Tuareg: Desert Warrior

1984
5.5| 1h35m| en
Details

In a desolate section of the Sahara once ruled by the French, two thirsty men stumble into the camp of a Tuareg warrior where they're given water and shelter. Soldiers from the new Arab government now arrive by Jeep and demand the two men be turned over to them. The warrior refuses, citing the sacred laws of hospitality. The soldiers shoot dead one of the men and carry off the other - a political foe of the new government. The warrior mounts his camel and rides off to rescue his kidnapped guest.

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Also starring Ritza Brown

Reviews

TrueJoshNight Truly Dreadful Film
Ceticultsot Beautiful, moving film.
Intcatinfo A Masterpiece!
InformationRap This is one of the few movies I've ever seen where the whole audience broke into spontaneous, loud applause a third of the way in.
Leofwine_draca This unusual Italian adventure film from acclaimed director Enzo G. Castellari benefits from a unique location - a barren desert land - and a wealth of slow-motion action scenes for which the director was famous. Sure, it has its fair share of flaws and errors, but these are easily outweighed by the assured direction, good performances and wonderful locations. For once, the story of a desert warrior fighting for justice is an uncliched one, which makes a change from the various post-apocalyptic rip-offs that Castellari had directed the year previously.Another unusual thing is the film's themes of justice, power, honour and the portrayal of the Tuareg tribe's way of life in the desert, where they abide by their own laws and dislike intrusion by the outside world. These issues, along with some sweeping visions of an isolated desert, give TUAREG: THE DESERT WARRIOR a kind of epic feel, something you wouldn't expect from a cheap Italian action flick. Here, the action complements the story, unlike Castellari's LIGHTBLAST from 1985, in which the action WAS the story. My personal favourite scene is an atmospheric moment where Gacel Sayah and his companion venture into an empty desert land and discover a huge graveyard of animal bones and forgotten belongings - the impact is strengthened by the sudden silence on the soundtrack, and the eeriness and power of the desert instantly made the hairs stand up on the back of my neck.Elsewhere, it's business as usual, with Harmon fighting off loads of soldiers and eventually massacring an army station at a remote prison, where he is briefly tortured by a sadistic guard (the director in a cameo). Castellari's use of slow-motion comes into play here, making for some brief but spectacular explosions, people getting bloodily shot and flying through the air. Other scenes include a realistic sword fight, a fine moment where Gacel gets his revenge on a cruel captain by slitting his throat (ouch!) and some jeeps blowing up in the desert.Mark Harmon - the imported American lead - is actually very good indeed as the just Gacel Sayah, creating a believable hero who fights for his own beliefs. The supporting cast - from his companions, to the soldiers, to the officials - are also fine in their respective roles, and the film is accompanied by an appropriately sweeping musical score which helps bring the mood of the desert to life. Some scenes - such as Harmon killing his camel and drinking its blood to stay alive - are destined to stick in the mind and make this a minor yet memorable mood piece.My only complaint is with the ending. After a massive build-up, you're left expecting some kind of final massacre, perhaps like the one at the end of COMMANDO, and yet nothing happens. Instead, Harmon ends up shooting the wrong guy in a sudden bleak and pessimistic moment which is at odds with the rest of the film and ends things on a very downbeat note. However, this doesn't spoil the rest of the film, which is worth a look for all who might be interested by the premise, as it certainly deserves kudos for what it does.
Red-Barracuda A mysterious man from a feared Saharan tribe, the Tuareg, makes it his mission to hunt down a group of soldiers responsible for abducting a man his tribe gave shelter to. He uses his highly developed survival skills, honed from life in the harsh desert, to deadly effect.Italian director Enzo G. Castellari was something of a specialist when it came to action movies. He made several in different popular sub-genres of the day – spaghetti westerns, poliziotteschi, post-apocalypse sci-fi, etc. But with Tuareg - the Desert Warrior he made an action film which was decidedly less derivative than most other Italian actioners. It was unusually set in the Sahara desert, with an Arab warrior as the hero. Having said this, I felt while I was watching it that it definitely played out like a spaghetti western in terms of structure, characters and action. After all, it features a mysterious illusive loner hero with highly developed weapon skills who embarks on a mission to take out nasty villains who have committed criminal acts against powerless civilians and he does this pretty much by himself. There have been a ton of Italian westerns that followed that template, so this one is fairly derivative plot-wise but benefits in distinctiveness from its desert locations and Arabian characters. It's for these reasons primarily that this one gets plus points, as well as a somewhat interesting climax in which the central hero's ignorance of western politics leads to an unexpected climax. Adding some additional class also is a dramatic score from the ever dependable Riz Ortolani. All-in-all, this is not great stuff by any means but it's certainly one of the more individualistic Italian genre flicks from the 80's.
mfaume I don't know how many times I have watched this movie when I was a kid; It was one of my favorite movies. Action packed and I mean a good action flick.It's worth watching!
Michael A. Martinez This film seems oddly more topical now with the French battling Tuareg militias in the Mali desert, especially as the plot concerns an isolated tribe dealing with a modern army (obviously patterned after Libya or Algeria, but never named). Mark Harmon (who actually does quite well even if he doesn't look the part) is bizarrely cast as the lead Tuareg, who must defend his honor by rescuing a refugee who sought his tribe's help. It turns out that the refugee (Luis Prendes) however is a major revolutionary figure whose existence could destabilize the country.I remember seeing this film on TV when I was a kid living in Italy. Not speaking Italian, I still had a good enough idea of what was going on to get swept up in the energy of the film and the scene where Harmon drinks blood from a camel's neck has stuck in my mind ever since. Now as an adult and a huge fan of Italian action, I see a lot to appreciate this film and unfortunately lot to shake my head at. It's a welcome change of pace for Italian B-movies to delve into something more original and creative than another blatant ripoff of a Hollywood blockbuster as was the fad at the time. However this film is full of questionable plot holes, bad acting, silly posturing, and marred by an overall cheapness which detracts from a lot of the magic set up by the entrancingly story which brims with potential.Director Enzo G. Castellari does here some of what he does best, which is to stage a few standout violent action scenes featuring his trade mark slow motion, stunts, and bloodletting (bridging the gap from Sam Peckinpah to John Woo). I don't know if it helps or hurts the film's meaningful overtones and messages, which focus more on the mysticism of the desert and honor with a much slower pace. The action of the film is weighted toward the center, leaving the third act quite curiously ponderous and jumpy, focusing more on Harmon evading guards than what any of the other characters (like a sympathetic captain Paolo Malco who enjoys a lot of screen time in the second act) in the dark with no resolution.Markedly better, more coherent and ambitious than any of Castellari's other early 80's action films, this film unfortunately was a major financial risk and failed to recoup from its expenses, leaving Castellari's career to enter an unfortunate steep decline immediately. Meanwhile his rival Antonio Margheriti continued making relatively good action movies in the Philippines for years. Don't get me wrong, this film has some great moments, but the location filming and knock-em-out action scenes probably were far too expensive for the cheapo Italian producers to handle. The most egregious effect comes early on where Harmon's son fends off a leopard by shooting it in the head. In place of a real leopard they opted to use a stuffed animal which barely looks like a leopard at all!Watch for a cameo appearance by Castellari as a prison guard who gets his kicks out of beating prisoners with his fists, plus frequent Margheriti collaborator Paul Costello as a villainous politician. Another awesome scene has Harmon single-handedly wiping out an entire fortress full of bad guys.

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