Mozambique | |
Director: | Robert Lynn |
Screenplay: | Peter Yeldham |
Story: | Harry Alan Towers |
Producer: | Harry Alan Towers Oliver A. Unger |
Starring: | Steve Cochran Hildegard Knef Paul Hubschmid Vivi Bach |
Cinematography: | Martin Curtis |
Editing: | Peter Boita |
Music: | Johnny Douglas |
Studio: | Towers of London Productions |
Distributor: | British Lion Films |
Runtime: | 98 minutes |
Language: | English |
Mozambique is a 1964 British drama film directed by Robert Lynn from a screenplay by Peter Yeldham, starring Steve Cochran in his final film role, Hildegard Knef, Paul Hubschmid and Vivi Bach.[1] [2]
An American pilot assists the Portuguese colonial police who are battling a gang of criminals involved in drug smuggling from Lisbon via Mozambique to Zanzibar.
During the making of the film, Cochran was arrested for committing adultery with the wife of a jockey while in Durban, South Africa.[3]
The New York Times called it "a sleazy little melodrama."[4]