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Zulu Dawn Poster

Zulu Dawn

The sun dawned bloodied... two great armies met face to face... and the earth trembled to the sound of the Zulu death chant!
1979 | 117m | English

(8067 votes)

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Popularity: 1.0 (history)

Details

In 1879, the British suffer a great loss at the Battle of Isandlwana due to incompetent leadership.
Release Date: May 14, 1979
Director: Douglas Hickox
Writer: Cy Endfield, Anthony Story
Genres: Adventure, Drama, History, War
Keywords fight, british empire, victory, prequel, battlefield, battle, death, colonialism, spear throwing, surrounded, standoff, mortar, zulu, tribal warfare, army life
Production Companies Lamitas, Samarkand, Zulu Dawn NV
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $11,750,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Burt Lancaster Col. Anthony Durnford
Simon Ward Lt. Vereker
Denholm Elliott Colonel Pulleine
Peter Vaughan QSM Bloomfield
James Faulkner Lt. Melvill
Christopher Cazenove Lt. Coghill
Bob Hoskins C.S.M. Williams
David Bradley Pte Williams
Paul Copley Cpl. Storey
Donald Pickering Maj. Russell R.A.
Nicholas Clay Lt. Raw
Phil Daniels Boy Pullen
Ian Yule Cpl. Fields
Peter J. Elliott Sentry
Brian O'Shaughnessy Maj. Smith R.A.
Jan Bruyns Elder Boer
Sydney Chama S.M. Kambula
Len Sparrowhawk Trooper James
Peter O'Toole Lord Chelmsford
Nigel Davenport Col. Hamilton-Brown
Michael Jayston Col. Crealock
Ronald Pickup Lt. Harford
Ronald Lacey Norris Newman
Don Leonard Fannin
Patrick Mynhardt Col. Harness
Christopher Chittell Lt. Milne
Simon Sabela Cetshwayo
Ken Gampu Mantshonga
Gilbert Tjabane Bayele
Abe Temba Uhama
Muntu Ndebele Siswe
Paul Mafela Zulu Prisoner
John Mills Sir Henry Bartle Frere
Freddie Jones Bishop Colenso
Anna Calder-Marshall Fanny Colenso
Kenneth Baker Mr de Witt
Claire Marshall Mrs de Witt
Vivienne Drummond Lady Frere
Graham Armitage Capt. Shepstone (uncredited)
Terrick Fitzhugh Jackson (uncredited)
Ross Kettle Isandhlwana Redcoat (uncredited)
Michael Richard Isandhlwana Redcoat (uncredited)
Larry Taylor Grenadier (uncredited)
Ashley Waldorf Field Hospital Casualty (uncredited)
Name Job
Cy Endfield Story, Screenplay
Douglas Hickox Director
Elmer Bernstein Original Music Composer
Anthony Story Screenplay
Ousama Rawi Director of Photography
Robin Gregory Sound Mixer
Irene Lamb Casting
John Buckley Costume Design
Robin O'Donoghue Sound Assistant
David Tomblin Second Unit Director
Peter Williams Art Direction
Gerry Humphreys Sound Mixer
Terry Sharratt Boom Operator
Malcolm Cooke Editor
John Rosewarne Production Design
Colin Polson Hair Department Head
Don Sharpe Sound Editor
Peter MacDonald Second Unit Director
Colin Arthur Makeup Department Head
Name Title
Barrie Saint Clair Executive Producer
Nate Kohn Producer
Dieter Nobbe Associate Producer
James Faulkner Co-Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


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Reviews

Geronimo1967
6.0

Though certainly epic in cinematographic terms, this is a really meandering and over-cast depiction of the Zulu defeat of the British garrison at Isandlwana at the end of the 19th century. I'm assuming it was made as a precursor of - and to capitalise upon - the far superior "Zulu" (1964) but right ... from the get-go it's just wordy and ponderous and, well, lacklustre. Peter O'Toole does exude a certain arrogance in his role as the Commander of the army (Lord Chelmsford) but Burt Lancaster - and his distinctly ropey accent - as "Col. Durnford", features all too sparingly to offer much more than a casual dig at the incompetencies of his boss as the Zulu and the soldiers of the Queen square up. This cast list is impressive but none of the assembled stars of stage and screen are really used to any great effect. History tells us what happens next, and the colourful action scenes are well put together with enthusiastic efforts from the Zulu themselves delivering well staged combat scenes. Sadly, though, we have to wait far too long for these to rescue this from the doldrums of colourful but procedural cinema that offers us little to nourish either our interest in the characters or in the colonial and ambitious politics of the region that prevailed at the time. Underwhelming, sorry!

Dec 03, 2022