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Chariots of Fire
Chariots of Fire
In the class-obsessed and religiously divided UK of the early 1920s, two determined young runners train for the 1924 Paris Olympics. Eric Liddell, a devout Christian born to Scottish missionaries in China, sees running as part of his worship of God's glory and refuses to train or compete on the Sabbath. Harold Abrahams overcomes anti-Semitism and class bias, but neglects his beloved sweetheart in his single-minded quest.
rating
6.771
runtime
123 min

Release

1981-05-15

Cast

Ben Cross
Ben Cross
as Harold Abrahams
Ian Charleson
Ian Charleson
as Eric Liddell
Cheryl Campbell
Cheryl Campbell
as Jennie Liddell
Alice Krige
Alice Krige
as Sybil Gordon
Nigel Havers
Nigel Havers
as Lord Andrew Lindsay
Ian Holm
Ian Holm
as Sam Mussabini
Nicholas Farrell
Nicholas Farrell
as Aubrey Montague
Daniel Gerroll
Daniel Gerroll
as Henry Stallard
John Gielgud
John Gielgud
as Master of Trinity
Lindsay Anderson
Lindsay Anderson
as Master of Caius
Nigel Davenport
Nigel Davenport
as Lord Birkenhead
Dennis Christopher
Dennis Christopher
as Charles Paddock
Brad Davis
Brad Davis
as Jackson Scholz
Patrick Magee
Patrick Magee
as Lord Cadogan
Peter Egan
Peter Egan
as Duke of Sutherland
Struan Rodger
Struan Rodger
as Sandy McGrath
David Yelland
David Yelland
as Prince of Wales
Richard Griffiths
Richard Griffiths
as Head Porter - Caius College
Patrick Doyle
Patrick Doyle
as Jimmie
John Young
John Young
as Rev. J.D. Liddell
Yvonne Gilan
Yvonne Gilan
as Mrs Liddell
David John
David John
as Ernest Liddell
Benny Young
Benny Young
as Rob Liddell
Yves Beneyton
Yves Beneyton
as George Andre
Stephen Mallatratt
Stephen Mallatratt
as Watson
Gerry Slevin
Gerry Slevin
as Colonel John Keddie
Colin Bruce
Colin Bruce
as Taylor
Alan Polonsky
Alan Polonsky
as Paxton
Edward Wiley
Edward Wiley
as Fitch
Jeremy Sinden
Jeremy Sinden
as President - Gilbert and Sullivan Society
Andrew Hawkins
Andrew Hawkins
as Secretary - Gilbert and Sullivan Society
Jack Smethurst
Jack Smethurst
as Sleeping Car Attendant
Peter Cellier
Peter Cellier
as Head Waiter - The Savoy
Philip O'Brien
Philip O'Brien
as US Coach
Ruby Wax
Ruby Wax
as Bunty
Ralph Lawton
Ralph Lawton
as Harbour Master
Kim Clifford
Kim Clifford
as Sybil's Maid
John Rutland
John Rutland
as Caius Porter
Peter Jones
Peter Jones
Tommy Boyle
Tommy Boyle
as Reporter
Wallace Campbell
Wallace Campbell
as Highland Provost
Gordon Hammersley
Gordon Hammersley
as President - Cambridge Athletic Club
Alan Dudley
Alan Dudley
as Caius Manservant
Tess Dignan
Tess Dignan
as Schoolgirl
Michael Jeyes
Michael Jeyes
as Footman
David Kivlin
David Kivlin
as First Scots Boy
Eddie Hughson
Eddie Hughson
as Second Scots Boy
Ted Robbins
Ted Robbins
as Shot Putter (uncredited)
Kenneth Branagh
Kenneth Branagh
as Cambridge Student at Society Day (uncredited)
Stephen Fry
Stephen Fry
as Cambridge Student at Society Day (uncredited)

Director

REVIEWS
NA

Geronimo1967

The opening bars of the Oscar-winning Vangelis score coupled with the shot of the athletes running along the beach, barefoot, at St. Andrews is amongst the most iconic opening scenes from any film, but somehow the rest of this strays all too often into mediocrity thereafter. It tells the story of two British athletes who strove to thrive at the Olympiad in Paris in 1924. Harold Abrahams (Ben Cross) comes from a Lithuanian Jewish background. who is welcomed to Cambridge University, but never quite accepted. The other is Eric Liddell (Ian Charleson), a devout Christian who comes from missionary stock and who believes that he must serve God before himself - and that includes not running any races on the Sabbath. Both of these men have considerable athletic skills, and the story intertwines their efforts to get to the Games, whilst both must deal with their differing priorities and challenges. It's this middle portion of the film, the prologued character development phase, that all plods along too slowly. It has too little pace and too many characters, and that just drags the film down. The last fifteen minutes liven up considerably though, not just with the events on the track - but amongst those determined to ensure that the whole team attains success making sacrifices and compromises along the way. It has a classy look to it, the costumes and settings are top drawer, but I found the leading performances rather disjointed and at over two hours long, I did struggle to stay engaged.