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5.0 out of 5 stars Timeless
This is one of those films you may have seen many time before, but if you see on TV again you almost have to sit down and watch again; it's irresistable.
I saw this film as a child on TV and never forgot the story, I was very happy to see available again.
The cast is great, and the story is believable and well told. And I wouldn't take a previous revierer from...
Published on Dec 8 2001 by Robert

versus
3.0 out of 5 stars Great classic-spotty mastering
If you've never seen Sahara you're missing out on a great Bogey performance and all out terrific WWII movie. It has all the elements of a great classic: Solid characterizations, stirring action, an excellent story, and one of America's greatest stars. Sahara really gets moving in the second half and I was surprised how violent and realistic the fighting was. I was a...
Published on Jun 13 2002 by M. S Swanson


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5.0 out of 5 stars Timeless, Dec 8 2001
By 
Robert (PETOSKEY, MI, United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Sahara (DVD)
This is one of those films you may have seen many time before, but if you see on TV again you almost have to sit down and watch again; it's irresistable.
I saw this film as a child on TV and never forgot the story, I was very happy to see available again.
The cast is great, and the story is believable and well told. And I wouldn't take a previous revierer from Ann Arbors skepticism with regards race relations in those days. If that person had ever had lead flying over his head he'd know there there are no racists in foxholes, or amongst people lost in the desert. Even in 1943.
A great war film
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Sahara: A Pre-Politically Correct Call For Multiculturalism, May 29 2004
By 
Martin Asiner (jersey city, nj United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Sahara (VHS Tape)
By 1943, the war in Europe had been going on for four years, and the United States had been involved for two. The war was far from being won, and Hollywood accordingly presented images of good old-fashioned American virtues of grit that sound increasingly quaint in the light of the modern tendency to downgrade the military. But in SAHARA, director Zoltan Korda involves the viewer directly in the war against fascism by presenting Humphrey Bogart as Sgt. Joe Gunn, in a role as memorable as any that he ever had. He, Dan Duryea, and Bruce Bennet are tankmen lost somewhere in the North African desert just before the battle of El Alemain. They seek to reenter the war and in doing so, pick up a number of equally lost fighters, two of whom are the enemy. J. Carrol Naish is Guiseppe, an Italian infantryman who has long since lost confidence in Mussolini. Kurt Krueger is a downed Luftwaffe pilot who is forced to ally himself with Guiseppe, a man who he is sure is not far elevated, racially speaking, over the Jews who were being tossed into crematoria. Bogart discovers an oasis that provides just enough water to keep his men alive. The plot complicates when an Afrika Korps battalion is short on water and attacks the oasis for its precious water.

SAHARA is typical of the war films of the time in that Hollywood knew that audiences would respond patriotically if the film combined crackling scenes of realistic combat with powerful and believable characters. Bogart as Joe Gunn more than delivers in nearly every scene in which he appears. His craggy face and gravel voice are totally convincing, especially in scenes like the one in which he responds to the not unreasonable question as to why they should risk their lives in battle when to run away seems the more prudent course. Bogie deadpans that delaying the Nazis at every step is the surest way to win the war. Director Korda makes sure that Bogart's tank crew is a multinational ethnic mix of Brits, French, Nigerian, and even Guiseppe, who in one stirring scene, repudiates his Italian Duce by telling Kurt Krueger, "Must I kiss the hand that beats me and lick the boot that kicks me? No! I'd rather stay in this miserable hole than to return to an Italy like that." SAHARA provided just the right note of infectious enthusiasm for a nation to rally around its military, even if today's peace-at-all-cost activists can't quite understand why.

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5.0 out of 5 stars "Bogart's finest performance of America's Fighting Man is Realistic", Mar 14 2011
By 
J. Lovins "Mr. Jim" (Missouri-USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Sahara (DVD)
Columbia Pictures Corporation presents "SAHARA" (1943) (97 min/B&W) -- Starring Humphrey Bogart, Bruce Bennet, J. Carrol Naish, Lloyd Bridges & Dan Duryea

Directed by Zoltan Korda

Well directed by Zoltan Korda, this is a first rate War film, which qualitatively balanced its superb action sequences with penetrating character studies.

When separated from his unit in the Libyan Desert, Bogart seen as a tank commander picks up a group of allied (and eventually several enemy) stragglers and heads out in search of badly needed water. Only arriving at a nearly dry oasis, and after he learns that a motorized battalion of Germans is also after the water, Bogart decides to make a valiant stand...

Considered to be the most realistic portrait of the truly "American" fighting man yet pictured on the screen, Bogart's characterization is outstanding.

Masterful musical score by Miklos Rozsa, who did similar duty the same year in another "tank" picture, Billy Wilder's "Five Graves to Cairo."

Filmed in the American desert instead of the real Sahara due to the war, this movie is one of the best war films ever made. The Allied soldiers are a mix of a lot of different nationalities (American, British, French, South African, Irish, Sudanese) and we see how these men from diverse backgrounds come together to survive against the elements and the Germans.

Oscar nominated for Best Actor in a Supporting Role (J. Carrol Naish), Best Cinematography (Black-and-White) and Best Sound, Recording

BIOS:
1. Zoltan Korda [aka: Zoltan Kellner] [Director]
Date of Birth: 3 June 1895 - Pusztaturpaszto, Túrkeve, Austria-Hungary (now Hungary)
Date of Death: 13 October 1961 - Hollywood, California

2. Humphrey Bogart
Date of Birth: 25 December 1899 - New York City, New York
Date of Death: 14 January 1957 - Los Angeles, California

3. J. Carrol Naish [aka: Joseph Patrick Carrol Naish]
Date of Birth: 21 January 1896 - New York City, New York
Date of Death: 24 January 1973 - La Jolla, California

Mr. Jim's Ratings:
Quality of Picture & Sound: 5 Stars
Performance: 5 Stars
Story & Screenplay: 5 Stars
Overall: 5 Stars [Original Music, Cinematography & Film Editing]

Total Time: 97 min on DVD ~ Columbia Pictures Corporation ~ (12/11/2001)
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5.0 out of 5 stars Desert wartime conflict, April 23 2004
By 
Cory D. Slipman (Rockville Centre, N.Y.) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Sahara (VHS Tape)
The incomparable Humphrey Bogart is tough, gritty and determined as Sgt. Joe Gunn commander of the remainder of a U.S. tank crew retreating south from the Nazis into the Libyan desert. His crew including a young Dan Duryea and the veteran actor Bruce Bennett pick up a small group of Allied stragglers on the way. Running low on supplies and water they set out for a well marked on a map. They encounter a British Sudanese sergeant major played by Rex Ingram leading an Italian prisoner played by the versatile and Oscar nominated J. Carroll Naish. Finding the well to have dried up, the rag tag bunch is led by the beautifully spoken Ingram to a distant well by following an old caravan trail.

Little do they know but they are being pursued by a mechanized German battalion of about 500 men also desperate for water. Bogart and his group find a scant supply of water at the second well which is located amid some ruins deep in the desert. They ambush a German scouting party and learn of their quandry. They release prisoners with the false knowledge that there is plenty of water to be found to lure the battalion in. They decide to make a stand at the well to delay the Nazi troops while sending out Bennett in a captured Nazi vehicle for help.

Sahara is an excellent wartime movie which serves as a testimony to the resolve of our troops to defend their country and ideals in the face of deplorable circumstamces. Bogart is terrific as usual. J. Carroll Naish does a superb acting job playing the disillusioned Italian prisoner, a mechanic from Turin, Giuseppe.

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4.0 out of 5 stars A quest for water..., Jan 2 2004
By 
Kim Anehall "www.cinematica.org" (Chicago, IL USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Sahara (DVD)
Sergeant Gunn (Humphrey Bogart) is the chief for an American tank in the war against the Nazi's during World War II. As they pull back they come across a group of soldiers consisting of a Frenchman, a South African, and four Brits. These soldiers join the Americans on their retreat, since it is easier to ride on a tank than walking and because they are low on water. As the party journeys deeper into the Sahara desert, they meet a Sudanese soldier who has an Italian prisoner. The Sudanese soldier is great help for the international group of armed forces, since he knows where there is water. The journey becomes a pilgrimage for water and it leads the men into a tough decision, which will most likely lead them to their death. Sahara is an interesting film, since it was filmed during the war and enhanced the support for soldiers that were fighting in World War II. In addition, it has some elements that offer some understanding for different cultures, which was needed in the time of war. Overall, the film offers an adventure for those who seek entertainment, which in the end provides the audience with a good cinematic experience.
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4.0 out of 5 stars A classic war film from WW II, Nov 5 2003
By 
Robert Moore (Chicago, IL USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Sahara (DVD)
In 1942 Humphrey Bogart had finally become a major star. After accidentally establishing himself as a leading man in HIGH SIERRA, and the unexpected brilliance of THE MALTESE FALCON, his star turn in CASABLANCA proved that these two prior successes were not flukes and that Bogart was the real deal. SAHARA was, therefore, the first film to be released after Bogart had become Bogart. In the aftermath of December 7, 1941, the studios turned out a plethora of war films in an attempt to rally public opinion in support of the war (as if that were necessary). Most of these films are forgettable. All of them today have an odd appearance, for the simple fact that the military was so short of equipment that it was unable to lend and the films were made with outdated equipment. One of the things that is striking about SAHARA is how much they manage to achieve with virtually no equipment at all. We usually imagine war films as involving epic struggles between contending armies, but SAHARA instead focuses on a lone tank crew and the few stragglers that they pick up along the way. They use the small scale of the film to their advantage, with the unseen but threatening enemy more omnipresent by their absence.

Given the absence of equipment and armies, the emphasis in the film is on the relations between the members of the tank crew and the individuals they encounter. Bruce Bennett, who first came to fame as an Olympic shot-putter in the 1920s, is excellent as one of the crew members. And there are a host of other veteran supporting actors. Also in a significant role is one of my favorite 1940s actors, Rex Ingram, who was one of the very, very few black actors before Sidney Portier to carve out a career as an actor despite refusing to play in any degrading or stereotypical "negro" roles. Ingram never played a cook or a red cap or a house servant, but instead portrayed soldiers as in SAHARA, genies (THE THIEF OF BAGHDAD, also directed by Zoltan Korda), the devil (CABIN IN THE SKY), and even God (GREEN PASTURES), as well as a very memorable performance in THE ADVENTURES OF HUCKLEBERRY FINN as the escaped slave Jim.

Many of the films of 1942 with war themes are embarrassing today with their jingoistic patriotism or-in the case of the Japanese-borderline racism. That is certainly not the case with SAHARA. The director, Zoltan Korda, was a dedicated leftist (a source of conflict with his more conservative brother Alexander, the producer of most of the top films Zoltan worked upon), and there is a liberal optimism that under girds this film that would be far rarer only there years later in Hollywood. I think this lack of jingoism has helped prolong the life of SAHARA beyond many of the other war films of 1942.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Good war flick with Bogie, Feb 4 2003
By 
Herr Neechee "Closer2Truth" (Smyrna, GA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Sahara (DVD)
I enjoyed this flick. Bogie is an American tank sargeant in WWII. The best part is Bogie's cynical stoic attitude, especially when dealing with the Brits. The story is paced well and even my wife enjoyed it. The battle scene at the end is a little hokey, the Germans of course get mowed down, but overall its a good flick and one I'd never seen before, even on the afternoon B&W flick channels. If you like war movies and Bogie, this is for you.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Desert Duel, Dec 19 2002
This review is from: Sahara (DVD)
Any fan of Humphrey Bogart probably has seen this. If they haven't, hop to it! Those of you that have not seen anything by him, you need to see at least three, "Casablanca", "African Queen", and "Sahara". If you can spare the time catch "The Maltese Falcon", "Treasure of the Sierra Madre" and "Key Largo". Quite honestly he made very few movies that most people would not enjoy. The sets and music are great but the characterizations steal the movie. A rag tag group of soldiers fight off overwhelming odds of the bad guys, in this case German soldiers, in the desert. Kind of like "Magnificent Seven" and "Beau Geste" rolled into one. Well worth the time to see it. I bought the DVD and it is great quality. Some extras included.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Sahara, Aug 6 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Sahara (DVD)
Good all around WWII movie with Bogart doing his best for the war effort. There's a few lessons that can be learned from this film,not just fighting the Germans.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A DEEPLY MOVING FILM..., July 21 2002
By 
Elaine Campbell "Desert Dweller" (Rancho Mirage, CA United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Sahara (VHS Tape)
Especially the ending. The screenwriter, John Howard Lawson, created a scene which one can never forget, in its simplicity, its beauty, its sorrow. But it took a Humphrey Bogart to bring a universal quality to it.

And this is his movie. He is like a magnet which all the other characters circle about, support, and each in their own way adds quality performances. We have Bruce Bennett (silver medalist in the shot put in the 1928 Olympics) as a member of Bogart's tank crew, Kurt Krueger as a German captive, J. Carroll Naish as an Italian captive, Lloyd Bridges, Dan Duryea, Rex Ingram, and I especially liked the performance of Richard Nugent as Captain Jason Halliday. The movie was filmed in the Borego Desert of the Imperial Valley just south of the Mexican border.

The story is about a tank crew stranded in the North African desert. They are out of water. Their search for water is shared by German troops, whom they eventually come face to face with. They are far outnumbered, with only their wits and their military skills to aid and abet them. This is high drama pulled off beautifully by another great and honest Bogart performance.

This movie stays with you long after you have viewed it. And the sterling performances do too.

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Sahara
Sahara by Zoltan Korda (DVD - 2001)
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