The Ghost And The Darkness review

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Yes, it's Jaws with lions. All the familiar elements are here: the too-nice-to-live sidekicks, the cynical hunter, the boss-man who cares less about lives than money, the unwilling amateur forced to give up his chosen craft to become a hunter... Like Jaws, the cast is wall-to-wall blokes (there's only one lady in the film - Emily Mortimer as Patterson's wife) and, like Jaws, the killers aren't acting at all like the rest of their species. The rolling plains of Africa, represented by shots of waving grass, even do a passable sea impersonation, the silent lions cruising through the shadows like that Great White of yore.

Not that this is a bad thing, and not that it makes the film a remake either. The Ghost And The Darkness' trump card is that it's all real - at least, in a "only a few bits have been changed to spice it up" way. Jollied along or not, it's an extraordinary story. Adult male lions loathe each other, yet the two on which the screenplay's based worked together. They avoided all traps, attacked the other end of the camp to the waiting gunmen, killed in daylight, and seemed to do it all for sheer feline fun, rasping the skin off their victims with their rough kitty tongues and eating the feet - just because they could. For months they slowed and eventually stopped the railroad construction; in the past, entire armies had tried and failed to do this.

Like a more-serious Michael Palin Ripping Yarn, The Ghost And The Darkness is Merchant Ivory with big guns. Top performances from all concerned, including the lions, while director Stephen Hopkins proves that Judgement Night was a terrible one-off mistake.

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