CINEFLIX HD — OFFICIAL TRAILERS, REVIEWS & RATINGS UPDATED DAILY
1972 • Adventure / Drama • 100m

The Call of the Wild

61

CINESCORE

FRESH

63 critic reviews

63%

POPCORN METER

AUDIENCE

Verified ratings

John Thornton, is a fearless man who's after more than gold; he wants to do what's right. Thornton works for the U.S. mail and is the only person daring and smart enough to figure out how to travel the deadly 600 miles from Skagway to Dawson, Alaska in the icy winter. His incredibly dog Buck is by his side and part of how he survives.

IMDb

Top Cast

Charlton Heston
Charlton Heston
John Thornton
Raimund Harmstorf
Raimund Harmstorf
Pete
George Eastman
George Eastman
Black Burton
Maria Rohm
Maria Rohm
Mercedes
Juan Luis Galiardo
Juan Luis Galiardo
Seze
Sancho Gracia
Sancho Gracia
Taglish Charlie
Rik Battaglia
Rik Battaglia
Dutch Harry
Alf Malland
Alf Malland
Constantine
Sverre Wilberg
Sverre Wilberg
Colonel
Michèle Mercier
Michèle Mercier
Calliope Laurent
Antonio Mayans
Antonio Mayans
Jack
Luis Barboo
Luis Barboo
Alfredo Mayo
Alfredo Mayo
Judge Miller
Kåre Siem
Kåre Siem
Piano Player
Dan Fosse
Dan Fosse
Old Miner
Per Tofte
Per Tofte
Runner
Jody Hanson
Jody Hanson
Alice
Charly Bravo
Charly Bravo
Producer: Artur BraunerDirector: Ken AnnakinProducer: Harry Alan TowersWriter: Harry Alan TowersWriter: Wyn WellsWriter: Peter YeldhamWriter: Federico De UrrutiaWriter: Hubert Frank

Photos

Reviews

Wuchak
2023-08-11
80%

**_Euro version of Jack London’s classic with Charlton Heston_** During the Klondike Gold Rush of 1897, two mail dispatchers travel by dog sled from Skagway, on the coast of southeast Alaska, to Dawson City over 400 miles north in the Yukon. One of the sled dogs, Buck, is fresh from California with no experience in snowy weather. Thorton (Heston) unwisely makes an enemy of the town mogul (George Eastman) while getting friendly with a beautiful saloon proprietor (Michèle Mercier). “The Call of the Wild” (1972) is a surprisingly good wilderness adventure with spectacular locations that could pass for a Western in the mold of “North to Alaska” (1960), albeit minus the slapstick humor. The later “North Star” (1996) and “The Claim” (2000) also come to mind, as does “The Mountain Men” (1980) due to Heston in the lead role and the wintery Western milieu. The fact that the film includes a dog as one of the protagonists brings to mind eye-rolling Disney flicks, but this isn’t Disney-fied at all. I should point out that Buck here is a German Shepherd whereas in the book he’s a St. Bernard–Scotch Shepherd mix. The runtime is just over 1 hour, 40 minutes. Beware of versions available on streaming (e.g. Tubi and Plex) that cut a full half hour in the last act. I’m talking about the sequences involving Thorton fraternizing with Calliope at the saloon and in a Western-styled bathtub, as well as the sequences of Pete (Raimund Harmstorf) looking for gold with his half-breed guide (Juan Luis Galiardo). There’s currently a great HD version available for free on Youtube (the full version). Michèle Mercier is stunning on the female front as redhead Calliope while Maria Rohm is lovely as blonde Mercedes. Heston lamented “The Call of the Wild” as his worst film, but he was objecting more to the difficulties involved in making the flick and the Euro politics thereof, rather than the movie itself; that is, the final product. For instance, the production team had to import sled dogs since there (curiously) weren’t any in Norway and Heston had to learn the arcane art of dog sledding on the spot wherein the dogs would either run or fight each other. As far as the “Euro politics” go, this was a joint British, Norwegian, German, French, Spanish and Italian production (so expect a lot of dubbing à la Spaghetti Westerns). This forced the rogue Brit producer to hire at least two key participants from each country to facilitate distribution in Europe. Heston called the cast/crew an assemblage gathered by political committee rather than ability, a “United Nations” production. It didn’t help that Spaniard Juan Luis Galiardo (Seze) was lonely and depressed on set, which was augmented by the fact that he couldn’t speak English or the languages of the other members. The film was shot primarily in Norway, but also Lapland, Finland, with studio stuff done in Spain. GRADE: B+/A-

Audience Reviews(0)

Sign in to share your review of The Call of the Wild.SIGN IN

Loading reviews…

Keywords

Details

Status
Released
Origin
US, GB
Languages
English
Studios
Norsk Film, Oceania Film, Universal Pictures France, Ízaro Films, CCC Filmkunst

Recommended For You

More Like This