Web Wombat - the original Australian search engine
 
You are here: Home / Entertainment / DVDs / Reviews / Sahara
Entertainment Menu
Business Links
Up to 70% off Clothes
Games @ Great Prices
Buy Flowers
DVDs @ Great Prices
StrawberryNET
Clinique
Learn Forex Trading
SEO
High Interest Accounts
Credit Card Comparison
Find A Job
Enterprise Search
Business Profiles
Business Directory

Premium Links
Quick Cash Advance
Domain Names
Cheap Business Cards
Diamonds
The Buzz Insurance
Car Loans Car Finance
Boat Loans Boat Finance
Car Lease, Finance
Computer & AV Hire
Ace Rental Cars NZ
Credit Cards
Solar Energy
Sydney Festivals
World Newspapers
Melbourne Festivals
Soccer Schools

Web Wombat Search
Advanced Search
Submit a Site
 
Search 30 million+ Australian web pages:
Try out our new Web Wombat advanced search (click here)
DVDs
Humour
Movies
TV
Books
Music
Theatre

Sahara

Review by James Anthony


Click here for DVD details at a glance

Sahara is one of those few war movies that this chappie has not seen at some time or another. Filmed in 1943, a year after Casablanca, it is another 'yay-us' production from Hollywood meant to boost the fighting spirits of Allied forces.

Humphrey Bogart is Sergeant Joe Gunn, a tank sergeant assisting the Allies in North Africa. He loves his Lee tank and doesn't take kindly when even his allies are rude about it.

Retreating to a then little-known place called El Alamein, Gunn and his crew come across a number of Commonwealth troops stuck in the middle of nowhere. They hop aboard and then try to locate much-needed water.

Along the way they manage to pick up an Italian POW - who is very eager to surrender - and shoot down a German pilot. Of course he happens to be a dyed-in-the-wool Nazi that we can all hate.

This motley collection finally track down some water at a series of small wells and then discover hundreds of German troops, themselves desperate for water, are heading their way.

What follows is a terrific battle where the hugely outnumbered good guys have to hold off the nasties.

Sahara can be described as a propaganda movie, but one in which that aspect is underplayed. The action scenes are terrific, the film work first-rate and the storyline is a good one.Transfer-wise Sahara is first-rate and its black and white imagery radiates the furnace-like conditions these guys fought a war in.

And, as you would expect, Bogie is wonderful and gives Gunn a mysterious edge that only he can.

Conclusion: Movie 75%, Extras 0%

Continued: DVD details at a glance >

Shopping for...
Visit The Mall

Promotion
Home | About Us | Advertise | Submit Site | Contact Us | Privacy | Terms of Use | Hot Links | OnlineNewspapers | Add Search to Your Site
Copyright © 1995-2012 WebWombat Pty Ltd. All rights reserved