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Casablanca Express Poster

Casablanca Express

... British S.I.S. and U.S. Marines rescue Winston Churchill from Nazi storm troopers in the Moroccan Desert... Stop.
1989 | 90m | English

(645 votes)

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Popularity: 0.8 (history)

Details

It is 1942 and the conflict between the U.S. and Germany is getting heated, U.S. Intelligence soon discovers that the Natzis are planning to capture Winston Churchill. In order to protect him they send commando Al Cooper to guard Churchill who is going by train to Casablanca where he will meet with Roosevelt and Stalin.
Release Date: Dec 22, 1989
Director: Sergio Martino
Writer: Sergio Martino, Roberto Leoni, Ernesto Gastaldi
Genres: Action, Drama, War
Keywords
Production Companies Dania Film, National Cinematografica, Globe Films, Dania Cinematografica, Surf Film
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Aug 03, 2024 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Jason Connery Alan Cooper
Francesco Quinn Captain Franchetti
Donald Pleasence Colonel Bats
Glenn Ford Major Gen. Williams
Luisa Maneri Nanny
Jinny Steffan Lt. Lorna Fisher
Jean Sorel Major Valmore
Manfred Lehmann Otto Von Tiblis
Horst Schön Priest
David Brandon Jason Lloyd
Marina Viro Olga
Giulia Urso Liz
Giovanni Tamberi Julian
Augusto Poderosi Barry
John Evans Winston Churchill
Phillip Vye Churchill's Double
Todd Carter Capt. Jerry Frazer
Claire Selinger Myriam
Omar Chanbout Muezzim
J.R.M. Chapman Colonel Del Croix
Jean-Pierre Chevallier Train Passenger
Stella Vizzazi Nun #1
Sabah Chahid Nun #2
Zakaria El Ahmadi Arab Medina
Khadiya Hadda Arab Girl
Khalid Nekmouche Train Radio Operator
Bouchaid Ben Chefii Stationmaster
Dennis U.S. Marine Officer
Michael Vargas Doctor
Robert Chavagnac American Officer
Guillaume De Casenove German Radio Operator
Malayrand J. Pierre Station Worker #1
Christian Chamalaud Station Worker #2
Name Job
Sergio Martino Director, Screenplay
Roberto Leoni Screenplay, Story
Alberto Dell'Acqua Stunts
Giancarlo Ferrando Director of Photography
Arnaldo Dell'Acqua Stunts
Umberto De Luca Stunts
Ernesto Gastaldi Screenplay
Luigi Ceccarelli Original Music Composer
Eugenio Alabiso Editor
Lorenzo Constantini Assistant Editor
Silvana Di Legge Assistant Editor
Claudio Cinini Art Direction
Mario Carlini Costume Design
Soumeya Arahmani Assistant Makeup Artist
Massimo Camiletti Makeup Artist
Massimo Parasmo Hairstylist
Tham Hajjaj Production Manager
Khalid Nekmouche Second Assistant Director
Carlo U. Quinterio Assistant Director
Roberto Granieri Props
Antonio Murer Props
Nick Alexander ADR Editor
Romano Checcacci Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Vittorio Melloni Sound Mixer
Teresa Negozio Dialogue Editor
Fong Roma Sound Recordist
Federico Savina Sound Supervisor
Paolo Ricci Special Effects
Roberto Ricci Special Effects Technician
Elio Terribili Special Effects Technician
Hamid Ousfour Special Effects Technician
Makrani Azziz Grip
Bruno Cascio Camera Operator
Giorgio Garibaldi Schwarze Still Photographer
Matt Giordano Key Grip
Daniele Massaccesi Assistant Camera
Armando Moreschini Gaffer
Ahmed Satarate Electrician
Francesco Crivellini Wardrobe Assistant
Amika Kouasma Seamstress
Carla Latini Seamstress
Todd Carter Dialogue Coach
Marisa Calia Script Supervisor
Name Title
Pietro Innocenzi Producer
Umberto Innocenzi Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 6 14 2
2024 5 8 11 4
2024 6 5 13 1
2024 7 7 14 3
2024 8 5 10 2
2024 9 6 11 2
2024 10 6 13 2
2024 11 4 7 1
2024 12 2 3 1
2025 1 3 11 1
2025 2 2 4 1
2025 3 1 2 1
2025 4 1 1 1
2025 5 1 1 1
2025 6 1 1 1
2025 7 0 0 0
2025 8 0 1 0

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Reviews

CyrusPK
5.0

Star power is perhaps less important in movies today than it was in decades past. Films are more often sold on a concept rather than a name and it is far less common for a star to have the ability to ‘open’ a film on their name power alone. The casting for Casablanca Express, a World War II set ta ... le shot in Morocco and Italy demonstrates two types of name casting of the period. The first is the use of actors who had substantial careers but were perhaps past the point of being headliners themselves anymore. Glenn Ford at the age of 73 and Donald Pleasance at 70 are given substantial supporting roles that rely on their presence and the ability for their names to be used in print and related advertising. Ford had given very few acting performances in the previous decade, whilst Pleasance had been hugely busy in a large range of low budget features. The older audience would be familiar with the actors’ work and be happy perhaps to see them again in a feature. The second form of name recognition used is to cast the offspring of known actors, in this case the sons of Sean Connery and Anthony Quinn, relying perhaps on curiosity value from the audience about whether they would be equivalent level stars to their parents. In this case neither has a great deal of charisma but their evident willingness to engage in complex stunt work un-doubled for the most part is impressive. The complex action sequences atop and around trains go a long way to adding to the conviction of the film. The plot is fairly perfunctory though with a non-cheat twist ending and the remote locations through which the train of the title travels are fairly evocative. Dialogue is at time unintentionally hilarious and extensive post-production dubbing appears to have occurred. I enjoyed my first viewing of Casablanca Express but did not feel it had sufficient depth or other items of interest that would support a repeat viewing.

Jun 23, 2021