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In the town of Biondi in French
Equatorial Africa, Morel launches a campaign to save the majestic
elephant herds from hunters, poachers and zoo collectors.
Morel's crusade is rebuffed by the territorial governor and a
missionary priest, who both refuse to sign his petition on the
grounds that their concern is the betterment of humankind, not
animals. At the local café, Saint Denis, a government
official, ridicules Morel and declares that the killing of elephants
is too profitable to be outlawed. The only people who agree to
sign Morel's petition are Minna, the barmaid who was forced into
prostitution by the Germans during World War II, and Forsythe, an
incorrigible drunk.
When his civil endeavor fails, Morel
institutes a terrorist campaign aimed at the hunters and people who
collect elephants for zoos. Morel attracts the attention of
famed U.S. television broadcaster Cy Sedgewick when he shoots him in
the rear while Sedgewick is rhapsodizing about hunting elephants.
Sensing a story, Sedgewick sides with Morel and begins to champion
his cause.
Drawn by Sedgewick's interest, busloads
of journalists descend on the town. Suspecting that Morel has
forged an alliance with Waitari, a native leader who advocates an
end to imperialism, the Governor sends Saint Denis to find Morel.
In the African bush, Saint Denis meets Morel and his small band of
supporters: Danish scientist Professor Peer Quist, the Baron,
a German nobleman, and Waitari, who has decided to co-opt Morel's
crusade to argue the cause of African nationalism. After Morel
refuses to surrender until the elephant killing stops, Saint Denis
comes to respect him and begins to question the motives of the
government.
Back in Biondi, Minna offers Saint Denis
sexual favors in exchange for protecting Morel, whom she now
admires. Saint Denis refuses her offer and instead sends her
to Morel to convince him to surrender before he is killed.
Enlisting Forsythe's help, Minna loads a jeep with supplies and
drives into the bush. Along the way, Forsythe confesses that
he is tormented because during the war, as a British officer, he
passed on strategic information to the enemy rather than face death
like the rest of his battalion. Led by a witch doctor friend
of Saint Denis', Forsythe and Minna reach Morel, who confides that
his obsession with elephants began when he was a prisoner in a
German POW camp, because thinking about the massive beasts helped
him to survive.
At daybreak, Morel and his band sneak
back to Biondi, where Morel enlists a native printer to publish a
leaflet outlining his demands. Morel then crashes a party at
the Orsini house and publicly humiliates Madame Orsini, a wealthy
white hunter, by having her spanked for her crimes. Irate that
the cause of African nationalism has been excluded from the
manifesto, Waitari breaks ranks with Morel. The drought has
driven the elephants to congregate at a lake, and Morel and his band
follow them there. Soon after, Abe Fields, an American
photojournalist covering the Morel story, crash lands at the lake in
a plane.
That night, truckloads of ivory poachers
bearing machine guns come to the lake to massacre the elephants, and
to save the herd, Morel causes a stampede. In
retaliation, the poachers fire at Morel and his men, killing
Forsythe and the Baron and capturing the others. As the
poachers pile the tusks into their trucks, Waitari and his followers
arrive to advocate Morel's execution. After Fields convinces
them to reconsider, Waitari frees Morel and his band. When
word comes that the Congo Congress has refused to outlaw elephant
hunting, Morel, defeated and disillusioned, decides to turn himself
in, and Fields joins them on their arduous trek through the barren
countryside. During a brutal wind storm, Minna, weak and
feverish, collapses and is carried the rest of the way on a
stretcher. As Morel continues on his journey, he is joined by
admiring supporters, and by the time he reaches Biondi, the ranks
have swollen to become a multitude. When Morel emerges from
the bush, the police chief, overwhelmed by Morel's show of support,
allows him to pass. After saying goodbye to the ailing Minna,
Morel and his burgeoning army return to the bush.
Notes
The film ends with the following written acknowledgment: "For the
kind assistance they have rendered in the production of the picture
we thank the High Commission of the French Republic in French
Equatorial Africa, the High Commission in the Cameroons, the Tchad
Government, the Ozbangui Government, the Forestry and Games
Department, the General Government of the Belgian Congo and also the
Management of the National Parks in the Belgian Congo."
Romain Gary, co-screenwriter and author
of the novel on which the film was based, served as the French
Consul General in Los Angeles during the 1950s. Location filming
took place in French Equatorial Africa from mid-March until mid-May
1958. While interiors were filmed at the Studios de Boulogne in
Paris, France, an August 1958 HR news item adds that
associate producer Robert Jacks spent a year in French Equatorial
Africa and France to prepare for filming.
According to John Huston's autobiography
and to an October 1958 Newsweek article, the extreme
temperatures and primitive conditions of filming in remote parts of
Africa caused health problems for much of the cast. Juliette
Gréco contracted a rare blood disease, Eddie Albert suffered from
sunstroke and many other cast members were victims of heat
prostration, malaria and sunstroke. Upon returning to Paris to
film interiors, Darryl Zanuck and
Errol Flynn were hospitalized. According to Huston's
autobiography, Zanuck insisted that Gréco play the female lead.
Huston also stated that exteriors were filmed at the forest of
Fontainebleau outside of Paris.