Watching this movie first time in 2023 it gives me wonderful feeling of Africa and Charton Heston the legend Actor . I was a child when i saw TEN Commandments with my Father .
This reminds me about how I am very glad I went on a wonderful safari trip in Tanzania in July of 2019, before the next year in 2020, when the coronavirus pandemic would have made such a trip impossible!
I see father and son chasing the same woman,Heston quite the ladies man,but didnt quite hit it off with the charm.He actually looked a bit tired and boring.Wonderful looking at the african savanna,with its diversity of animal life and also the beautiful indigenous people of Kenya.Enjoyed the movie though,with the gorgeous Maud Adams spicing up things.❤
I spent the first 12 years of my life in Zambia and Zimbabwe. In Zim Daddy taught in a Catholic mission school. The campus was 7x17 km. We teachers' kids had the time of our lives roaming, exploring. Cave and rock paintings abounded as did Spitting Cobras and Black Mambas. But the local dogs accompanied us. We had found four puppies apparently abandoned so we placed two in our home and two at our friend's house across the street. Those four dogs grew to become our guardians. No child was ever unprotected as long as those dogs were around. There was one occasion when a lion had wandered off its range and was loose in the bush. The school operated a car pick-up for all the teachers who didn't own cars. They strung barbed wire across our fences. I hated that because I would see the dogs scream when trying to creep under the wire and getting impaled on the barbs. We had brought them up since their mother had disappeared so they were family. In our innocence we used antiseptic cream on their wounds, but we got thrashed for stealing the cream and we never told that it was for the dogs. That would have resulted in another worse thrashing. But our parents allowed us to bring the dogs into the corridor at night. Finally that lion was neutralised. I don't remember how but we could spread our deck chairs out on our spraggly lawns - mostly soil and brown grass. One of our Indian staff had gone on vacation to India and he returned with kites and maanja (razor string). So he taught those of us who could learn (not i. I was and remain an uncoordinated clumsy oaf) to fly and to fight kites, ergo the maanja. One day we brought down a crow, the maanja had ripped through her wing root. We carried her to the doctor who tried his best. He was a Swiss priest who had studied medicine in his effort to make himself useful to his mission. Our crow shared our homes and fluttered as best she could on her good wing. The African children could never understand our empathy with our crow and that lead to a few fights with them. We lost heavily because we were six Indians versus fifty or more Africans. And make no mistake, Africans are the most racist of races and they are the least intelligent of all the races I have encountered. Indians join Grade 1 at age 4 whereas Zambians do so at age 7. And I was obviously the brightest pupil so the Africans bullied me daily. Most people confess to loving school whereas i hated and feared it thanks to those bully Africans. And that brings me to a topic that raises hackles. A Pakistani teacher turned up with his three daughters. All little girls, so we tried to make friends, but they called us haraam. We didn't know what that meant so we jeered them. Things came to a head when one morning the mother dog began screaming. Those Pakistani girls were throwing stones at the mother and her puppies while they were feeding. The Muslim parents were standing by, encouraging the horrendous depravity of their children. We responded by flinging stones back at the girls. They ran home and the Muslim father complained to the Swiss Headmaster of the school. He, in true Christian humility, met every family at their homes to understand the situation. We boys were adamant that those strange non-Christian girls were evil incarnate for who stones puppies? And he, on his frequent visits to the teachers' homes had a very good understanding of the community. Suffice to say that Muslim family was treated like outcasts; their brutish Muslim girls were always made fun of, and eliminated from all our children's play. The African, Indian and European teachers avoided the family, meaning they were never invited to parties or to the term-end games of RISK and MONOPOLY. That was my first encounter with Muslims and those impressions have proven true about that crass, belicose, uncultured, ruffian religion. Our flights back home, Livingstone to Hyderabad, were marked on the luggage, Liv-Lusaka-Nairobi-Bombay. Lusaka-Nairobi flights in the 1970's were by 4-engined propeller airliners (and after by Boeing 707's,). I remember looking through my window to watch those massive propellers start up. Rolls Royce.
Great movie. Love Charlton Heston, alway a great actor, always doing his best with any role he played, one of my favorite actors of all time….Ben-Hur, the Ten Commandments and El CID were my favorites with him in it …..👍👍👍👍👍👍👍❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
Charlton Heston was a great actor in other movies too such as the 'Ten Commandments' as Moses and in the western 'The Big Country' with Gregory Peck and Jeane Simons as foreman of a big cattle Ranch
I was. Also. Born in Nairobi. Kenya. In 1957. Looking for my family. Who. Are missing from that time frame. My late father's cousins. Their surname. Was. Russell. He worked. At the Royal Air Force. In Nairobi. Don't seem to trace them. Probably. Due to sensitive. Nature of Mr Russell work. Had a son Clive Russell. Have no way to trace them. Since. 1971. They are in England. Somewhere. I am in South. Africa
Man, I would love to visit and spend time on a safari in a place like this. No big game hunting either. Just exploration, experience, and observation. A tourist in the wild. To experience the going down of the sun in Africa would be quite a thrill like when.I stood before the pyramids on the Giza plateau..
@@DonaldPBorchersOG Por favor. La película tiene grandes escenarios, los mejores actores, pero ... 😊 soy mal aprendiz de inglés, más películas como ésta pero con subtítulos 😊, muchas gracias.
A movie in the current world that does not go down well. Our elephants and Rhino are killed by the thousands in Southern Africa, driven by the Asian cartels. Our loins are canned to give joy to the Americans and other so called international hunters, that have no balls to tackle these animals bare handed.
⚔️I good contrast -high & dry-movie while retired, and the rains here are relentless. It’s odd that Rich is hunting poachers, without a native African assistant. Why has Rich not set up his truck, to accommodate him for sleeping? The older movies liked to match up, much older men with girl in her late teens or early 20’s. So when I became older, I just unknowingly followed suite. But, there’s a age threshold, occurring when those years, finally catch up, and breaks a relationship.🛡️
If anyone googles Africa they will have an interesting read. Two things for me 1) an abundance of underground spring wells 2) The USA,China have embassies right next to each other.
i do have to say, a timeless story. a woman between a father and a son. WAnt a problem? Open an algebra book. Want a REAL problem? Insert woman in situation. Didn't used to be this way. Shouldn't be this way. IT IS this way now.
A good solid film. Not one of Heston's best performances though. (perhaps bad writing) Sadly, he film quality is disapointing. Look at "Hatari" shot 22 years earlier, the film quality is like night and day. Again many thanks to Donald P. Borchers for posting.
@@stubromac2711 Moses was a Hebrew who married an Ethiopian woman. Jethro the Ethiopian priest of Midian was the priest Moses kissed and did obesience to, and Moses did whatever Jethro said. Jethro is the priest who Moses prayed would be eyes for them in the wilderness, while God was leading them with a pillar of fire by night and a pillar of smoke by day.
Poachers need to be hunted down the way they hunt down the wildlife. Governments need to empower the rangers to do their jobs p[properly and none of this nonsense of arresting them and bringing them to justice. The only justice they deserve is the same end they had planned for the wildlife.
Turned this off at the "action" scene with Dad and son attempting to murder their poacher friend. Too stupidly illogically unreal. They didn't need to capture the guy, just to denounce him to the authorities. There was no point in him running away, less in him making a stand and shooting at them. In real life, they might have chased him to talk him into giving himself up. They wouldn't have ignored his entreaty to "be reasonable" and talk. Just "action" to fulfill the need for cinematic expectations. Was a bit interesting for the personal storyline, but then this action element turned the heroes into cold blooded murderers...
Scenery effective Dialogue not the best silly Family feud better to have Done a documentary About the poaching problem Narrated by heston! With his own family Accompanying him He had a stable marriage! Why do dramas!
You are right but people are so stupid you have to hide a good message in a silly story to get them to pay attention. Surprisingly "aware" for 1984, Heston saying ivory is illegal and reminding her elephants have to die to get it
I've been to Kenya, Africa on Safari & this movie "Nairobi Affair" brought back Wonderful Memories!!!🌞
Glad to hear that. Thanks for the visit!
FIRST time I saw this excellent movie. Thank you for showing us this movie. GOD BLESS YOU
Glad you enjoyed it. Welcome.
A great movie. A good love story too. Great cast, very well done.
Welcome.
Watching this movie first time in 2023 it gives me wonderful feeling of Africa and Charton Heston the legend Actor . I was a child when i saw TEN Commandments with my Father .
Welcome. Thanks for the visit!
reading your comment, I conclude that no one gives a shit how you feel
111a❤@@DonaldPBorchersOG
I ❤'d this Go-Oldie! I have seen Every Charlton Heston's Movies, many Times over! Thank's for the Nostalgia! 😊✌❤🤗🙏👍😎😉
Glad you enjoyed it! Classic.
Thanks Donald, I love Charlton Heston movies.
Welcome.
THSI MOVIE IS A GEM! SO MANY FAMOUS AND TALENTED PEOPLE!
How do we get back to this!
Welcome.
We cannot, the great actors are dead
Decided to binge Charlton Heston Films😊❤
Enjoy! Thanks for the visit!
Charlton Heston is one of our best Americans and a great actor. I have already seen this movie. Everything Charlton Heston did was the best.
Roger that. Welcome.
Great movie, excellent cast and good story line with awesome scenery of Africa!!!!
Welcome.
Charlton Heston is the best character actor I ever saw. Clear up to “True Lies” he commanded whatever scene he was in.
Well said. Thanks for the visit!
……his height of 6’ 4”, & very broad shoulders’ certainly made sure of that!
It was even better to see, & meet him in ‘real’ life! Wonderful!
This reminds me about how I am very glad I went on a wonderful safari trip in Tanzania in July of 2019, before the next year in 2020, when the coronavirus pandemic would have made such a trip impossible!
Plandémie...
Good memories. Thanks for the visit!
I see father and son chasing the same woman,Heston quite the ladies man,but didnt quite hit it off with the charm.He actually looked a bit tired and boring.Wonderful looking at the african savanna,with its diversity of animal life and also the beautiful indigenous people of Kenya.Enjoyed the movie though,with the gorgeous Maud Adams spicing up things.❤
Roger that. Thanks for the visit!
I just loved the movie, everything is perfect. Thank you.
Welcome.
A different love triangle but a great story line with an emotional ending. A different genre for Charlton Heston!
I spent the first 12 years of my life in Zambia and Zimbabwe. In Zim Daddy taught in a Catholic mission school. The campus was 7x17 km. We teachers' kids had the time of our lives roaming, exploring. Cave and rock paintings abounded as did Spitting Cobras and Black Mambas. But the local dogs accompanied us.
We had found four puppies apparently abandoned so we placed two in our home and two at our friend's house across the street. Those four dogs grew to become our guardians. No child was ever unprotected as long as those dogs were around.
There was one occasion when a lion had wandered off its range and was loose in the bush. The school operated a car pick-up for all the teachers who didn't own cars. They strung barbed wire across our fences. I hated that because I would see the dogs scream when trying to creep under the wire and getting impaled on the barbs. We had brought them up since their mother had disappeared so they were family. In our innocence we used antiseptic cream on their wounds, but we got thrashed for stealing the cream and we never told that it was for the dogs. That would have resulted in another worse thrashing. But our parents allowed us to bring the dogs into the corridor at night. Finally that lion was neutralised. I don't remember how but we could spread our deck chairs out on our spraggly lawns - mostly soil and brown grass.
One of our Indian staff had gone on vacation to India and he returned with kites and maanja (razor string). So he taught those of us who could learn (not i. I was and remain an uncoordinated clumsy oaf) to fly and to fight kites, ergo the maanja. One day we brought down a crow, the maanja had ripped through her wing root. We carried her to the doctor who tried his best. He was a Swiss priest who had studied medicine in his effort to make himself useful to his mission. Our crow shared our homes and fluttered as best she could on her good wing. The African children could never understand our empathy with our crow and that lead to a few fights with them. We lost heavily because we were six Indians versus fifty or more Africans. And make no mistake, Africans are the most racist of races and they are the least intelligent of all the races I have encountered. Indians join Grade 1 at age 4 whereas Zambians do so at age 7. And I was obviously the brightest pupil so the Africans bullied me daily. Most people confess to loving school whereas i hated and feared it thanks to those bully Africans.
And that brings me to a topic that raises hackles. A Pakistani teacher turned up with his three daughters. All little girls, so we tried to make friends, but they called us haraam. We didn't know what that meant so we jeered them. Things came to a head when one morning the mother dog began screaming. Those Pakistani girls were throwing stones at the mother and her puppies while they were feeding. The Muslim parents were standing by, encouraging the horrendous depravity of their children. We responded by flinging stones back at the girls. They ran home and the Muslim father complained to the Swiss Headmaster of the school. He, in true Christian humility, met every family at their homes to understand the situation. We boys were adamant that those strange non-Christian girls were evil incarnate for who stones puppies? And he, on his frequent visits to the teachers' homes had a very good understanding of the community. Suffice to say that Muslim family was treated like outcasts; their brutish Muslim girls were always made fun of, and eliminated from all our children's play. The African, Indian and European teachers avoided the family, meaning they were never invited to parties or to the term-end games of RISK and MONOPOLY. That was my first encounter with Muslims and those impressions have proven true about that crass, belicose, uncultured, ruffian religion.
Our flights back home, Livingstone to Hyderabad, were marked on the luggage, Liv-Lusaka-Nairobi-Bombay. Lusaka-Nairobi flights in the 1970's were by 4-engined propeller airliners (and after by Boeing 707's,). I remember looking through my window to watch those massive propellers start up. Rolls Royce.
Wow. What a remembrance. Thanks for sharing.
You sound prejudiced, I have different memories of indian „behavior“when I lived in Tanzania.
@@f.drachenfels4503 I agree. It is wrong to judge the people of entire nations homogeneously.
😮you should write a Book...I'm not joking..
It's a beautiful movie to watch. Thank you.
Glad you enjoyed it. Welcome.
splendid!!! thanks for sharing!
Welcome.
Charlton Heston was a Great Actor and person!
Welcome.
Great movie. Love Charlton Heston, alway a great actor, always doing his best with any role he played, one of my favorite actors of all time….Ben-Hur, the Ten Commandments and El CID were my favorites with him in it …..👍👍👍👍👍👍👍❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
Roger that. Welcome.
Unbeatable African landscapes bringing back so many memories of life growing up in East Africa. Not a great script.
Roger that. Thanks for the visit!
Great movie. Thank you
Welcome.
Great movie!! One of those movies you should not miss!!
Welcome.
Thanks also for the serious presentation.
Welcome.
ALWAYS happy to see charlton the king of ben hur and the ten commandmants
Welcome.
Charlton Heston was a great actor in other movies too such as the 'Ten Commandments' as Moses and in the western 'The Big Country' with Gregory Peck and Jeane Simons as foreman of a big cattle Ranch
Roger that. Welcome.
Been on safari here stunning scenery when there were lots of wildlife to see
Thanks for sharing.
Thanks for this🇨🇦✌️
Welcome.
Excellent film.. ! Charlton Heston at best.. Thanks. Dave
Welcome, Dave.
Any movie made with Kenya in the background would be interesting.African savanna and it's fauna will always keep you spellbound
Welcome.
Very Good Film...Thank You.
Welcome.
never heard of this movie....great cast.
Wonderful movie!
Glad you like it. Welcome.
Wonderful movie. First time seeing it.
Nice to see good old Nairobi City Kenya.
Welcome.
I was. Also. Born in Nairobi. Kenya. In 1957. Looking for my family. Who. Are missing from that time frame. My late father's cousins. Their surname. Was. Russell. He worked. At the Royal Air Force. In Nairobi. Don't seem to trace them. Probably. Due to sensitive. Nature of Mr Russell work. Had a son Clive Russell. Have no way to trace them. Since. 1971. They are in England. Somewhere. I am in South. Africa
I liked charton heston he's great actor remember the 10 commandments. Thank you!
Welcome.
Watching this type of movie get me a feeling of something beautiful hearts crying
Man, I would love to visit and spend time on a safari in a place like this. No big game hunting either. Just exploration, experience, and observation. A tourist in the wild. To experience the going down of the sun in Africa would be quite a thrill like when.I stood before the pyramids on the Giza plateau..
It would be a dream come true.
A life is the summon of all our decisions; when our decisions are stupid the end is usually sad.
Right on. Thanks for the visit!
My Baba's most liked actor Charles Heston 🎉
Thanks for the visit!
Excelente película sobre África, soy Mexicano podrían poner subtitulos en español gracias
Welcome. I'm semi-retired and can barely find these movies. But, if you send me subtitled movies, I will post them.
@@DonaldPBorchersOG Por favor. La película tiene grandes escenarios, los mejores actores, pero ... 😊 soy mal aprendiz de inglés, más películas como ésta pero con subtítulos 😊, muchas gracias.
@@paramexicoconamor.2337 Sorry, and thanks for the visit!
A movie in the current world that does not go down well. Our elephants and Rhino are killed by the thousands in Southern Africa, driven by the Asian cartels. Our loins are canned to give joy to the Americans and other so called international hunters, that have no balls to tackle these animals bare handed.
Good point. Thanks for the visit!
Chartan Heston historical legend actor
Truth. Thanks for the visit!
⚔️I good contrast -high & dry-movie while retired, and the rains here are relentless. It’s odd that Rich is hunting poachers, without a native African assistant. Why has Rich not set up his truck, to accommodate him for sleeping? The older movies liked to match up, much older men with girl in her late teens or early 20’s. So when I became older, I just unknowingly followed suite. But, there’s a age threshold, occurring when those years, finally catch up, and breaks a relationship.🛡️
Thanks for sharing, and for watching!
If anyone googles Africa they will have an interesting read. Two things for me 1) an abundance of underground spring wells 2) The USA,China have embassies right next to each other.
Interesting. Thanks for sharing.
Curious, the do- good charities are always showcasing the poor Africans who need clean water. They walk for miles ... etc etc.
😮 I'm a fan of both Heston and Adams
Me, too. Welcome.
15:41 Where are the two pieces of wood that he removed in front of the wheels?
Good question." Bueller?... Bueller?... Bueller?... Bueller?..."
Fantastic ' keep it up!!!
Roger that. Thanks for the visit!
Some guy officially hunting poachers with no assistance or backup? Hard to believe, is it not?
Zactly!
Não precisa acreditar hehehe
Rhodesian farmers used to do it.
Good Point. Thanks for the visit!
i do have to say, a timeless story. a woman between a father and a son.
WAnt a problem? Open an algebra book.
Want a REAL problem? Insert woman in situation.
Didn't used to be this way. Shouldn't be this way. IT IS this way now.
Roger that. Thanks for the visit!
Around the 15 min mark, who removed the planes wheel chocks? Great movie.
Good question. Bueller...? Bueller...? Bueller...? Bueller...?
I'm disappointed. I was hoping to see 1984 Nairobi, but the movie is almost totally shot on safari.
Alas. Thanks for the visit!
I remember why Charleston H,is so revered,Moses Moses ❤❤❤❤❤
Roger that. Thanks for the visit!
A good solid film. Not one of Heston's best performances though. (perhaps bad writing) Sadly, he film quality is disapointing. Look at "Hatari" shot 22 years earlier, the film quality is like night and day.
Again many thanks to Donald P. Borchers for posting.
Thanks for sharing your opinions. Welcome. I appreciate your support.
A little out of the ordinary to see John Rhys-Davies playing the character role of a bad guy?
Carros bem bregas nessa época , anos 70! Interessante vê-los !
Yes. I'm old enough to remember. Thanks for the visit!
I truly enjoyed the movie.
Welcome.
CH, believable in almost every role, even the campy ones like Soylent Great.
True dat. Thanks for the visit!
Meant ,"green"
@@norronlee4945 Roger that.
Soylent Green was a disgusting movie.
He should have avoided acting in that one.
very good moive
John Rhys-Davies has saved many a bad clunker movies
So true. Thanks for the visit!
Always enjoy obscure things from obscure places
I recognised Connie Booth from Fawlty Towers and Maud Adams from Playboy.
Roger that. Thanks for the visit!
John Rys-Davies ever change in appearance? Same character too.
Right?! Thanks for the visit!
Very. Good. One. 🎉🎉🎉💢💥💫👍👍
The cinematographer “RONNIE TATLOR”; is he the Ron Taylor, with his wife, Valerie who did the underwater filming in Jaws?
No. This is Ronnie Taylor, married to Mary Devetta. 1983 Winner Oscar
Best Cinematography for "Gandhi," shared with: Billy Williams.
where is it ?
Who's on first?
Nairobi. Kenya. East Africa. One of countries. Of East Africa Indian. Ocean 🌊 as it's coast line
Lástima no está subtitulada. Hermosa peli
Sorry, and thanks for the visit!
Só super stars! Adoro muñdo selvagem!😢😮😅
Welcome.
Beautiful animals in their natural habitat is best part of movie. People who kill those animals need to hav the same demise. Sad ending.
Thanks for the visit!
MUITO PAPO, POUCA AÇÃO 😢😢😢😢
Thanks for watching.
Awesome movie
Welcome.
Quite a movie !!!!
I've been to Kenya, Africa on Safari & this movie "Nairobi Affair" brought back Wonderful Memories!!!
Welcome.
Esse Charlatão é o maximo, adoro ele!!!
Welcome.
I saw this movie when i was just 15.
Fond memories. Welcome.
Good movie-the natural course of humanity.
Welcome.
Nice movie 5 stars 🌟.
Glad you enjoyed it. Welcome.
Come back to me. I am pining for you ❤❤❤❤
Thanks for the visit!
All good comments here I couldn't have said anything better.
Welcome.
@@DonaldPBorchersOG Well it seems you have another subscriber.👀
@@sammythompson3694 Thanks.
father and son chasing the same woman
Abd she was a slit to boot😂
Ya gave it away.
Thanks for the visit!
La pelicula parece buena pero es una pena no se ingles no entiendo nada🤨🤨🤨🤨🤨🤨🤨🤨🤨
Sorry, and thanks for the visit!
Good movie
Welcome.
That Heston fella looks a bit like Moses.
Moses was a Nubian fella
He's older than Moses.
@@stubromac2711 Moses was a Hebrew who married an Ethiopian woman.
Jethro the Ethiopian priest of Midian was the priest Moses kissed and did obesience to, and Moses did whatever Jethro said.
Jethro is the priest who Moses prayed would be eyes for them in the wilderness, while God was leading them with a pillar of fire by night and a pillar of smoke by day.
Heston was Moses in the old movie 🎥
@@whitecockk2 He's older than the movie.
Rhys- Davies as a villain; great film
CH got to play some bomb bits!
Roger that. Thanks for watching.
Poachers need to be hunted down the way they hunt down the wildlife.
Governments need to empower the rangers to do their jobs p[properly and none of this nonsense of arresting them and bringing them to justice. The only justice they deserve is the same end they had planned for the wildlife.
Great ideas! Thanks for the visit!
Turned this off at the "action" scene with Dad and son attempting to murder their poacher friend. Too stupidly illogically unreal. They didn't need to capture the guy, just to denounce him to the authorities. There was no point in him running away, less in him making a stand and shooting at them. In real life, they might have chased him to talk him into giving himself up. They wouldn't have ignored his entreaty to "be reasonable" and talk. Just "action" to fulfill the need for cinematic expectations. Was a bit interesting for the personal storyline, but then this action element turned the heroes into cold blooded murderers...
Great old movie
Welcome.
Que pena não poder assistir a esse filme moro no Brasil país de língua portuguesa
Sorry. If you can send me copies in your language, I will post them.
That woman is ridiculous.
Thanks for the visit!
Actors are overrated and overpaid, great movie 🍿
Thanks for the visit!
Surely someone could have shown the "son" how to hold a rifle, embarrassing to watch 😮😊
Dommage qu'il ne soit pas en Français
Welcome.
I remember the Ten Commandments which Charles Histon act as Moises..
……Charlton Heston. Moses.
Fond memories. Thanks for the visit!
Kis baat se gussa ho, bataoto sabi. Galtisn insaan sehe hoti hain. Maaf karl aur sa jaso, walad
❤❤❤❤❤
Thanks for the visit!
I have thoroughly enjoyed Heston films, but this storyline sounds stupid.
Thanks for the visit!
I don't have any son.I have three daughters.
Thanks for the visit!
Maud Adams was much better in 'Tattoo'.
Yes. She turned in an amazing performance in "Tattoo" (1981). Thanks for the visit!
Wow! Who wrote this script; some high school sophomore? Heston and Adams must've needed a paycheck. At least it's on location.
I think it was a made for tv special.
Lol. It's just background noise tonight.
Ha! Thanks for the visit!
Only reason I watched the movie was to see CH act. The rest was garbage.
Thanks for the visit!
Scenery effective
Dialogue not the best silly
Family feud better to have
Done a documentary
About the poaching problem
Narrated by heston!
With his own family
Accompanying him
He had a stable marriage!
Why do dramas!
Because people don’t like documentaries but love dramas.
Plenty of drama in Real life
Why manufacture it
Thou shalt not tempt
The Lord thy God!
You are right but people are so stupid you have to hide a good message in a silly story to get them to pay attention. Surprisingly "aware" for 1984, Heston saying ivory is illegal and reminding her elephants have to die to get it
Because CHUCK insisted on making movies. He looked forward to make up every day. Loved putting his acting face on.
Thanks for the visit!