6/10
A WW I tale of romance and conflict on a broader map than Europe
15 May 2022
"The Last Outpost" is billed as an adventure film but it mostly resembles a sword and sandal picture, with a segment in the middle that provides for development of a romance. The film is based on a novel by British author F. Britten Austin, "The Drum." The time is World War I, and the story centers around two British officers and their "adventures." Cary Grant plays Captain Michael Andrews who commands an armored unit, and Claude Rains plays Captain John Stevenson, whom Grant knows only as Smith, because Stevenson is in the British intelligence service. He works undercover to infiltrate enemy forces and maintain liaisons with friendly tribes and cultures.

The setting moves between three locations. The first is in what the movie identifies as Kurdistan, but was actually a larger area then identified as the Kurdish State where that tribal culture dominated others and warred against other cultures that were friendly toward the West. This Western Asia area encompasses large portions of Turkey, Syria, and the countries of the South Caucasus near the Caspian Sea and Black Sea.

The second setting is in Cairo where Andrews is treated for a broken leg in the British hospital, and where he meets and falls in love with his nurse, Rosemary Haydon. The third setting is In the Sudan of North Africa, including the endless sand dunes and then the bordering jungle.

There's a little mystery and intrigue in this - between the two male leads, that also involves nurse Haydon. Besides the fighting in the last part between British soldiers and hostile African desert tribes, the first segment especially has some excellent filming of a mass migration. The friendly tribes are fleeing an advancing Kurd attack, and cross a swollen river with people, sheep, carts and goods being swept downstream. In the last segment of the Sudan, Africans set fire to the jungle to flush out Stevenson and Andrews, and it shows panicking and stampeding animals - monkeys, hippos, various cats, and more.

The story of the characters seems to be woven into the bigger picture of a world war that involves peoples, tribes, and cultures across a vast area. But it doesn't do that very well. This wasn't the trench-warfare of France that WW I has been mostly identified with; but may be a better picture of the overall worldwide dimension of the war.

This doesn't give away the gist of the romance and relationship of the two men, but it shouldn't be too hard to guess the details. While Rains and Grant were stars and leading men of cinema by 1935, Gertrude Michael had been mostly in supporting roles. She was an up-and-coming actress at Paramount who didn't reach stardom. She made lots of movies, some with very good supporting roles into the early 1950s. That decade was spent mostly working for television. She never married, but had a long affair as an alcoholic and died in Los Angeles in 1964, at age 53.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed