Al-Mas'ala Al-Kubra | |
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The official poster of the movie
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Directed by | Mohamed Shukri Jameel |
Produced by | Iraqi Film and Theater Foundation |
Written by | Ramadan Gatea Mozan, Lateif Jorephani and Mohamed Shukri Jameel. |
Starring |
Oliver Reed John Barron James Bolam Helen Ryan Sami Abdul Hameed |
Music by | Ron Goodwin |
Cinematography |
Jack Hildyard and Majid Kamel |
Edited by | Bill Blunden |
Distributed by | Iraqi Film Corporation |
Release date
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1983 |
Running time
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184 minutes |
Country | Iraq |
Language | Arabic English |
Budget | $24 mil |
Clash of Loyalties (Arabic: Al-Mas'ala Al-Kubra, aka The Great Question) is a 1983 Iraqi film focusing on the formation of Iraq out of Mesopotamia in the aftermath of the First World War.
The film was financed by Saddam Hussain, filmed in Iraq (mainly at the Baghdad Film Studios in Baghdad's Mansour neighbourhood and on location at the Tigris-Euphrates marshlands, Babylon and Kut) at the height of the Iran–Iraq War and starred Oliver Reed as Gerard Leachman, Marc Sinden as Captain Dawson and Helen Ryan as Gertrude Bell, with a stirring score by Ron Goodwin.
Investigative journalist James Montague, writing in the July 2014 issue of Esquire magazine, claimed that Marc Sinden spied for the British Government's Secret Intelligence Service (MI6) during the filming of Clash of Loyalties in Iraq, after being made "an offer he couldn’t refuse, appealing to his duty and his pride in Queen and Country." In the article Sinden admitted that it was true.
It is known for being the last film made to use the now banned "Running W" technique, invented by the only Oscar-winning stuntman Yakima (Yak) Canutt, which was a method of bringing down a horse at the gallop by attaching a wire, anchored to the ground, to its fetlocks and so launching the rider forwards spectacularly at a designated point. It invariably killed the horse, or at best it was unrideable afterwards. The British stuntman Ken Buckle (who had been trained by Yak) performed the highly-dangerous stunt three times during the huge cavalry charge sequence.