The Beast of Babylon Against the Son of Hercules
The Beast of Babylon Against the Son of Hercules (Italian: L'eroe di Babilonia, French: Héros de Babylone, also known as Heroes of Babylon, Hero of Babylon and Goliath, King of Slaves) is a 1963 Italian-French peplum film written and directed by Siro Marcellini and starring Gordon Scott.[1][2]
The Beast of Babylon Against the Son of Hercules | |
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Directed by | Siro Marcellini |
Produced by | Albino Morandini |
Written by | Gian Paolo Callegari Siro Marcellini Albert Valentin |
Starring | Gordon Scott |
Music by | Carlo Franci |
Cinematography | Pier Ludovico Pavoni |
Release date |
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Language | Italian |
Plot
When the high-born Nippur returns to Babylon following a long stay in Persia, he rescues slave-girl Tamira from the soldiers of the evil usurper, Balthazar. Nippur then pays a courtesy visit to Balthazar's court where he meets the high-priestess Ura who has ambitions to become queen and who casts a lustful eye on this new visitor. Later, shocked by the cruelty of Balthazar's reign and influenced by a group of rebels, Nippur interrupts a fiery sacrifice of virgins. Forced to flee Babylon, Nippur -- wounded by an arrow in the back -- is restored to health by the forces of the Persian king, Cyrus, who are marching toward Babylon. Nippur slips back into Babylon where he's captured and chained to a wall inside a dungeon. Using his great strength, Nippur breaks free, rescues Tamira before she can be sacrificed, and engages Balthazar in a sword fight to-the-death. The Persian army now arrives and Cyrus, before returning home, sees to it that Nippur sits on the throne of Babylon with the faithful Tamira by his side.
Cast
- Gordon Scott as Nippur
- Geneviève Grad as Tamira
- Andrea Scotti as Namar
- Célina Cély as Agar
- Moira Orfei as Ura
- Mario Petri as Zairus
- Piero Lulli as Balthazar
- Andrea Aureli as Anarsi
- Giuseppe Addobbati as Licardius
- Harold Bradley as Mursuk
- Oreste Lionello
- Consalvo Dell'Arti
- Renato Malavasi