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Red Dust (2004) Certificate 15

Red Dust

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Rated 3.0 stars
Average rating
(62%)
 
Starring: Jamie Bartlett | Chiwetel Ejiofor | Ian Roberts | Hilary Swank | Marius Weyers
Director: Tom Hooper
Studio: LIONS GATE HOME ENTERTAINMENT
Run time: 106 mins
Genres: Drama
Languages: English
Released: July 11, 2005

Red Dust was lensed almost entirely on MGM's back lot; even so, we are utterly convinced that the film takes place in Indochina (never mind that everyone pronounces Saigon as Say-gone). Even more importantly, the audience never doubts for one moment that the relationship between hero Clark Gable and heroine Jean Harlow has gone far beyond the meaningful-glances stage. Gable plays the overseer of a rubber plantation, whiling away the hot, lonely nights with his drunken assistant Tully Marshall. Donald Crisp, another of Gable's cohorts, arrives by boat with stranded prostitute Jean Harlow in tow. Gable wants no part of Harlow at first, telling her that she's history the moment the next boat to Saigon shows up. But Gable and Harlow are, in the parlance of the time, made for each other. After the inevitable affair, Harlow leaves, just as engineer Gene Raymond shows up to participate in the construction of a bridge. Raymond has brought along his seemingly proper wife Mary Astor; it isn't long, however, before Astor is throwing herself at the not altogether unwilling Gable. Raymond is such a good egg that Gable feels ashamed of himself for enjoying Astor's favors. When Harlow returns, Gable goes back to her, which drives the already unstable Astor completely off her trolley. She shoots Gable in a fit of jealous rage. Hearing the shot, Raymond rushes in. Proving that she's aces, Harlow quickly covers up for Astor, insisting that it was she who shot Gable. None the wiser, Raymond returns to the mainland with Astor, while Gable and Harlow end up in each other's arms for keeps. Fairly hot even by pre-code standards, Red Dust has gained legendary status thanks to rumors concerning Jean Harlow's famous bathing scene in a shaved barrel; according to rumor, footage still exists of Harlow totally au naturel (some stories go as far as to claim that the overseas version of Red Dust shows Gable and Harlow doing it.) For all the sexual badinage, our favorite bit occurs when Harlow, cleaning out a parrot's cage, mutters Watcha been eatin', cement? A heavily laundered remake of Red Dust, Mogambo, appeared in 1954, again with Clark Gable in the lead, but this time with Ava Gardner and Grace Kelly in the Harlow and Astor roles, respectively.~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Rating of 4 stars out of 5
Radio Times

Love in a hot climate is the theme of this steamy melodrama from Victor Fleming, a director better known for such films as The Wizard of Oz and Gone with the Wind. The film was a hit in its day, thanks to Fleming's direction and the sultry, stylish performances of Clark Gable, as the macho boss of a rubber plantation in the Far East, and Jean Harlow and Mary Astor as the two very different women he's involved with. A 1930s classic, the film risks looking rather clichéd, if not downright over-the-top, today.

Highest rated reviews

3 out of 3 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 4.0 stars
Eye opening

A Customer from Newbury, 1st September, 2005

Being a South African who lived in SA during the apartheid era this movie confirmed stories my husband and I had heard on the News. I think it only showed one aspect of SA though. During all this trouble there were 'good' white people who never dreamt of harming or treating people disrespectfully because of their race. My children were surprised to see how the white people were portrayed - they have grown up here and only have good memories of SA. The movie showed them what SA was like and I think it was good for them to see.

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2 out of 2 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 5.0 stars
amazing

sara from Derbyshire, 8th November, 2005

blew me away - realised that I have made myself a prisoner for past events. For anyone saying its a cheap propaganda film I pity them but at the same time wish I would hold such a simplistic view of life so that I could be so one dimensional

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2 out of 2 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 4.0 stars
Very Good

A Customer from Guisborough, 6th September, 2005

Enjoyed this film immensly. Well acted well written. Go on rent it you won't be sorry.

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Rated 3.0 stars
moving

A Customer from London, 23rd January, 2010

these kind of film makes me weep plot is a man and his friend who were tortured in the apartiheid era of south africa face there tormentors at the truth and reconcillation a emotional drama about the life of black south africans in that era a real tear jerker

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Most recent reviews

Rated 5.0 stars
Red Dust

A Customer from croydon, 30th December, 2009

Gillian Slovo, the author of the book Red Dust, is the daughter of anti apartheid activists. Her mother was killed by a letter bomb . If anyone is well equipped to pen such a story it is her. Fantastic film with great depth.

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Rated 5.0 stars
Gripping

A Customer from UK, 3rd March, 2008

I rented this film purely because it was filmed in my hometown in South Africa. It was nice seeing the familiar scenery, but I must say I was very impressed with this film. A very sad film, but the truth is too important to ignore.

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Rated 4.0 stars
Definitely worth watching...

A Customer from London, England, 9th December, 2006

...but not necessarily one to buy to watch repeatedly. Don't watch it expecting it to give you a potted history of South Africa, but enjoy the story for what it is - a well acted film with an engaging plot.

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