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Sahara

Sahara

  • Status: Released
  • 06-04-2005
  • Runtime: 124 min
  • Score: 5.9
  • Vote count: 1497

Seasoned adventurer and treasure hunter Dirk Pitt, a former Navy SEAL, sets out for the African desert with his wisecracking buddy Al in search of a confederate ironclad battleship rumored to have vanished long ago, the main draw being the treasure supposedly hidden within the lost vessel. When the daring duo come across Dr. Eva Rojas, a beautiful scientist who is juggling an escape from a warlord and a mission to stop the spread of a powerful plague, their desert expedition begins to heat up.

Matthew McConaughey

Dirk Pitt

Penélope Cruz

Dr. Eva Rojas

Steve Zahn

Al Giordino

Lennie James

General Zateb Kazim

Lambert Wilson

Yves Massarde

William H. Macy

Admiral Jim Sandecker

Rainn Wilson

Rudi Gunn

Glynn Turman

Dr. Frank Hopper

Jude Akuwudike

Imam

Clint Dyer

Oshodi

Delroy Lindo

Carl

Robert Cavanah

Captain Tombs

Paulin Fodouop

Modibo

Abdul Salis

Oumar

Maurice Lee

Zakara

Tosin Sanyalo

Azikiwe Nwokolo

Rakie Ayola

Mrs. Nwokolo

Patrick Malahide

Ambassador Polidori

Emmanuel Ighodaro

Kazim's Officer Asselar

Mark Aspinall

Lawyer

Christopher Bello

Train Driver

Nicholas Beveney

Gunboat 1 Officer

Empotoe Bosage

Pick Up Truck Guard

Matthew Flynn

1st Lieutenant, Ironclad

Ouahbou Houcine

Tuareg Village Boy #1

Daniel Njo Lobé

Tuareg Sangare

Francis Magee

Fuse Cutter

Thierno Amath Mbaye

Pick Up Truck Driver

Femi Ogunbanjo

Modibo's Tuareg #2

Eddie Osei

Train Guard

Nathan Osgood

Gun Captain

Lahcen Ouezgane

Tuareg Village Boy #2

Robert Paterson

NUMA Crew Member

Christopher Saul

Pilot, Ironclad

Billy Seymour

Powder Monkey

Mark Springer

Solar Plant Guard

Celestine Vita

Old Woman in Labbezanga

Mark Wells

Sailor Who Drops Gold

Kamurai

Decent watch, might watch again, but can't recommend unless you're running out of things to watch or are an action archaeology fan. This was a weird attempt created a 2005 version of Indiana Jones, or, since this is in Africa, Alex Quartermaine with Matthew McConaughey, of all people. I'm not aware of Matthew McConaughey or Steve Zahn being big action stars, but they surprisingly manage to handle their own, even if it isn't always believeable. Rainn Wilson and Penelope Cruz get in on the action as well....if that helps. The premise is a little interesting: they're looking for a U.S. Confederate boat in Africa. Because it's not interesting enough on it's own, Penelope Cruz is a doctor trying to stop a plague coming from a war-torn country. It all feels a like ridiculously improbable things happening in a world that is far too realistic rather than a world created of fiction that houses an incredible story. The movie is heavy with plot armor, despite any cleverness the characters have. It's fine to watch, but there has to be something else that you can watch that is likely going to be better.

GenerationofSwine

Words like "Literary work" and "Clive Cussler" really shouldn't be in the same sentence. Hey...chill...I love Clive Cussler, I honestly do. In fact I'll put him in the same league as Elmore Leonard and Louis L'Amour and I will put them in the same league as Dumas and Doyle. They all write pulp fiction, adventure, crime, mystery, horror, whatever, they all fall under the title "pulp" and I can admit that I eat them whole, without swallowing... ...and without the need to call them "Literary" in an effort to save face. I have the academic degrees somewhere in a box, the intellectual prowess, and a library with enough classics and heady works of history and philosophy to be able to openly display writers like Chris Claremont, Marv Wolfman, and Timothy Zane to not have to call his work "Literature." I will however call it "Adventure" I will call it "Fun" and what should be most important to any writer or film maker..."Entertaining." It doesn't have to follow the book. Jackie Brown was a far cry from Rum punch and they were both a lot of fun to watch and read. So Sahara isn't like the novel. It is an Action-Adventure-Comedy. That means it is everything that pulp should be, it is everything that movies should be... In fact it is the kind of film that the critics would have loved in the Golden Age of Hollywood.