The Colossus of Rhodes

A monster statue of bronze and stone...A fabulous fortress 20 stories tall!

6.0
19612h 7m

While on holiday in Rhodes, Athenian war hero Darios becomes involved in two different plots to overthrow the tyrannical king, one from Rhodian patriots and the other from sinister Phoenician agents.

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: The Colossus Of Rhodes Trailer

The Colossus Of Rhodes Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Brian Trenchard-Smith on THE COLOSSUS OF RHODES

Brian Trenchard-Smith on THE COLOSSUS OF RHODES

Cast

Photo of Ángel Aranda

Ángel Aranda

Koros, Peliocles' brother

Photo of Mabel Karr

Mabel Karr

Mirte, Peliocles' sister

Photo of Roberto Camardiel

Roberto Camardiel

Serse, King of Rhodes

Photo of George Rigaud

George Rigaud

Lisippo, Dario's uncle

Photo of Félix Fernández

Félix Fernández

Carete, Diala's father

Photo of Ignazio Dolce

Ignazio Dolce

(uncredited)

Photo of Antonio Casas

Antonio Casas

Phoenician Ambassador

Photo of Álvaro de Luna

Álvaro de Luna

(uncredited)

Photo of Ángel Menéndez

Ángel Menéndez

Eteocle (uncredited)

Photo of Nello Pazzafini

Nello Pazzafini

Man Ringing Gong (uncredited)

Photo of Gustavo Re

Gustavo Re

Mercante (uncredited)

Photo of José María Vilches

José María Vilches

Eros (uncredited)

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

"Dario" (Rory Calhoun) is a travelling Athenian having some time off on the beautiful island of Rhodes. He's a bit of a military hero so is fêted by his new hosts who on the other hand have quite a lucrative slave-trading business going on with their Phoenician friends. What "Dario" soon learns, though, is that there is a plan afoot to topple "King Serse" (Roberto Camardiel) and use the mighty statue that guards their harbour mouth to ruthless effect if anyone anyone tries to interfere with their ambitions to rule the island and trade in even more lost souls. Mired in these conspiracies is "Diala" (Lea Massari) to whom our visitor takes a bit of a shine - but is she all that she seems? I like the genre and this production has seen some effort go into the costumes and visual effects - especially around the huge bronze statue and it's menacing payload. Snag? Well there's just far too much dialogue, nowhere near enough action - and it's long. It does drag at times, especially in the middle with the cat and mouse romance cluttering up what adventure elements there are. Calhoun was only ever really a decent looking, competent, actor - and here offers little more as we plod along to the historically established denouement. Conrado San Martín's "Tireo" makes for a passable baddie, though, and all-in-all I did quite enjoy it.

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