The Wild Men of Kurdistan
The Wild Men of Kurdistan
| 06 October 1965 (USA)
The Wild Men of Kurdistan Trailers

After dealing with the Shut in the Balkans, Kara Ben-Nemsi ('Karl the German') receives a firman (precious passport) from the padishah (Ottoman sultan) before he continues his travels through Kurdistan. Achmed El Corda, the son of Halef's Hadedhin Beduin tribe's sheik Mohammed Emin, has been captured by the machredsh (Turkish governor) of Mossul for resisting water seizure by his Turkish troops. Kara takes charge of the rescue.

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Reviews
Lucybespro

It is a performances centric movie

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StyleSk8r

At first rather annoying in its heavy emphasis on reenactments, this movie ultimately proves fascinating, simply because the complicated, highly dramatic tale it tells still almost defies belief.

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Catangro

After playing with our expectations, this turns out to be a very different sort of film.

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Lachlan Coulson

This is a gorgeous movie made by a gorgeous spirit.

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Horst in Translation (filmreviews@web.de)

"Dirchs wilde Kurdistan" or "Wild Kurdistan" is a West German / Spanish co-production from 1965, so this film already had its 50th anniversary last year. German audiences in the 1960s were truly crazy for these Karl May film adaptations and writer and director Franz Josef Gottlieb gave them exactly what they wanted. He is known for having a good touch with what the masses want to see as he also worked on many Edgar Wallace films and some of the German semi-known soft-core porn movies. But back to this one here. At some point, people realized Lex Barker was too big of a star to play second fiddle to Pierre Brice in the Winnetou movies, so he got his own Kara Ben Nemsi franchise. This film here follows "Der Schuch". Unfortunately, the film has not aged very well by today's standards. The story is predictable and the film lacks shades completely in terms of who's good or who's evil. It's either one or the other. And Barker's character is presented as the ultimate man. Every woman desires him, the bad guys fear him, his friends admire him. He is basically God in a human's body and it gets annoying pretty quickly. Barker is not the worst actor, it is mostly about the way the character was written. Other than him, this 100-minute movie includes a handful of actors that are known from other Karl May adaptations. But it is all too generic and stereotypical and the way the story was written with the main antagonist and everything cannot make up for that. I don't recommend the watch.

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unbrokenmetal

Kara Ben Nemsi (Lex Barker) and his friend the sheik hear that the sheik's son was taken prisoner by the evil Machredsch of Mossul. On their way to his rescue, they face many dangerous adventures and meet interesting characters such as the constantly drunk Mütesselin (Werner Peters, hilarious!), the unshakable butler Archie (Chris Howland) and the beautiful dancer Ingdscha (Marie Versini).Mostly solid, colorful fun, but not without flaws. Originally it was planned to shoot this picture at its historical location in Turkey, but for organizational reasons it was decided to make it in Spain instead (source: M. Petzel). „Durchs wilde Kurdistan" was not huge, but successful enough to have a sequel following in the same year: „Im Reich des silbernen Löwen".

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amikus2000

This adventure is more tentious than the "Schut", although Gottlieb is not the considerably better director than R. Siodmak (Schut), but the story is somehow predictable and this is fighting with its suspense. It is worth watching the landscape, that is great.

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