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The Last Valley (film)

The Last Valley is a 1971 film directed by James Clavell, a historical drama set during the Thirty Years' War (1618–1648). While war ravages southern Germany, a mercenary leader (Michael Caine) and a teacher (Omar Sharif) stumble upon a valley untouched by the war. Based upon the novel The Last Valley (1959), by J. B. Pick,[2] the cinematic version of The Last Valley, directed by James Clavell, was the final feature film photographed with the Todd-AO 70 mm widescreen process until it was revived to make the film Baraka in 1991.

The Last Valley
US release Poster (B)
Directed byJames Clavell
Written byJames Clavell
Based onthe novel The Last Valley
by J. B. Pick
Produced byJames Clavell
executive
Martin Baum
StarringMichael Caine
Omar Sharif
Florinda Bolkan
Nigel Davenport
Per Oscarsson
CinematographyJohn Wilcox Norman Warwick Cinematography Second Unit
Edited byJohn Bloom
Music byJohn Barry
Production
companies
Season Productions
ABC Pictures Corporation
Distributed byCinerama Releasing Corporation
Release date
  • 28 January 1971 (1971-01-28)
Running time
128 minutes
CountriesUnited Kingdom
United States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$6,250,000[1]
Box office$1,280,000[1]

Michael Caine called it "the most disappointing picture I ever made. Disappointing not from the finished picture, but the reaction to it. It is a performance of which I’m particularly proud, one of the best performances I ever gave, as a matter of fact. For a start, it was anti-religious war at the time of Northern Ireland. I did the film to show what I felt about all the religions. But it meant absolutely nothing to the public, the critics were extremely unkind, and it was a terrible thing for me because everybody was sure it would be a big hit — and so was I."[3]

Plot edit

"The Captain" leads a band of mercenaries who fight for whoever will pay them, regardless of religion. His soldiers pillage the countryside, raping and looting when not fighting. Vogel is a former teacher trying to survive the fighting and resulting chaos in south-central Germany. Vogel runs from the Captain's force, and eventually stumbles upon an idyllic mountain valley, untouched by war.

The Captain and his small band are not far behind. Caught, Vogel convinces the Captain to preserve the village so it can shelter the band through the coming winter, as the outside world faces famine, plague and the devastation of war. "Live," Vogel tells the Captain, "while the army dies." The Captain thinks the idea is good. He kills Korski, one of his own men, without warning when Korski objects to the idea of desertion. The local headman, Gruber, submits, after obtaining the best terms he can.

The local Catholic priest is livid that the mercenaries include a number of Protestants (and nihilistic atheists for that matter), but there is nothing he can do to sway the Captain. The Captain kills several dissenting members of his band to uphold their pledge to set aside religious divisions.

The locals accept their fate. The Captain and Gruber agree to appoint Vogel as judge to settle disputes between villagers and soldiers. As long as food, shelter, and a small number of women are provided, the mercenaries leave the locals alone.

The Captain takes Gruber's wife, Erica, for himself. Hansen attempts to rape a girl. When Vogel stops him, he and two others try but fail to kill the Captain. They flee, but return with a larger mercenary band before the winter closes the valley to outsiders. However, the Captain has anticipated this, and Hansen and his band are destroyed.

From the first peddler to enter the valley in the spring, the Captain learns of a major military campaign in the Upper Rhineland and decides to seek employment with Bernard of Saxe-Weimar. Vogel wants to accompany him, fearing Gruber will have him killed once the Captain leaves. However, the Captain orders Vogel to stay as the condition of not sacking the village, leaving Geddes and Pirelli behind as guards.

After the Captain departs, the priest catches Erica praying to Satan to keep the Captain safe. The priest has her tortured and condemned to be burned at the stake. To spare her further suffering, Vogel kills her before her body is consigned to the flames. Enraged, Geddes pushes the priest into the fire and holds him there. Both are killed.

Meanwhile, the Captain and his men fight in a night assault on a fortified city. He returns to the valley with the only other survivor of his band. Vogel tries to warn him, but the Captain rides into an ambush set by Gruber. The Captain, however, is dying of his battle wounds, so there is no fighting. He tells Vogel, "You were right. I was wrong." Inge, a young woman who has fallen in love with Vogel, wants to leave with him, but he tells her to stay, and walks off alone.

Cast edit

Production edit

Development edit

The novel was published in 1960.[4] The New York Times called it "oddly compelling".[5] The Chicago Tribune called it "a strange and memorable book."[6]

In July 1967 it was announced that James Clavell, then enjoying success with the release of the film To Sir With Love and the book Tai-Pan, would adapt the book into a screenplay and direct a film adaptation for the Mirisch Corporation.[7]

In November 1968 it was announced Clavell would make the film for ABC Pictures.[8] The head of ABC was Martin Baum who was Clavell's agent and who had helped put together To Sir, with Love.[9]

Clavell was going to make the film after The Great Siege, a story of the Siege of Malta, which he was going to do after Where's Jack? (1967). He ended up not making Great Siege.[10] Before making The Last Valley he said he would write another book afterwards "to see if I've still got it."[11] (This would become Shogun.)

Omar Sharif was the first star to sign. By June 1969 Michael Caine had also signed on. At one stage the film was going to be called Somewhere in the Mountains There is a Last Valley. It had the biggest budget of any picture made to that point by ABC Pictures.[12] Caine was paid $750,000, Sharif $600,000.[13] At one stage the film was going to be called Somewhere in the Mountains There is a Last Valley or A Last Valley.

Clavell cast much of the supporting cast from British rep companies.[14]

Shooting edit

Filming started 25 August 1969 in Austria.[15]

The film was mostly shot in Tyrol, Austria (Trins and Gschnitz and the Gschnitztal Valley). Actor Martin Miller collapsed and died on the set before shooting of the first scene commenced.[16]

Caine played a German. He later said, "I thought that the obvious trap was to play a German like a man trying to do a German accent; so I decided to play my character like a German trying to speak perfect English. I hired dialect records and listened to them non-stop for a few days. Then I put it out of my mind and tried to speak good English but with a German’s basic speech pattern."[17]

It was the first film for Brian Blessed who recalled it "was a happy experience for everyone involved. The director and his management were inordinately kind to us, doing everything in their power to make us comfortable."[18]

In October 1970 Clavell said he had been working on the film for three years. "I imagine that if I'd come along with the project six months later, it wouldn't have been made at all. By then the financial rot had set in." (A proposed film of his novel Tai Pan had been cancelled due to its cost.)[19]

Reception edit

Box office edit

Caine later claimed " I knew pretty well as soon as we finished filming that it wasn’t going to work at the box office."[20] The film was one of the most popular movies at the British box office in 1971.[21] However, it was an expensive failure overall. It earned rentals of $380,000 in North America and $900,000 in other countries; after deducting distribution costs it recorded an overall loss of $7,185,000.[1]

Caine later wrote in his memoirs, "I liked this film very much but it was not a success, due mainly I think to problems of timing. We were in the midst of the Vietnam War, and here was a story about the Hundred Year War in Germany, set in the Middle Ages."[22]

Critical edit

The Monthly Film Bulletin called it "unexpectedly terse, elegant and intelligent."[23]

Variety said it was "disappointing" and "faces an uphill battle" at the box office.[24] The Evening Standard called it "an excellent advertisement for the Tyrolean Tourist Board."[25]

With its setting in the Thirty Years' War, it covered a period never previously depicted on film (apart from 1933's Queen Christina). In this light, George MacDonald Fraser wrote in 1988, "The plot left me bewildered - in fact the whole bloody business is probably an excellent microcosm of the Thirty Years' War, with no clear picture of what is happening and half the cast ending up dead to no purpose. To that extent, it must be rated a successful film. ... As a drama, The Last Valley is not remarkable; as a reminder of what happened in Central Europe, 1618-48, and shaped the future of Germany, it reads an interesting lesson." Fraser says of the stars, "Michael Caine ... gives one of his best performances as the hard-bitten mercenary captain, nicely complemented by Omar Sharif as the personification of reason."[26]

Home media edit

The Last Valley was released on VHS by Magnetic Video Corporation in 1981, and on CED by CBS/Fox Video in 1983. Since then, it has been released on DVD through three different labels: by Anchor Bay Entertainment on November 16, 1999, by MGM Home Entertainment on May 25, 2004, and by Kino Lorber Studio Classics (on both DVD and Blu-ray) on June 23, 2020.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "ABC's 5 Years of Film Production Profits & Losses", Variety, 31 May 1973 p 3
  2. ^ Pick, J. B. (1960). The Last Valley. Boston; Toronto: Little, Brown and Company. OCLC 1449975.
  3. ^ Hall, William (2004). 70 not out : the authorised biography of Sir Michael Caine. John Blake. p. 221.
  4. ^ History Must Stop: The Last Valley. By J.B. Pick. 176 pp. Bottom Little, Brown & Co. $3.50. By Frederic Morton. New York Times 24 Jan 1960: BR4.
  5. ^ Books of The Times By Orville Prescott. The New York Times 22 Jan 1960: 25.
  6. ^ Memorable Little Tale of Thirty Years' War. Redman, Ben Ray. Chicago Daily Tribune 28 Feb 1960: b4.
  7. ^ Et Tu Pasolini? By A.H. Weiler. The New York Times] 30 July 1967: 81.
  8. ^ Movie Call Sheet: 'The Last Valley' for Clavell Martin, Betty. Los Angeles Times 8 Nov 1968: f18.
  9. ^ A Blue-Ribbon Packager of Movie Deals. Warga, Wayne. Los Angeles Times 20 April 1969: w1.
  10. ^ The Great Siege' Purchased. Martin, Betty. Los Angeles Times 13 July 1968: 18.
  11. ^ 'James Clavell: Filmdom's Do-It-Yourselfer' Warga, Wayne. Los Angeles Times 4 April 1969: h13.
  12. ^ Movie Call Sheet: Michael Caine Signs for Role. Martin, Betty. Los Angeles Times 17 June 1969: c15.
  13. ^ Hall, p. 223.
  14. ^ 12-Hour TV Movie: 'Shogun' to Be Filmed in Japan. Smith, Cecil. Los Angeles Times 2 May 1979: f1.
  15. ^ Movie Call Sheet: Plays to Be Filmed in 70s. Martin, Betty. Los Angeles Times 7 August 1969: c17.
  16. ^ "Unknown title". The Times. California. 4 March 1971. p. 15.
  17. ^ Caine, Michael (1990). Acting in film: an actor's take on movie making. Applause Theatre Book. p. 78.
  18. ^ Blessed, Brian (1995). Nothing's impossible. Isis. p. 16. ISBN 9781856951135.
  19. ^ Kleiner, Dick (8 October 1970). "$6 mill film stars Caine, Sharif". Lancaster New Era. p. 47.
  20. ^ Caine, Michael (2010). The elephant to Hollywood. Hodder & Stoughton. p. 152.
  21. ^ Harper, Sue (2011). British Film Culture in the 1970s: The Boundaries of Pleasure: The Boundaries of Pleasure. Edinburgh University Press. p. 269. ISBN 9780748654260.
  22. ^ Caine, Michael. What's It All About?. p. 269.
  23. ^ Last Valley, The Monthly Film Bulletin; London Vol. 38, Iss. 444, (Jan 1, 1971): 77.
  24. ^ "The Last Valley Review". Variety Film Reviews. 1983. p. 14.
  25. ^ Jenkins, Valerie (8 April 1971). "Films". Evening Standard. p. 24.
  26. ^ Fraser, George MacDonald (1988). The Hollywood History of the World. London: Michael Joseph Limited. pp. 107–108. ISBN 0-7181-2997-0.

Sources edit

External links edit

  • The Last Valley at IMDb
  • The Last Valley at TCMDB
  • The Last Valley at Letterbox DVD
  • The Last Valley at Rotten Tomatoes
  • The Last Valley at AllMovie
  • The Last Valley at Variety

last, valley, film, last, valley, 1971, film, directed, james, clavell, historical, drama, during, thirty, years, 1618, 1648, while, ravages, southern, germany, mercenary, leader, michael, caine, teacher, omar, sharif, stumble, upon, valley, untouched, based, . The Last Valley is a 1971 film directed by James Clavell a historical drama set during the Thirty Years War 1618 1648 While war ravages southern Germany a mercenary leader Michael Caine and a teacher Omar Sharif stumble upon a valley untouched by the war Based upon the novel The Last Valley 1959 by J B Pick 2 the cinematic version of The Last Valley directed by James Clavell was the final feature film photographed with the Todd AO 70 mm widescreen process until it was revived to make the film Baraka in 1991 The Last ValleyUS release Poster B Directed byJames ClavellWritten byJames ClavellBased onthe novel The Last Valleyby J B PickProduced byJames ClavellexecutiveMartin BaumStarringMichael CaineOmar SharifFlorinda BolkanNigel DavenportPer OscarssonCinematographyJohn Wilcox Norman Warwick Cinematography Second UnitEdited byJohn BloomMusic byJohn BarryProductioncompaniesSeason ProductionsABC Pictures CorporationDistributed byCinerama Releasing CorporationRelease date28 January 1971 1971 01 28 Running time128 minutesCountriesUnited KingdomUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 6 250 000 1 Box office 1 280 000 1 Michael Caine called it the most disappointing picture I ever made Disappointing not from the finished picture but the reaction to it It is a performance of which I m particularly proud one of the best performances I ever gave as a matter of fact For a start it was anti religious war at the time of Northern Ireland I did the film to show what I felt about all the religions But it meant absolutely nothing to the public the critics were extremely unkind and it was a terrible thing for me because everybody was sure it would be a big hit and so was I 3 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Development 3 2 Shooting 4 Reception 4 1 Box office 4 2 Critical 5 Home media 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksPlot edit The Captain leads a band of mercenaries who fight for whoever will pay them regardless of religion His soldiers pillage the countryside raping and looting when not fighting Vogel is a former teacher trying to survive the fighting and resulting chaos in south central Germany Vogel runs from the Captain s force and eventually stumbles upon an idyllic mountain valley untouched by war The Captain and his small band are not far behind Caught Vogel convinces the Captain to preserve the village so it can shelter the band through the coming winter as the outside world faces famine plague and the devastation of war Live Vogel tells the Captain while the army dies The Captain thinks the idea is good He kills Korski one of his own men without warning when Korski objects to the idea of desertion The local headman Gruber submits after obtaining the best terms he can The local Catholic priest is livid that the mercenaries include a number of Protestants and nihilistic atheists for that matter but there is nothing he can do to sway the Captain The Captain kills several dissenting members of his band to uphold their pledge to set aside religious divisions The locals accept their fate The Captain and Gruber agree to appoint Vogel as judge to settle disputes between villagers and soldiers As long as food shelter and a small number of women are provided the mercenaries leave the locals alone The Captain takes Gruber s wife Erica for himself Hansen attempts to rape a girl When Vogel stops him he and two others try but fail to kill the Captain They flee but return with a larger mercenary band before the winter closes the valley to outsiders However the Captain has anticipated this and Hansen and his band are destroyed From the first peddler to enter the valley in the spring the Captain learns of a major military campaign in the Upper Rhineland and decides to seek employment with Bernard of Saxe Weimar Vogel wants to accompany him fearing Gruber will have him killed once the Captain leaves However the Captain orders Vogel to stay as the condition of not sacking the village leaving Geddes and Pirelli behind as guards After the Captain departs the priest catches Erica praying to Satan to keep the Captain safe The priest has her tortured and condemned to be burned at the stake To spare her further suffering Vogel kills her before her body is consigned to the flames Enraged Geddes pushes the priest into the fire and holds him there Both are killed Meanwhile the Captain and his men fight in a night assault on a fortified city He returns to the valley with the only other survivor of his band Vogel tries to warn him but the Captain rides into an ambush set by Gruber The Captain however is dying of his battle wounds so there is no fighting He tells Vogel You were right I was wrong Inge a young woman who has fallen in love with Vogel wants to leave with him but he tells her to stay and walks off alone Cast editMichael Caine as The Captain Omar Sharif as Vogel Florinda Bolkan as Erica Nigel Davenport as Gruber Per Oscarsson as Father Sebastian Arthur O Connell as Hoffman Madeleine Hinde as Inge Yorgo Voyagis as Pirelli Vladek Sheybal as Matthias Miguel Alejandro as Julio Christian Roberts as Andreas Brian Blessed as Korski Ian Hogg as Graf Michael Gothard as Hansen George Innes as Vornez John Hallam as Geddes Leon Lissek as CzerakiProduction editDevelopment edit The novel was published in 1960 4 The New York Times called it oddly compelling 5 The Chicago Tribune called it a strange and memorable book 6 In July 1967 it was announced that James Clavell then enjoying success with the release of the film To Sir With Love and the book Tai Pan would adapt the book into a screenplay and direct a film adaptation for the Mirisch Corporation 7 In November 1968 it was announced Clavell would make the film for ABC Pictures 8 The head of ABC was Martin Baum who was Clavell s agent and who had helped put together To Sir with Love 9 Clavell was going to make the film after The Great Siege a story of the Siege of Malta which he was going to do after Where s Jack 1967 He ended up not making Great Siege 10 Before making The Last Valley he said he would write another book afterwards to see if I ve still got it 11 This would become Shogun Omar Sharif was the first star to sign By June 1969 Michael Caine had also signed on At one stage the film was going to be called Somewhere in the Mountains There is a Last Valley It had the biggest budget of any picture made to that point by ABC Pictures 12 Caine was paid 750 000 Sharif 600 000 13 At one stage the film was going to be called Somewhere in the Mountains There is a Last Valley or A Last Valley Clavell cast much of the supporting cast from British rep companies 14 Shooting edit Filming started 25 August 1969 in Austria 15 The film was mostly shot in Tyrol Austria Trins and Gschnitz and the Gschnitztal Valley Actor Martin Miller collapsed and died on the set before shooting of the first scene commenced 16 Caine played a German He later said I thought that the obvious trap was to play a German like a man trying to do a German accent so I decided to play my character like a German trying to speak perfect English I hired dialect records and listened to them non stop for a few days Then I put it out of my mind and tried to speak good English but with a German s basic speech pattern 17 It was the first film for Brian Blessed who recalled it was a happy experience for everyone involved The director and his management were inordinately kind to us doing everything in their power to make us comfortable 18 In October 1970 Clavell said he had been working on the film for three years I imagine that if I d come along with the project six months later it wouldn t have been made at all By then the financial rot had set in A proposed film of his novel Tai Pan had been cancelled due to its cost 19 Reception editBox office edit Caine later claimed I knew pretty well as soon as we finished filming that it wasn t going to work at the box office 20 The film was one of the most popular movies at the British box office in 1971 21 However it was an expensive failure overall It earned rentals of 380 000 in North America and 900 000 in other countries after deducting distribution costs it recorded an overall loss of 7 185 000 1 Caine later wrote in his memoirs I liked this film very much but it was not a success due mainly I think to problems of timing We were in the midst of the Vietnam War and here was a story about the Hundred Year War in Germany set in the Middle Ages 22 Critical edit The Monthly Film Bulletin called it unexpectedly terse elegant and intelligent 23 Variety said it was disappointing and faces an uphill battle at the box office 24 The Evening Standard called it an excellent advertisement for the Tyrolean Tourist Board 25 With its setting in the Thirty Years War it covered a period never previously depicted on film apart from 1933 s Queen Christina In this light George MacDonald Fraser wrote in 1988 The plot left me bewildered in fact the whole bloody business is probably an excellent microcosm of the Thirty Years War with no clear picture of what is happening and half the cast ending up dead to no purpose To that extent it must be rated a successful film As a drama The Last Valley is not remarkable as a reminder of what happened in Central Europe 1618 48 and shaped the future of Germany it reads an interesting lesson Fraser says of the stars Michael Caine gives one of his best performances as the hard bitten mercenary captain nicely complemented by Omar Sharif as the personification of reason 26 Home media editThe Last Valley was released on VHS by Magnetic Video Corporation in 1981 and on CED by CBS Fox Video in 1983 Since then it has been released on DVD through three different labels by Anchor Bay Entertainment on November 16 1999 by MGM Home Entertainment on May 25 2004 and by Kino Lorber Studio Classics on both DVD and Blu ray on June 23 2020 References edit a b c ABC s 5 Years of Film Production Profits amp Losses Variety 31 May 1973 p 3 Pick J B 1960 The Last Valley Boston Toronto Little Brown and Company OCLC 1449975 Hall William 2004 70 not out the authorised biography of Sir Michael Caine John Blake p 221 History Must Stop The Last Valley By J B Pick 176 pp Bottom Little Brown amp Co 3 50 By Frederic Morton New York Times 24 Jan 1960 BR4 Books of The Times By Orville Prescott The New York Times 22 Jan 1960 25 Memorable Little Tale of Thirty Years War Redman Ben Ray Chicago Daily Tribune 28 Feb 1960 b4 Et Tu Pasolini By A H Weiler The New York Times 30 July 1967 81 Movie Call Sheet The Last Valley for Clavell Martin Betty Los Angeles Times 8 Nov 1968 f18 A Blue Ribbon Packager of Movie Deals Warga Wayne Los Angeles Times 20 April 1969 w1 The Great Siege Purchased Martin Betty Los Angeles Times 13 July 1968 18 James Clavell Filmdom s Do It Yourselfer Warga Wayne Los Angeles Times 4 April 1969 h13 Movie Call Sheet Michael Caine Signs for Role Martin Betty Los Angeles Times 17 June 1969 c15 Hall p 223 12 Hour TV Movie Shogun to Be Filmed in Japan Smith Cecil Los Angeles Times 2 May 1979 f1 Movie Call Sheet Plays to Be Filmed in 70s Martin Betty Los Angeles Times 7 August 1969 c17 Unknown title The Times California 4 March 1971 p 15 Caine Michael 1990 Acting in film an actor s take on movie making Applause Theatre Book p 78 Blessed Brian 1995 Nothing s impossible Isis p 16 ISBN 9781856951135 Kleiner Dick 8 October 1970 6 mill film stars Caine Sharif Lancaster New Era p 47 Caine Michael 2010 The elephant to Hollywood Hodder amp Stoughton p 152 Harper Sue 2011 British Film Culture in the 1970s The Boundaries of Pleasure The Boundaries of Pleasure Edinburgh University Press p 269 ISBN 9780748654260 Caine Michael What s It All About p 269 Last Valley The Monthly Film Bulletin London Vol 38 Iss 444 Jan 1 1971 77 The Last Valley Review Variety Film Reviews 1983 p 14 Jenkins Valerie 8 April 1971 Films Evening Standard p 24 Fraser George MacDonald 1988 The Hollywood History of the World London Michael Joseph Limited pp 107 108 ISBN 0 7181 2997 0 Sources editClavell James Director January 28 1971 The Last Valley Motion picture ABC External links editThe Last Valley at IMDb The Last Valley at TCMDB The Last Valley at Letterbox DVD The Last Valley at Rotten Tomatoes The Last Valley at AllMovie The Last Valley at Variety Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Last Valley film amp oldid 1171205712, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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