| La Fabuleuse Aventure de Marco Polo | |
|---|---|
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| Directed by | Denys de La Patellière, Noël Howard | 
| Written by | Raoul Lévy, Jacques Rémy, Jean-Paul Rappeneau | 
| Based on | The Travels of Marco Polo by Rustichello da Pisa  | 
| Starring | Horst Buchholz Anthony Quinn  | 
Release date  | 1965 | 
| Countries | France Italy Yugoslavia Egypt Afghanistan  | 
| Languages | French Italian English  | 
La Fabuleuse Aventure de Marco Polo or Marco the Magnificent is a 1965 international co-production (Afghanistan, Yugoslavia, Egypt, France, Italy) adventure film directed by Denys de La Patellière and Noël Howard. Raoul Levy committed suicide after losing most of his fortune financing this film.[1]
Plot
Marco Polo (Horst Bucholz) is idling around in Venice when Pope Gregory commissions him to take a message of peace and understanding to the Emperor of China on the presumption that a young courier might stand a better chance of reaching China.
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On the journey his escort is attacked and killed leaving Marco Polo on his own. He meets with The Old Man of the Mountain; braves all varieties of climatic conditions; is captured by the Mongols and witnesses a sort of "Miss China" competition in order to provide the Emperor with an Empress.[2]
Cast
- Horst Buchholz as Marco Polo
 - Anthony Quinn as Kublai Khan, Mongol Emperor of China
 - Omar Sharif as Sheik Alla Hou, 'The Desert Wind'
 - Orson Welles as Akerman, Marco's tutor
 - Akim Tamiroff as the Old Man of the Mountain
 - Elsa Martinelli as the woman with the whip
 - Robert Hossein as Prince Nayam, a Mongol rebel leader
 - Grégoire Aslan as Achmed Abdullah
 - Massimo Girotti as Niccolò, Marco's father
 - Folco Lulli as Spinello, a Venetian merchant
 - Guido Alberti as Pope Gregory X
 - Lynne Sue Moon as Princess Gogatine (credited as Lee Sue Moon)
 - Bruno Cremer as Guillaume de Tripoli, a Knight Templar
 - Jacques Monod as Nicolo de Vicenza, a Knight Templar
 - Mića Orlović as Matteo, Marco's uncle
 
Production
Rotislav Doboujinsky worked on the design of the clothes and caparacons for the men, horses and elephants - the living figures - of the chess game.[3]
References
- ↑ Scheuer, Philip K. (13 July 1964). "Marco Polo Filming Ended by Buchholz". Los Angeles Times. p. IV-18 – via Newspapers.com.
 - ↑ "At The Films" column; Gibraltar Chronicle newspaper; 25/08/1969; Page 3
 - ↑ Jean-Louis Perrier (June 28, 2000). "Rotislav Doboujinsky". Le Monde.
 
External links
