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Where No Vultures Fly

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Director
  
Harry Watt

Country
  
United KingdomSouth Africa

7/10
IMDb

Language
  
English

Where No Vultures Fly movie poster

Writer
  
W. P. Lipscomb
, ,

Release date
  
November 1951

Based on
  
story by Harry Watt

Where No Vultures Fly is a 1951 British film. It was released under the title Ivory Hunter in the United States. It was directed by Harry Watt and starred Anthony Steel and Dinah Sheridan. The film was inspired by the work of the conservationist Mervyn Cowie. The film's opening credits state that "the characters in this film are imaginary, but the story is based on the recent struggle of Mervyn Cowie to form the National Parks of Kenya." The title Where No Vultures Fly denotes areas where there are no dead animals.

Contents

Where No Vultures Fly wwwgstaticcomtvthumbdvdboxart5141p5141dv8

The film had a sequel West of Zanzibar.

Where No Vultures Fly Blog Archive Where No Vultures Fly 1951

Where no vultures fly


Plot

Where No Vultures Fly Blog Archive Where No Vultures Fly 1951

The film is set in East Africa. It is about a game warden called Bob Payton (Anthony Steel). He is horrified by the destruction of wild animals by ivory hunters. He establishes a wildlife sanctuary. He is attacked by wild animals and must contend with a villainous ivory poacher (Harold Warrender).

Development

Where No Vultures Fly Blog Archive Where no vultures fly more COLOUR scenes

The movie was one of a series of "expeditionary films" Harry Watt made, like The Overlanders, where he would find the story from visiting a location. "These expeditionary films are really journalistic jobs", he wrote later. "You get sent out to a country by the studio, stay as long as you can without being fired and a story generally crops up."

Where No Vultures Fly HORIZONTES SIN BUITRES MOVIE POSTER WHERE NO VULTURES FLY MOVIE

Watt got the idea of the film after a chance remark from a game warden in Tanganyika. He was shooting zebras and when Watt wondered if it was necessary, the warden remarked that Watt "talk like Mervyn Cowie". This prompted the director to track down Cowie in Nairobi, who inspired the story.

W.P. Lipscomb wrote the script based on Harry Watt's original idea. Ralph Smart worked on it. According to Leslie Norman "the script was turned down generally, so I went in and added a bit which made them accept it."

The movie was a co=production between Ealing and South Africa's African Films, with half the financing coming from South Africa. (Africa Films was a South African theatre chain.)

Shooting

Watt took a full unit to Africa and based it at Amboseli, south of Nairobi. They built a complete village of huts for the crew to live in.

Anthony Steel contracted malaria during filming on location in Africa.

Reception

The movie was selected for the 1951 Royal Command Performance, over other contenders such as A Place in the Sun and Outcast of the Islands.

Box Office

It was the second most popular film at the British box office in 1952.

In 1957, the film and its sequel were listed among the seventeen most popular movies the Rank organisation ever released in the US.

References

Where No Vultures Fly Wikipedia
Where No Vultures Fly IMDb Where No Vultures Fly themoviedb.org


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