Zulu Dawn

Zulu Dawn

1979-05-14 1h 57m PG
Adventure Drama History War
6.1
User Score
108 votes

"The sun dawned bloodied... two great armies met face to face... and the earth trembled to the sound of the Zulu death chant!"

Overview

In 1879, the British suffer a great loss at the Battle of Isandlwana due to incompetent leadership.

Douglas Hickox

Director

Anthony Story

Writer

Top Billed Cast

Movie Details

Status

Released

Original Language

en

Budget

$11,750,000

Revenue

$N/A

Runtime

1h 57m

Release Date

1979-05-14

Recommendations

Reviews

CinemaSerf

CinemaSerf

2022-12-03T18:11:54.395Z

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!