The Man from Cairo
{{short description|1953 film by Ray Enright}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2016}}
{{Use British English|date=April 2016}}
{{Infobox film
| name = The Man from Cairo
| starring = George Raft
Gianna Maria Canale
Massimo Serato
Guido Celano
| director = Ray H. Enright
| producer = Bernard Luber
| screenplay = Eugene Ling
Phillip Stevens
Janice Stevens
| based_on = From a story by
Ladislas Fodor
| image = The Man from Cairo FilmPoster.jpeg
| music = Renzo Rossellini
| cinematography = Mario Albertelli A.I.C.
| editing = Mario Serandrei
| released = {{Film date|1953|11|27|df=yes}}
| studio = Michael David Productions Inc.
| distributor = Eros Films (UK)
Lippert Pictures Inc.
| country = United Kingdom
Italy
United States
| language = English
| budget = $235,000Mark Thomas McGee, Talk's Cheap, Action's Expensive: The Films of Robert L. Lippert, Bear Manor Media, 2014 p 155
}}
The Man from Cairo is a 1953 British/Italian/American international coproduction film noir starring George Raft. Released in Italy as {{langx|it|Dramma nella Kasbah/Avventura ad Algeri}}, it also went under the alternative English titles Cairo Incident, Adventure in Algiers and Secrets of the Casbah.Everett Aaaker, George Raft: The Films, McFarland & Co. 2013, [https://books.google.com/books?id=Qi7JiuIsQbsC&dq=%22The+Man+from+Cairo%22&pg=PA156 pp. 155-7]
Plot
The French government is investigating the location of bullion stolen during World War 2, the gold reserves of the Free French transported to Algeria in 1940. One consignment worth $100 million, had been ambushed, the only survivor being General Dumont, who escaped before he could be tried. Five agents who attempt to find the hoard are later murdered. Therefore an American agent, Charles Stark, is called in and, while passing through Cairo in order to establish his cover story, runs into his friend Mike Canelli, an ex-serviceman who had served in Algeria for three months in 1942.
Canelli continues on to Algiers and is drugged while visiting the room of a night club dancer. Nearly arrested for her subsequent murder, he is only released when the singer's friend, Lorraine Beloyan, fails to identify him as the visitor. Afterwards the two fall in love and arouse the suspicion of the gang of thieves while trying to solve the crime themselves. The climax comes when Lorraine is kidnapped and taken on board a freight train, from which Canelli rescues her while the police, led by the disguised Dumont, intercept the train, arrest the criminals and retrieve the stolen money.
As Charles Stark arrives at the airport in Algiers to complete his assignment, Canelli is departing with Lorraine and hands his friend a newspaper with the headline reporting that an American tourist has already solved the mystery.
Cast
{{cast listing|
- George Raft as Mike Canelli
- Gianna Maria Canale as Lorraine Belogne
- Massimo Serato as Basil Constantine
- Guido Celano as Sgt. Emile Touchard
- Irene Papas as Yvonne Le Beaux
- Alfredo Varelli as General Dumont, also known as Professor Crespi
- Leon Lenoir as Capt. Akhim Bey
- Mino Doro as Major Le Blanc, assumed name of Emile Moreau
- Angelo Dessy as Pockmark
- Leslie Daniels as Colonel Fournier
- Richard Mc Namara as Charles Stark
- Franco Silva as Armeno
- Henry Vidon
- Charles Fernley Fawcett as police prefect Pierre de Montfort (uncredited)
}}
Production
The film was produced by Bernard Luber, who had just made Loan Shark with Raft. It was shot on location in Algeria and Italy and was made for $155,000, with $80,000 in deferrals. Leading lady Gianna Maria Canale, a previous runner-up in the 1947 Miss Italy competition, had the distinction of the largest age gap between Raft and one of his leading ladies.Aaker, 2013, p. 156
Reception
In a contemporary review for The New York Times, Howard Thompson found the film to be formulaic though having "a sleazy, authentic-looking backdrop." In his view it was "lethargically directed by Ray H. Enright, [where] the action soon levels off to a dull, unsurprising trot." As for the acting, "Mr. Raft is…still the same competent, brisk and unimaginative performer [and] the rest go through their assigned motions. It takes all of them a long time."{{Cite news|last=Thompson|first=Howard|date=1953-12-17|title=George Raft in 'The Man From Cairo' and a New Stage Bill Seen at the Palace|page=52|work=The New York Times}} A later critic concurs that the plot is dull and Raft comes over as "a tired, bored and boring hero".John Howard Reid, Mystery, Suspense, Film Noir and Detectiver Stories on DVD, Lulu Books, 2009, [https://books.google.com/books?id=PDGsAgAAQBAJ&dq=%22The+Man+from+Cairo%22&pg=PA123 p.123]
References
{{reflist}}
{{Ray Enright}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Man from Cairo}}
Category:1950s English-language films
Category:English-language Italian films
Category:British black-and-white films
Category:Films shot in Algeria
Category:Films directed by Ray Enright
Category:American black-and-white films