The Poppy Is Also a Flower

The story of another war more deadly...more destructive...against the world wide opium conspiracy.

5.8
19661h 40m

A special United Nations bureau organises a campaign to trace a drug-smuggling ring across Europe to its source on the Afghanistan-Iran border.

Cast

Photo of Yul Brynner

Yul Brynner

Colonel Salem

Photo of Angie Dickinson

Angie Dickinson

Linda Benson

Photo of Georges Géret

Georges Géret

Superintendent Roche

Photo of Hugh Griffith

Hugh Griffith

Salah Rahman Khan

Photo of Jack Hawkins

Jack Hawkins

General Bahar

Photo of Rita Hayworth

Rita Hayworth

Monique Marko

Photo of Trevor Howard

Trevor Howard

Sam Lincoln

Photo of E.G. Marshall

E.G. Marshall

Coley Jones

Photo of Marcello Mastroianni

Marcello Mastroianni

Inspector Mosca

Photo of Amedeo Nazzari

Amedeo Nazzari

Captain Di Nonno

Photo of Anthony Quayle

Anthony Quayle

Captain Vanderbilt

Photo of Gilbert Roland

Gilbert Roland

Serge Marko

Photo of Nadja Tiller

Nadja Tiller

Dr. Bronovska

Photo of Eli Wallach

Eli Wallach

'Happy' Locarno

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

5/10

The opening dose of earnest monologue from Princess Grace of Monaco gives us a clue as to what we might be in for here. It's a clunkily stitched together series of cameos built around the process of identifying and stopping those bent on exporting opium from Iran to, ultimately via Europe, the United States. Yul Brynner ("Col. Salem") starts off the process working with the Imperial authorities in Iran where poppy farming is completely outlawed. Needless to say, though, if the money was right then there were those who would bend the rules and here we can look "Salah Khan" (Hugh Griffiths - a performance straight out of "Ben Hur"). The police, though, have devised a plan to inject his resin with a radioactive isotope enabling it to be tracked and them to destroy the distribution network. Helping the colonel with his task is the doughty "Sam Lincoln" (Trevor Howard) and as they follow the trail we are introduced to a cast of dozens of famous faces adding their visage, if little else, to the potency of the message set out by HSH at the top of the film. It's quite an interesting theory, the journey is well documented as are the difficulties faced by those trying to thwart this most lucrative of trades, but the style of presentation is so very disjointed and the narrative spends just a little too much time pontificating and not enough time engaging the audience. After about forty minutes I had the gist and the baddie firmly in my sights - the remainder delivered little better than an half-baked "007" adventure (Ian Fleming was involved here too). It is not without it's tragedies - this is not a sterile depiction and characters do get bumped off to illustrate just how ruthless these dealers are - but none of that really enlivened what is essentially rather a dull drama.

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