Find free sources for our audience.

Watch Free
Watch Free
Watch Free

Will Our Heroes Be Able to Find Their Friend Who Has Mysteriously Disappeared in Africa?

December. 19,1968
Rating:
7
Trailer Synopsis Cast Keywords

A rich businessman is fed up with work, family, society, and goes with his accountant to Africa, in search of his brother-in-law who had vanished there in mysterious circumstances. They will find him alright - as a tribal chief, surrounded with lots of topless, shapely wives. They are going to return to civilisation, but will their friend come with them?

Alberto Sordi as  Fausto Di Salvio
Bernard Blier as  Ubaldo Palmarini
Nino Manfredi as  Oreste Sabatini
Giuliana Lojodice as  Marisa Sabatini
Franca Bettoia as  Rita Di Salvio
Manuel Zarzo as  Padre Tomeo
Erika Blanc as  Geneviève
José María Mendoza as  Il Leopardo
Vittorio André as  Père Francesco

Similar titles

I Dreamed of Africa
I Dreamed of Africa
Inspired by the true story of indomitable Kuki Gallmann, the film tells of a beautiful and inquisitive woman who had the courage to escape from her comfortable yet monotonous life in Italy to start anew in the African wilderness with her son, Emanuele, and her new husband, Paolo. Gallmann faces great danger there but eventually becomes a celebrated conservationist.
I Dreamed of Africa 2000
Kakababur Protyaborton
Kakababur Protyaborton
A famous hotel in Nairobi is about to close. People don't go to that hotel like before. Kakababu and Santu go to the hotel to find out the reason. Based on Jongoler Modhye Ek Hotel.
Kakababur Protyaborton 2022
Against the Wild II: Survive the Serengeti
Against the Wild II: Survive the Serengeti
Two kids and their dog must use all their skills to survive in the African bush after a plane crash.
Against the Wild II: Survive the Serengeti 2016
The African Queen
The African Queen
At the start of the First World War, in the middle of Africa’s nowhere, a gin soaked riverboat captain is persuaded by a strong-willed missionary to go down river and face-off a German warship.
The African Queen 1952
Nabonga
Nabonga
When a treasure hunter seeks a downed airplane in the jungles of Africa, he encounters one of the passenger's young daughter, now fully grown, and with a gorilla protector.
Nabonga 1944
The Bucket List
The Bucket List
Corporate billionaire Edward Cole and working class mechanic Carter Chambers are worlds apart. At a crossroads in their lives, they share a hospital room and discover they have two things in common: a desire to spend the time they have left doing everything they ever wanted to do and an unrealized need to come to terms with who they are. Together they embark on the road trip of a lifetime, becoming friends along the way and learning to live life to the fullest, with insight and humor.
The Bucket List 2007
Sahara
Sahara
Seasoned adventurer and treasure hunter Dirk Pitt, a former Navy SEAL, sets out for the African desert with his wisecracking buddy Al in search of a confederate ironclad battleship rumored to have vanished long ago, the main draw being the treasure supposedly hidden within the lost vessel. When the daring duo come across Dr. Eva Rojas, a beautiful scientist who is juggling an escape from a warlord and a mission to stop the spread of a powerful plague, their desert expedition begins to heat up.
Sahara 2005
The Three Investigators and The Secret Of Skeleton Island
The Three Investigators and The Secret Of Skeleton Island
In "The Three Investigators and The Secret of Skeleton Island" the cult detective trio from Rocky Beach, California, fall into a breath-taking mixture of adventure, thriller and mystery. Only by a hairs-breadth did they escape with their lives after the successful completion of their last case.
The Three Investigators and The Secret Of Skeleton Island 2008
The Snows of Kilimanjaro
The Snows of Kilimanjaro
Writer Harry Street reflects on his life as he lies dying from an infection while on safari in the shadow of Mount Kilimanjaro.
The Snows of Kilimanjaro 1952
Gone Too Far!
Gone Too Far!
When London teenager Yemi’s big brother comes to live with him from Nigeria, Ikudayisi’s terrible fashion sense, broad Yoruba accent and misplaced confidence with the opposite sex threaten to destroy Yemi’s already small amount of street cred. When the pair are forced to spend the day together on their Peckham estate Yemi is forced to confront local bullies, the unattainable girl of his dreams and his own African heritage, eventually teaching both of them the values of family and self-respect.
Gone Too Far! 2014

Reviews

zogz54
1968/12/19

It must first be stated that if Ettore Scola were to remake this movie today, it would probably be very different in one regard: it would be careful to feature more fully developed African characters. As it is, the film is only really interested in its (pre-dominantly male) European characters, and can be accused of the same fault that Chinua Achebe laid at the door of Conrad's 'Heart of Darkness' (of which this film is a kind of comic variation), that of using Africa as a mere backdrop to an investigation of European problems. Nevertheless, though the film is undeniably Eurocentric in its outlook, it neither demeans nor patronises Africans; there are no bloodthirsty cannibals, noble savages or grinning simpletons here. Alberto Sordi's protagonist has his preconceptions about the continent undercut in several amusing scenes, most neatly when he first arrives, and proceeds to film the 'exotic' locals, only to be disconcerted when he realises that he himself is being filmed by an African armed with a bigger, more expensive camera; Sordi's outlandish safari gear renders him as much of an object of amazed curiosity to members of the indigenous population as they are to him.The action takes a while to get going, with some over-extended wildlife sequences taxing one's patience a little, but once things are truly underway, a gently humorous odyssey unfolds, with false starts, mishaps, and odd little diversions impeding our two heroes' search for the enigmatic Titino. The contrast in the acting styles of Sordi and Blier is highly effective: the former is appropriately blustery and pompous, teetering at times on the edge of self-parody, whilst Blier underplays for all he's worth, and all but steals the show. They make for a genuinely engaging duo, and Manuel Zarzo and Nino Manfredi are memorable in supporting roles. The excellence of the actors is matched by that of the script, which is admirably relaxed and expansive, never overdoing its comic set-pieces (a stand-out example is some very funny business involving a confusion over cigarettes and a tape-recorder).The accusations of escapism that were levelled at the film when it first appeared (1968, after all) seem misplaced today: what Scola presents is not an indulgent, soft-headed retreat from the maladies of European capitalism, but a final image of uncertainty, circularity and psychological conflict. The film seems more relevant today than many of the more dated simplifications, pipe dreams and inanities that abounded in its year of release, and surely deserves a DVD run here in Britain. With its faults, thoroughly recommended.

... more
petra_ste
1968/12/20

This on-the-road adventure - whose ironically pompous title translates as "Will our heroes manage to save their friend mysteriously disappeared in Africa?" - is the comedic version of Joseph Conrad's masterpiece Heart of Darkness. Italian businessman Di Salvio (Alberto Sordi) and his scarcely enthusiastic sidekick Palmarini (Bernard Blier) travel through Africa searching for Titino (Nino Manfredi), Di Salvio's brother-in-law; during their journey they meet a multitude of weird individuals and face experiences ranging from ingloriously embarrassing to flat-out dangerous.Sordi is hilarious in his trademark role, a mediocre, sardonic man not nearly as smart or competent as he believes, and yet neither evil nor unlikable; Di Salvio, bored by his shallow life, sees the search for Titino as his only opportunity for a memorable adventure. Blier is perfect as bald, overweight Palmarini, a Sancho-like accountant whose meager pragmatism (faced with a spectacular exotic vista, he starts filing his tax returns) is the perfect foil to his boss' pomposity. The great Nino Manfredi has a short but crucial role as mysterious Titino.An underrated, endlessly quotable comedy with many memorable scenes. 8/10

... more
sergio.mannu
1968/12/21

This marvellous film is an authentic masterpiece, perhaps among the best products of the Italian cinema. The confrontation of two different human kinds, the enterprising editor Fausto Di Salvio (Alberto Sordi) and his shabby book-keeper Ubaldo Palmarini, interpreted by an extraordinary Bernard Blier, is the main source of an intelligent and never ending comicality. The two protagonists reach Africa in search for Mr. Di Salvio's brother-in-law, Oreste Sabatini (Nino Manfredi), who disappeared in the Black Continent without giving news of himself anymore. The trip, full of unbelievable adventures, becomes also for the watcher the occasion to taste the beauty of an uncorrupted nature and to distinguish the true values of life from the silly and stressing habits of modern society. An elegant soundtrack signed by Armando Trovajoli is the perfect musical comment for this movie, skilfully directed by Ettore Scola, which confirms again his limpid talent of master of the Italian comedy.

... more
Watch Free for 30 Days

Stream thousands of hit movies and TV shows