Killers of Kilimanjaro backdrop
Killers of Kilimanjaro

Killers of Kilimanjaro

Africa as you've never seen it!

6.0 / 1019591h 31m

Synopsis

An American engineer reaches Mombasa to finish the works of an African railroad and to find his predecessor, who has mysteriously disappeared. While the work continues, will have to face several obstacles, especially violent local tribes, Arabs slave traders and wild animals.

Genre: Adventure

Status: Released

Director: Richard Thorpe

Website:

Main Cast

Robert Taylor

Robert Taylor

Robert Adamson

Anthony Newley

Anthony Newley

Hooky Hook

Anne Aubrey

Anne Aubrey

Jane Carlton

Grégoire Aslan

Grégoire Aslan

Ben Ahmed

Allan Cuthbertson

Allan Cuthbertson

Sexton

Martin Benson

Martin Benson

Ali

Orlando Martins

Orlando Martins

Chief

Donald Pleasence

Donald Pleasence

Captain

Earl Cameron

Earl Cameron

Witchdoctor

John Dimech

John Dimech

Pasha

User Reviews

CinemaSerf

It's an hybrid of many things, this - and all set in the not very politically correct scenario of late 19th century colonial Africa. Robert Taylor is "Adamson" - a railway engineer tasked with completing a dangerous stretch of track between Mombasa and Lake Victoria. No mean feat as he must face duplicity from some, slave-trading, locals with vested interests and some hostility from the natives whose land he must cross. Adding to his difficulties, he is engaged by "Jane" (a pretty unremarkable Anne Aubrey) to try to track down her engineer brother - a man charged with the same task earlier, but who has disappeared. It's a solid boy's own adventure story this with plenty of stereotypes of the time peppering a tale that has little jeopardy but just enough action and beasties to sustain it for ninety minutes. The one thing I did struggle with was the curious casting of Anthony Newley as his assistant "Hooky" but otherwise this is just a sort of "King Solomon's Mines" meets "Northwest Frontier" type of film that lauded the pioneering spirit of empire at a time when that's what cinema audiences wanted. It's entirely forgettable fayre, and very much of a time long gone - in just about every fashion.