Rampage (1963) Poster

(1963)

User Reviews

Review this title
16 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
6/10
The Trapper And The Hunter
bkoganbing4 June 2011
Rampage casts Robert Mitchum and Jack Hawkins as a trapper of wild game and a hunter of same respectively. They've been hired by the Berlin Zoo to bag some big cats for exhibition. Both of them see themselves as Hemingway like existential characters, each with a distinct philosophy about the profession they've chosen for themselves. Both have world wide reputations for what they do.

Probably it would all have been fine had not Hawkins introduced Mitchum to Elsa Martinelli his mistress who has been such since she was found in a burned out church during World War II as an adolescent. Hawkins did introduce her to the facts of life, but Elsa's been taking care of business on her own for a while, but she always comes back to Hawkins. A fling with Mitchum though has Hawkins going through the Othello thing without an Iago to stoke those green fires.

The trio is looking for special game, it is reported that there is an enchantress in the Malay jungle, a mixed breed of a tiger and a leopard. When we see the enchantress it looks like it has the bone structure and shape of a tiger, but the spots of a leopard. The Malay natives regard them as special.

I saw Rampage in the theater when it first came out and the jungle scenes are great, but the soap opera plot among the leads is strictly melodramatic. Still I think fans of the leading characters will like it.
9 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Interesting cast but a poor film and a weak story
JuguAbraham21 August 2020
I watched the film because of the cast. I am a fan of Mitchum, Martinelli, and Hawkins, All of them were at their best physical condition when they made the film, making the film worthwhile if you were a fan of any of the three. Silvia Koscina, the Yugoslavian actress, has a small role as a stewardess during a business class flight sequence. Interestingly, the noted Italian film director Mauro Bolognini had chosen both Martinelli and Koscina to act in his movies by a coincidence. .The film Rampage was ordinary, if not dumb with a story that has a very predictable ending,

Why is the film stupid? "The Enchantress" in the film is a leopard that apparently attracts Asian tigers in the story. The fact is a leopard is smaller than a grown tiger and they don't like each other and have different habitats. The film and the story suggest something else.

Finally to have a German actor Stefan Schnabel play an Asian village chief was poor casting.
6 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Jungle romance story about the old eternal triangle with good main cast and colorful outdoors
ma-cortes18 June 2014
¨Rampage¨ is an entertaining mixture of moving story , sunny adventure and loving drama about some wild-animal trappers . A team of professionals who holds each other to high standards in their job have a common objective , the animal trapping in . As German menagerie hires big game trapper , a zoo-suppling wild animals called Harry Stanton (sober Robert Mitchum) and renowned big game hunter Otto Abbot (sad-looking Jack Hawins) to travel to Malaysia to capture wildlife for the zoo , but the main object of the safari is to catch a special piece . As they are also tasked with capturing a very particular animal , a specie known as the Enchantress , a half tiger , half leopard that boasts the movie but when appears , it's rather a disenchantment , as she proves to be a simple leopard with her back dyed pink . Accompanying them is Abbot's mistress , gorgeous Anna (Elsa Martinelli) , an orphan who Otto adopted long time ago . Harry goes for her ; then , Anna falls in love for him . They fly into the jungles of Malaysia, an area that Abbot knows well having hunted there many times before , but it's Stanton who arranges to get the local tribal leader's cooperation and being helped by a native scout (Sabu) . Later on , it occurs thrilling scenes of the tigers hunt , when two of the animals are caught in nets at the same time . Then , there take places the old eternal triangle .

This jungle adventure yarn is full of spectacular scenes , thrills , an usual triangular drama and results to be quite entertaining , though mediocre with a lousy sense of pace and some holes in the screenplay . Hunting scenes through the footage of the capture of wildlife is made by stock-shots in that the risk of the hunters is none at all , as the Rhino hunt is filmed by transparency . Filmmaker Phil Karlson shot this tawdry jungle romance and Mitchum and Hawkins star in it , which should guarantee a high quality excitement and entertainment , but doesn't . This stirring picture effortlessly switching between love story and hunting scenes . All sounds a mite too familiar , it is because the picture is merely a blending from previous films such as ¨Red Dust¨ (1932) by Victor Fleming , ¨The Macomber Affair¨ (1947) by Zoltan Korda , ¨Mogambo¨ (1953) by John Ford and the best , ¨Hatari¨ (1962) , by Howard Hawks . This is a moving though average adventure movie in which a trapper and a white hunter go after a wild animal , a cross between a tiger and a leopard . For more exciting are the scenes of the leopard hunt on a modern building and over the attic . Foot-tapping and lively soundtrack by the classic Elmer Bernstein and glamorous color photograph by cameraman Harold Lipstein , though filmed in Hawai ; all contribute towards compensating for the flaws and gaps in the plot .

The motion picture was regularly directed by Phil Karlson . There were no half measures in this filmmaker . He would make adventure movies or violent and noir films . As he directed Western as ¨Gunman's walk¨ , ¨They rode west¨, ¨Texas rangers, ¨Iroquois trail¨ and Gansters genre or Noir films as ¨Phoenix city story¨ , ¨Kansas City confidential¨ and ¨Scarface mob¨ . Karlson was never able to capitalize on them and raise himself out of the B-picture mire , and he was stuck making things like ¨The Young Doctors¨ (1961), a Elvis Presley vehicle as ¨Kid Galahad¨ (1962) and a pair of failures Matt Helm films with Dean Martin such as ¨The silencers¨ , until he hit it big with Walking tall . Flops alternated with hits through his career , though Karlson's direction was more than successful in ¨ Walking tall¨ (1973) with invaluable help of Joe Don Baker , this was his biggest commercial success and which , since he owned a large part of the picture, made him rich . ¨Rampage¨ rating : 5,5/10 passable and acceptable ; Robert Mitchum fans will enjoy his idol .
5 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
A big game hunter against a trapper, both going for the same animal, and a love interest comes between the two.
Mickey-226 June 2002
"Rampage", made in 1963, starred Robert Mitchum, Elsa Martinelli, and Jack Hawkins. This film, set in the jungles of Malasia, had the two professionals, Hawkins an animal hunter, and Mitchum, a trapper, hired by a zoo in Germany to capture a rare species of jungle cat and bring the animal back alive for a major exhibition. Mitchum sees the chance to do as the zoo wishes, while Hawkins only desires the killing of the animal for the newest addition to his collection of kills and trophies. Adding to the mixture is Hawkins' mistress, played by Elsa Martinelli. She goes on the hunt as well, and finally decides to leave Hawkins, tiring of his desire to only kill.

The hunt in Malasia goes well, the animal is captured, but Hawkins' jealousy gives vent to revenge on the two, Mitchum and Martinelli. The film features a stirring music score by Elmer Bernstein, and the scenery in Malasia is breathtaking. Mitchum portrays cool as only he could, and Martinelli and Hawkins add a style to the film. Sadly, not on VHS or DVD yet.
12 out of 19 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Not bad, of its type and era
neil-47623 June 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Robert Mitchum and Jack Hawkins are tasked with bringing big cats - tigers and a panther - back from Malaysia to Berlin. In the company of Elsa Martinelli, Hawkins' young protégé and lover. Hawkins' behaviour becomes erratic and hostile as Martinelli's attraction to Mitchum grows.

The attractive and colourful location work (with Hawaii standing in for Malaysia), the hunting sequences, Elmer Bernstein's score, and solid performances from the three principals all add up to a film which would have been a successful movie back in 1963, displaying good production values if somewhat soapy in its central eternal triangle story. It all seems a bit dated now, though.

Incidentally, for those people who refer to this movie being located in Africa, please note that there are no tigers in Africa.
5 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
"Rampage" is a bit Freudian...but also a lot dull.
planktonrules27 October 2020
"Rampage" is definitely one of Robert Mitchum's lesser-known films. It is about two hunters to work together to bring back big cats for a German zoo. But there is tension between them, as Otto (Jack Hawkins) is big in killing animals to prove his virility and Harry is a trapper with no interest in killing (Robert Mitchum). The Freudian aspect of this is that Otto uses his gun to prove his manliness....as his wife (Elsa Martinelli) and her carnal needs apparently cannot be satisfied by him. Not surprisingly, the two men are going to butt heads...over killing animals and over the wife.

There's a subplot involving a leopard called 'The Enchantress'. But it's so stupid and nonsensical that I won't even bother discussing it further!

The film looks nice...with Hawaii substituting for location shooting in Malaysia. The actors are also good. But the story itself is a bit silly and dull at times....and the dialog a bit ridiculous. So it's pretty obvious why the movie isn't well known compared to other Mitchum films. Not terrible...but also pretty silly and boring, which is odd since it's about trapping big cats! It's also a bit sad to see some of the natives are played by white actors (such as the Malayan chief, played by German actor Stefan Schnabel). All in all, watchable but you could easily do a lot better.

By the way, sadly, this was Sabu's penultimate film. He died at age 39 of a heart attack after making one more film, "A Tiger Walks".
5 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Rampage-Up There On My Stinker List *1/2
edwagreen1 April 2012
Warning: Spoilers
This was some dull film. The moderator on TCM said that Bob Mitchum agreed to do it so that he could take his family on a Hawaiian vacation. The so called African scenery was shot in Hawaii. Mitchum would have been far better off had he skipped Hawaii that year.

The scenes in Africa are dull. The trapping of the so called cat was nothing to talk about. Jack Hawkins plays the guy who asks Mitchum to go on the expedition. He has taken in Elsa Martinelli at the age of 14; she is grown now and he wants to continue to possess her. He tries to show his manliness when he enters the cave where the cat is.

I was wondering where the rampage was when the trio leave Africa and head back to the German zoo. Go know that the Hawkins character would go berserk and unleash the cat as the train enters the station. Even the so called rampage on the German streets is minimal at best. The residents of the building where the cat is are told to make loud noises. I think they were told this to wake up the audiences in the theaters viewing this garbage.
6 out of 16 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Two Robust Men and a Sexy Woman in the Jungle
romanorum123 August 2021
The Wilhelm Zoo in West Germany hires big game hunter Otto Abbot (Jack Hawkins) and trapper Harry Stanton (Robert Mitchum) to travel to Malaysia to bring back two tigers and an "enchantress" (half-breed creature: part-leopard, part-tiger). Abbot's house is filled with wild animal artifacts (head trophies, rugs, animal skins). Harry wants no part of animal killing. Abbot's mistress is the statuesque and lovely Anna (Elsa Martinelli), whom he rescued when she was 14 years-old. She is a crack shot and will be along for the expedition. The jungle guide is Sabu ("The Jungle Book," 1942).

Early on the tone for the movie is set at a dinner club in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia when the confident Abbot suddenly asks Harry if he'll try to take Anna away from him. Harry responds, "You drag it out pretty flat on a table, but as long as you did . . . Yes, I'm gonna try." Anna darts those tantalizing dark eyes; she has subjugated her life to Abbot.

In the jungle the expedition captures two tigers with the help of the local Sakai people, who beat their drums to drive out the tigers from hiding. But as Abbot uses his rifle once, the Sakai chief says that the beaters will no longer help (they are against big game hunters). But there is still one more animal to capture, and the film is not even half over at that point. So there is time for plenty of tension. Although Anna has rebuffed Harry early on, they develop a bond that makes Abbot jealous. Eventually an enchantress is captured after hard work. But on the train to Germany Abbot releases it to attack Stanton, and it soon escapes the train: Abbot is not caring about the damage it will do or the people it will kill. In due course, the climax occurs on a building rooftop with all principals involved.

The acting is fine, and Robert Mitchum has always had a strong screen presence. He reminds one of the legendary real-life trapper, Frank Buck of the earlier 20th century ("Bring 'Em Back Alive," 1930). The underrated Elsa Martinelli is appropriately gorgeous, slender, and sensual. She had a fairly similar role in a comparable but superior film with John Wayne as the love interest ("Hatari," 1962). The photography is fine: "Rampage" was filmed in Hawaii. On the negative side the screenplay could have been better, and the enchantress was rather small and somewhat disappointing. Nevertheless, the movie is still worth a look.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
A very big disappointment
machrf21 September 2020
I hoped to see a great movie by Robert Mitchum and Sabu. The cast did pretty good with a poor script. The values expressed during the movie are less than admirable with the ending back peddling when the girl is gotten. I would have thrown her back into the sea. She may have had good looks but her character had no clue of good values.
3 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
A Hemingwayesque drama of man, woman, and jungle.
brooks-1314 February 2000
This movie is underrated. Robert Mitchum is at his laid-back best as the trapper and Elsa Martinelli is sexy and strong in the female lead. Jack Hawkins is fine, and it's nice to see Sabu in a strong role after The Jungle Book. The musical score (by Elmer Bernstein) is melodic, almost as good as his Magnificent Seven soundtrack. Set this all in verdant Africa with a tiger hunt thrown in, and it makes for good viewing.
12 out of 19 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Adventure Flick with Robert MITCHUM and Elsa MARTINELLI
ZeddaZogenau20 March 2024
Big game hunt for a trophy wife with Robert Mitchum and Elsa Martinelli

This adventure film by Phil Karlson (1908-1982) is also known in German-speaking countries as "IM BANNE DER ROTEN TIGERIN / Under the Spell of the Red Tigress". The beautifully photographed images come from Harold Lipstein. Elmer Bernstein contributes the music. The Warner Brothers film studio spared no effort.

The famous Wilhelma Zoo from Stuttgart in West Germany (but was filmed in the San Diego Zoo!) commissions an animal catcher (Robert Mitchum, 1917-1997) to catch two tigers and a rare big cat called "The Queen" in the jungle of Malaysia. There is supposed to be support from a notorious big game hunter (Jack Hawkins, 1910-1973), who is in a relationship with a much younger woman (Elsa Martinelli). Even before they go to Malaysia, a bitter fight breaks out between these two alpha men over the beautiful woman, who of course goes on the expedition...

Elsa Martinelli (1935-2017) looks beautiful in this film and is decked out in the most elegant costumes. Nevertheless, the way in which she is portrayed here as a woman trained by men is rather unpleasant. The viewer learns, for example, that she met her older partner as a 14-year-old orphan. Creepy! The year before, the Italian actress, who in those years regularly commuted between Hollywood and the Roman Cinecitta, was seen in a film of a similar nature, "Hatari".

In the jungle itself (all exterior shots were shot in Hawaii), the focus is on capturing the animals, but the conflict over the beautiful trophy wife continues to simmer. The great actor Sabu (1924-1963), who is unforgettable for his appearance in "The Thief of Bagdad" (1940), can be seen as a local helper. Here he can be seen in a very unworthy role as a submissive servant of the two "master men", who even offers his own wife (Cely Carillo) as a lover to the unwomanly Robert Mitchum. You can feel the colonialist look there!

In addition to the questionable gender image, the animal scenes are certainly no longer to everyone's taste. It's all excellently staged and photographed, but capturing animals for zoos (as a West German company from the idyllic Alfeld an der Leine did in particular in those years) was simply a ruthless business.

Incidentally, the enchanting Hercules star Sylva Koscina (alongside Steve Reeves in the first two Hercules films) as a stewardess and the German-born Stefan Schnabel (1912-1999) as the chief of the Sakai can also be seen in smaller roles.

At some point the ordered animals (the queen turns out to be a leopard painted red!) will be captured and will be ceremoniously handed over to the zoo in beautiful Stuttgart. But now the eponymous "killing spree" (in the original English the film is called RAMPAGE) finally occurs: one of the two alpha males completely freaks out and there is a fatal showdown with Leopard.

Fortunately, this film has now fallen out of time. The sexist, racist and animal cruel undertones are very noticeable these days. Nevertheless, the film is excellently directed in its own way. And men's stalking behavior is not glorified either. Still acceptable as an adventure film with the drawbacks mentioned.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
cat people
SnoopyStyle9 August 2021
British big game hunter Otto Abbot (Jack Hawkins) and American trapper Harry Stanton (Robert Mitchum) have been hired to hunt for big cats including a legendary one known as the Enchantress. Anna is Otto's 'general staff'. The trio travels to the jungle of post-British Malaya.

The most compelling is hunting the animals. The jungle is not the deepest and darkest jungle. It's the wilds of Hawaii. It's beautiful but it doesn't look dangerous. The movie is generally flat for it. Harry is a static character. He has one mode. There is no romantic triangle possible and yet the movie forces one. Otto has a semi-interesting relationship with Anna. A better script would have them deal with their relationship. That's the drama in this story. This should really be a movie about their companionship with Harry as the outside observer. The movie does have some good looking cats.
1 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Mitchum's got a tiger in his tank.
mark.waltz8 February 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Harry Stanton (Robert Mitchum) is his name, and catching wild cats is his game. The four legged fury kind, not the two long legged kind with curves. He has arrived in Malaysia with wealthy Jack Hawkins and his mistress, Elsa Martinelli (her having already explored Africa with John Wayne in "Hatari") in hopes of catching some rare Bengal tigers as well as a cross breed of tiger and leopard known as "the enchantress".

Hawkins suspects that there is an attraction between Mitchum and Martinelli, but he can't gain any proof since Mitchum is focused on the hunt. Bob is trying to avoid the advances of native girl Cely Carillo, presented to him for sharing with her husband, Sabu, now 40ish, but still ever muscular inch the barely covered elephant boy. Her advances are rather embarrassing as she pesters Mitchum constantly, with her husband's blessing.

An oddball exotic adventure that is certainly cinematic but often unintentionally funny. The German born Stefan Schnabel is cast as a native chief, at odds with Mitchum and Hawkins over their mission. Just as the viewer is thinking that the film is ending, there's another twenty minutes of a new plot involving the escape of the enchantress and Hawkins seeking vengeance. The wild cats used are certainly stunning, but they're far too majestic and free to be put into a zoo.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
rampage
mossgrymk29 January 2024
Cannot believe I watched the whole thing. I must have done it out of admiration for its director, Phil Karlson, who, at his best, helmed some great fifties noir like "Brothers Rico" and "Kansas City Confidential" and, at his worst, churned out crapola like this.

Nothing works. Neither the Mitchum/Martinelli pairing nor the cut rate safari movie, featuring a scenery chewing Jack Hawkins, that occupies the first three fourths. And the last fourth, with a magenta hued leopard loose in a German city, has to be the feeblest attempt at a disaster flic, well, ever. (The only victim is some schlubby janitor.) Throw in a banal screenplay with tiresome exchanges regarding loss of virility and killing animals versus trapping them and one of Elmer Bernstein's lesser scores (basically repetitions the title theme) and you can see why this thing teeters on the edge of awful. Give it a generous C minus 'cause Hawaii does a good job as Malaysia's stunt double and it was Sabu's penultimate film (the guy died way too young) and his sad smile is the only affecting thing in it. C minus.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
I just want to find out something.
theprofromdover25 February 2006
To whom it may concern-I just want to find out if this movie can be purchased.If so,where?I saw it years ago.The color and music were great.Mitchum is always great i just need to ask this question i just need to ask this question i just need to ask this question where can i buy this film.why can i not ask question in less than ten lines when a simple answer will do.i have been looking for this movie for years and it would be very cordial of you to provide me with this information.Why do i need to ask a simple question in ten lines?Is there another format i can go to where a simple question such as where can i purchase this film can be answered?
5 out of 26 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Very Good Movie
januszlvii13 August 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Rampage is a very good movie that I guess I prefer then most of the posters here ( of course, I have Elsa Martinelli in my likes so I am not exactly unbiased). What makes the movie ( besides Elsa of course), is the hunt and how the trapper Harry Stanton ( Robert Mitchum) is able to catch the elusive big cat called 'The Enchantress' while the hunter Otto Abbot ( Jack Hawkins) fails. Abbot is an interesting character. He was so good at hunting ( he never missed a shot), that Anna ( Elsa) who he picked up as a teenager basically considered him a god. But he finally missed shooting a rhino and he was never the same ( especially in the eyes of Anna). Abbot's problem was he treated everything ( including Anna) as a trophy ( Anna noted that herself). Spoilers ahead: Besides the way they treated animals, the real difference between Abbot and Stanton was how they viewed Anna. All the years Anna was with Abbot he took her for granted. Stanton did not. He was given a red scarf by his native assistant Talib ( Sabu in an excellent performance) and it is a marriage scarf, that he presented to Anna. He realized that this is a woman who is not only beautiful ( again this is Elsa we are talking about), but unlike the "Stay at home" type, she will be able to go with him when he goes after animals for zoos ( Anna is an expert shot and is used to living in less then ideal conditions in the outdoors), so marrying her is not only the right thing but the smart thing to do. I give it 9/10 stars.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed