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The Long Duel

The blazing passions of a land…its proud warriors…its exotic women…bursting aflame in revolt!
1967 | 115m | English

(783 votes)

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Popularity: 2 (history)

Details

An idealistic colonial police officer is sent to capture a rebel leader who threatens the stability of the Raj's north-west frontier. Despite his official colonial capacity, the policeman is impressed by the ingenuity and integrity of his enemy and is determined to arrest him alive rather than bring him in dead as his superiors might wish.
Release Date: Jul 27, 1967
Director: Ken Annakin
Writer: Peter Yeldham, Ernest Borneman
Genres: Adventure, Action, Drama
Keywords
Production Companies Paramount Pictures, Pinewood Studios
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Aug 03, 2024
Entered: Apr 20, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Yul Brynner Sultan
Trevor Howard Freddie Young
Charlotte Rampling Jane Stafford
Harry Andrews Miles Stafford
Andrew Keir Gungaram
Virginia North Champa
Laurence Naismith McDougal
Maurice Denham Governor
Imogen Hassall Tara
Paul Hardwick Jamadar
Antoñito Ruiz Munnu
David Sumner Gyan Singh
Rafiq Anwar Pahelwan
George Pastell Ram Chand
Shivendra Sinha Abdul
Kurt Christian Babu
Dino Shafeek Akbar
Terry Yorke Moti
Patrick Newell Colonel
Jeremy Lloyd Crabbe
Terence Alexander Major
Marianne Stone Major's Wife
Aldo Sambrell Prem
Ben Tatar Sandhu
Zohra Sehgal Devi
Name Job
Ken Annakin Director
Jack Hildyard Director of Photography
Peter Yeldham Screenplay
John Scott Original Music Composer
John Furniss Costume Design
Trevor Crole-Rees Makeup Artist
Dudley Messenger Sound Recordist
Ernest Borneman Adaptation
Bert Bates Editor
Rebecca Breed Wardrobe Supervisor
Alex Vetchinsky Art Direction
Jean Bear Hairdresser
Stephanie Kaye Hairdresser
Name Title
Ken Annakin Producer
F. Sherwin Green Associate Producer
Aida Young Associate Producer
Vivian Cox Co-Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 4 7 2
2024 5 6 10 2
2024 6 4 10 1
2024 7 6 16 2
2024 8 4 7 2
2024 9 4 7 1
2024 10 4 6 1
2024 11 2 5 1
2024 12 2 4 1
2025 1 3 6 2
2025 2 3 4 1
2025 3 2 4 1
2025 4 1 1 1
2025 5 1 1 1
2025 6 1 1 1
2025 7 0 0 0
2025 8 1 2 0
2025 9 1 2 0
2025 10 1 3 1

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Reviews

John Chard
4.0

Just…long… Run of the mill historical adventure yarn set on India’s North-West Frontier during the British Raj. Yul Brynner plays rebel tribesman Sultan who is pursued by Brit copper Freddy Young (Trevor Howard), who while chasing down the enigmatic rebel comes to respect him and is unwilling to ... execute the justice requested by his superiors. The intent to make an historical epic of some worth, that is based on facts, is honourable. It looks nice with an authentic feel to the surroundings of the story, if only it wasn’t so laboured, so full of inane posturing and poorly scripted characters, then it might just about crawl its way to being just above average. It rarely excites, director Ken Annakin unable to inject life into the more perkier aspects of plotting, and a cast that also features Harry Andrews, Charlotte Rampling, Virginia North and Andrew Keir, aren’t tasked with much more than reading their lines efficiently. All in all, not very convincing away form the location photography and costuming. 4/10

May 16, 2024
Geronimo1967
6.0

"Sultan" (Yul Brynner) leads his largely peaceable tribe as the days of the Raj increasingly impose themselves on their day-to-day living. Imprisoned after a raid, they manage to break out of the fort but one of their guards is killed, This serves to galvanise the Governor (Maurice Denham) to appoin ... t a solider tasked with apprehending this man before his disorder spreads. To that end he engages the rather unpopular but effective "Capt. Young" (Trevor Howard). What now ensues are a series of cat-and-mouse escapades as each man vies for the upper hand. The story of a principled man fighting for freedom against the oppressor is quite effective and both Brynner and Howard are on reasonable form as the two characters begin to respect each other, but the rest of the cast - especially the sterile Harry Andrews as "Stafford" and the even more curiously cast Andrew Keir as the turban-clad "Gungaram" - rather let the thing down. The (Spanish) location photography adds richness to the story and there is enough action to help us overlook a rather implausible romance between Howard and "Jane" (Charlotte Rampling) and the rather wordy dialogue that dogs this otherwise adequate costume drama. It ends in rather an underwhelming, if optimistic, fashion but I like the genre and this is perfectly watchable - just a bit long and not very memorable.

Nov 11, 2022