Quite by chance I saw a
movie clip with Roger Moore, Richard Harris and Richard Burton, so I
sat down and watched:
The Wild Geese (1978).
A wealthy banker hires an
unscrupulous mercenary, Colonel Faulkner (Burton) to put together a
team in order to rescue Julius Limbani, the president of an unnamed
African country. There has been a coup and Limbani is being held by
the new dictator. Faulkner gets in touch with his old friends Captain
Janders (Harris) and Lieutenant Fynn (Moore) and together they
assemble a team of veterans who although highly experienced are a bit
long in the tooth.
A simple synopsis, but to
avoid spoilers I'll keep that short. The Wild Geese is a bit over two
hours long, so I'm sure you can guess things don't go entirely
smoothly for the mercenaries. We do spend a lot of time on the setup,
the planning and the execution, but that only eats up half the run time.
I have no technical
complaints, it is a very nicely put together film, although it has
the typical over-powered grenades that fling bodies around like rag
dolls. There is an odd part where they plan to hit the compound where
Limbani is held at predawn, but the raid happens when the sun is
high. My other and bigger complaint is the scene on the bridge. In a
nutshell, the mercenaries are attacked while crossing a bridge and
instead of getting off the bridge they just stand there, something
experienced soldiers wouldn't do. Then as the team becomes separated
as the bridge is out of order, they shout plans as where to meet up
again, but there is no water! The river bed is completely dry and it
would have taken them ten minutes tops to cross. Very silly and some
frustratingly bad writing in an otherwise good movie.
It is the actors
that are the biggest draw here. Burton, Harris and Moore in one movie
is a real treat. Burton especially is showing his age, but he still
has his old steel here, which goes a long way to sell the character.
Moore, who was in the middle of his Bond career adds the charm and
Harris the heart. A really good trio and apparently they all worked
well together. Moore did request fewer lines when acting with the two
others and explained the request with: "You don't seriously
expect me to act against these guys?"
The rest of the
actors are good, again no complaints although everyone else is
overshadowed by the trio, even though a few are given quite a lot of
screen time.
Still trying to
avoid spoilers, I feel I should point out that this is not a fun
movie. It is very grim at times even though the soundtrack is trying
to sound upbeat with an almost comedic tone. Being a movie about
mercenaries it is also pretty bloody, but it doesn't wallow in gore
in any way. It is a kind of classy brutality if that makes sense.
Beyond what you see
on screen it is also almost miraculous that they managed to keep both
Harris and Burton sober during the shoot. Both were heavy, and I do
mean heavy drinkers, but they stayed sober the entire time with the
help of copious amounts of soda and jumping around. According to IMDB
Harris told Burton: “"Whenever you feel like a drink, do like
I do, jump up and down." For the rest of the production, both
men were seen daily in all sorts of unlikely situations hopping like
kangaroos”.
So, do I recommend
this movie? Absolutely. The Wild Geese is one of those movies that is
grim and violent, but it is also really good. It's not a feel good
adventure but a lesson in how cold and brutal the world can be and
why being a mercenary is not a fun job. The movie does telegraph some
things that happen if you're paying attention, but it is done very
well.
That 's that and all
that. Join me again next time and until then, have a great week!