The Son of Caesar and Cleopatra (1964) Poster

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6/10
A "Sword & Sandal" with lots of sand
dinky-424 September 2000
Mark Damon plays the leader of a desert tribe in 1st-century-B.C. Egypt. Angered by the corrupt rule of the Roman governor, he leads a revolt against this governor, even though he's become romantically involved with the governor's daughter whom he holds hostage.

Damon played in a few of these "Sword & Sandal" movies but his good looks had a softness to them which kept him from becoming a truly-persuasive action hero. His upper teeth also seemed a bit too-widely spaced for one of those Cinemascope smiles, but unlike Steve Reeves, Gordon Scott, and other stars of this genre, he had hair on his chest! (His torso is put on display here when he kneels down, hugs a stone altar, and is given a lashing across his bare back by horsemen wielding whips. This flogging ranks 23rd in the book "Lash! The 100 Great Scenes of Men Being Whipped in the Movies.")

Fans of this kind of movie will find the usual array of battles, intrigue, romance, colorful costumes, gaudy sets, comic-book dialog, etc. What puts "Son of Cleopatra" a bit apart from the others are some impressive desert tableaux of armies marching across desert scenery. It may not match "Lawrence of Arabia," but all that sand and sky still looks pretty impressive.

One note: the movie's script seems to forget that Cleopatra was not Egyptian but was actually Greek.
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5/10
One for Scilla Gabel's firm fans only!
JohnHowardReid4 June 2017
Warning: Spoilers
I'm surprised that three of the four previous reviewers actually liked this movie. My guess is that they saw a different print. The movie was never shown in New York. I watched it in Metro-Goldwyn- Mayer's theatrette. The producer, Nino Milano, was trying to sell it to M-G- M. He was only partly successful. M-G-M declined both USA and UK release rights, but, maybe spurred by my presence, M-G-M actually did buy the Australian rights and, although they took their time, they actually released the movie in Australia on May 5, 1967.

I would describe the movie as a sword and sandal saga with more sand than sword. Rustichelli's rousing music score represents just about the sole virtue of this otherwise mediocre offering from M-G-M. True, hero Mark Damon makes an okay desert champion, and Miss Gabel appears suitably vulnerable yet alluring, but the rest of the cast is plain awful. Admittedly the players are well and truly hamstrung by (1) plodding direction, (2) a wordy screenplay and (3) inept dubbing. Extensive location work in Egypt doesn't help much — thanks to often muzzy and underlit cinematography.
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4/10
Desert peplum
Leofwine_draca8 February 2022
THE SON OF CLEOPATRA is a desert-set peplum starring Mark Damon, later a standby both in Italy and America. It's less a follow-up to CLEOPATRA and more inspired by LAWRENCE OF ARABIA, I feel, with a lot of desert-set feuding and battles between the tribes. The plot is quite workmanlike and there's none of the grandeur you'd expect given our hero's parents. If you're looking for action you can forget it too as aside from a few half-hearted moments there's little on display here.
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10/10
Nice Surprise!
minadog-18 April 2008
Son of Cleopatra was included in the DVD Son of Samson that I had ordered through Amazon. I had ordered Son of Samson, because I am a Chelo Alonso fan. I held no expectations for Son Of Cleopatra, so I was happily surprised by this near epic movie. It was filmed in both Rome and Egypt. The acting was excellent for this sort of film, because with the exception of Mark Damon, it was an all Italian-Egyptian cast. They were great actors! There are innumerous amounts of people in some of the battle scenes. I suppose to pay that many people; they must have been citizens of Egypt at that time. The battles were excellent. The plot was thick, and action suspenseful. This is definitely a better than average Gladiator movie superbly directed. Sadly Son of Samson fell to second place behind this Desert Oasis. The quality of the DVD was very good, and the color was impressive.
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8/10
A hugely entertaining period action romp
Woodyanders27 March 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Brave and noble El Kabir (a solid and engaging performance by Mark Damon) fights for his oppressed people in Egypt against evil and pompous Roman governor Petronio (zestfully played to the hateful hilt by Livio Lorenzon). Director Ferdinando Baldi, who also co-wrote the engrossing script with Franco Airaldi and Anacleto Fontini, relates the absorbing story at a steady pace, maintains a serious tone throughout, and stages both the fierce gladiatorial bouts and rough'n'ready swordfights with considerable skill and flair. This film further benefits from fine acting by a sturdy cast: Damon makes for a very charming and appealing protagonist, Lorenzon has an absolute ball as the eminently despicable Petronio, plus there are praiseworthy contributions from the lovely Scilla Gabel as brash and beautiful princess Livia, Paolo Gozlino as Petronio's wicked partner Furio, Alberto Lupo as hard-nosed Roman general Octavian, Corrado Annicelli as wise adviser Longino, and the fetching Samira Ahmed as sweet fair maiden Meroe. Bitto Albertini's crisp and lively cinematography boasts plenty of impressive sweeping panoramic shots of the vast desert landscape. Carlo Rustichelli's robust, thrilling, flavorsome score likewise hits the stirring spot. A very good and satisfying film.
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9/10
Not just sand in your sandals
clanciai5 June 2022
The plot here his that the son of Cleopatra and Julius Caesar called Caesarion was smuggled away and survived, being reared by the bedouins in the desert and brought up like a son of one of their chiefs, while instead another boy was sacrificed to the Romans who naturally had to have him disposed of as a political peril and threat to the dynasty of Augustus, who was only a grandnephew of Julius Caesar, while a son of his could not be tolerated. Caesarion grows up to become a leader himself of the bedouins who wage a kind of guerrilla warfare with sudden surprise attacks against Roman convoys in the desert, but he has problems with his identity, as he is not as dark in his complexion as an Egyptian should be. His stepfather finally one day has no choice but to reveal his real identity to him, and that's where the drama of this film begins.

It is beautifully made with wonderful desert settings, great riding sequences on horseback, while at the same time it is almost a melodrama, as El Kebir (Caesarion) gets involved with the daughter of the Roman prefect, the villain of the play called Petronius, who has earned the displeasure of Octavian for embezzling funds and riches of Egypt. His daughter is nothing short of a blonde bombshell. There are reminiscences too obvious of both "Ben Hur" and "Lawrence of Arabia", the director has clearly been inspired by these mammoth epics and tried to at least accomplish something next to them. It is not unsuccessful. To its merits is added a marvellous score by Carlo Rustichelli, whose music generally has the power to elevate any film to a higher position than its realities. It is not a great film but highly intriguing, inspiring and interesting for its concept and impressive style.
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8/10
Very Good Historical Drama
EdgarST31 May 2015
I was also pleasantly surprised with this meticulously staged production, made in the wake of Joseph L. Mankiewicz's "Cleopatra", the legendary Fox historical spectacle for which no money was spared to bring a visually rich motion picture to the screen. This tale of El Kebir (or Cesarion, the son of Cleopatra and Julius Caesar) leading rebel Egyptian tribes against a tyrannical Roman governor is mostly an outdoors action drama, and whatever is set in interiors does not require lavishly rich sets and decoration since the scenes take place in desert tents and public officers' houses. Add location shooting in Egypt, hundreds of extras and you have a typical 1960s wide-screen and color adventure drama. Against what I have read about Mark Damon's performance he is equally fit as a handsome action leader (not precisely a mythological demigod, but a freedom fighter) and as a more complex character than the usual muscle-man fighting evil queens and emperors. There are also more interesting characters (even if they fit the usual stereotypes of right and wrong doers), played by an excellent cast of Italian and Egyptian actors; and firm and straight direction by Ferdinando Baldi. What is unfortunately lacking is chemistry between Damon and leading lady Scilla Gabel, as Livia, the Roman governor's daughter who falls for the dark-haired and green-eyed prince of the desert: their interaction is simply another element of the plot, since there is no passion or romantic energy in their scenes. Carlo Rustichelli's score is a plus, providing the romantic touch lacking in their performances, and adding a dimension reminiscent of the European westerns, with a melancholic trumpet leading the main theme. Watch it, it is quite enjoyable.
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