a director of worth. Here he impresses with his construction of the kinetic sword fights, while the attack on Nothumberland Castle (really it's Brittany, France, with Cardiff's camera working the oracle) is brilliantly staged and pumps the pulse rate considerably. Pic is often violent and features some genre moments never to be forgotten (Einar losing his eye, Ragnar and the Wolf Pit, The Running the Oars tradition), while it's also pleasing to find a director overseeing some attentive research that opens up the craftsman side of the Viking hoards. So all in all it's a fine and entertaining genre picture that's arguably more fun than dramatic gold, a film that was a fave of many who got lost in its charms all those years ago. The flaws and minor frustrations are obvious when one revisits with older and wiser eyes, but regardless one should crack open the mead and enjoy the sheer grizzled guts of it all. 8/10

May 16, 2024
Geronimo1967
7.0

This is one of these films that I can watch time and time again - it is Hollywood at it's best. Historical shmorical, that doesn't matter - it is a quickly paced action adventure with a strong cast delivering an enjoyable to watch drama. It all starts when some marauding Vikings deprive the English ... of their King. That leaves their kingdom in the hands of the malevolent King "Aella" (Frank Thring) who cottons on quite quickly that he has traitor in his midst - and that'd be "Egbert" (James Donald) who manages to flee to King "Ragnar" (Ernest Borgnine) and his handsome son "Einar" (Kirk Douglas) for who he promises to draw maps facilitating further raids on the terrified English. It is whilst showing off his hawking skills to their new guest that Douglas encounters the slave "Eric" (Tony Curtis) and after a tussle involving who's got the best bird - he becomes "one-Einar" and but for a timely intervention from Odin, that could have been the end for the young slave... Meantime, the maps have provided their first harvest - the Princess "Morgana" (Janet Leigh) who is betrothed to "Aella" and so is a valuable hostage. Curtis manages to escape with the young woman and her feisty handmaiden "Bridget" (Dandy Nichols) only to be pursued through the treacherous fog by the Norsemen... It's got just about everything. A great cast with plenty going on, a soupçon of lively romance, plenty of rumbustious activity - some poor girl with her head in a wheel having axes lobbed at her head, oh - and don't wear your bodice too tight. The ending is a bit daft, but there is chemistry a-plenty between the stars, Borgnine is having great fun and if you like your movies full to the brim of well photographed escapades with one of the best castle sieges I've seen, then this is for you... It's not cerebral, the writing won't win any prizes - it is just entertaining.

Jun 14, 2024