Arabesque official wallpaper
Arabesque poster

Arabesque

  • 6.4 /10

  • 179

  • 75%

Plot

When a plot against a prominent Middle Eastern politician is uncovered, David Pollock, a professor of ancient hieroglyphics at Oxford University, is recruited to help expose the scheme. Pollock must find information believed to be in hieroglyphic code and must also contend with a mysterious man called Beshraavi. Meanwhile, Beshraavi's lover, Yasmin Azir, seems willing to aid Pollock -- but is she really on his side?

Cast

Gregory Peck as Prof. David Pollock
Gregory Peck

as Prof. David Pollock

Sophia Loren as Yasmin Azir
Sophia Loren

as Yasmin Azir

Alan Badel as Nejim Beshraavi
Alan Badel

as Nejim Beshraavi

Kieron Moore as Yussef Kasim
Kieron Moore

as Yussef Kasim

Carl Duering as Prime Minister Hassan Jena
Carl Duering

as Prime Minister Hassan Jena

John Merivale as Maj. Sylvester Pennington Sloane
John Merivale

as Maj. Sylvester Pennington Sloane

Duncan Lamont as Webster
Duncan Lamont

as Webster

George Coulouris as Ragheeb
George Coulouris

as Ragheeb

Ernest Clark as Beauchamp
Ernest Clark

as Beauchamp

Harold Kasket as Mohammed Lufti
Harold Kasket

as Mohammed Lufti

Movie Facts

Rated

  • Approved

Status

  • Released

Release Date

  • May 4, 1966

Production Companies

  • Universal Pictures

  • Stanley Donen Films

Production Countries

  • United States of America

Spoken Language

  • English

Budget

  • $4,800,000.00

Revenue

  • -

Runtime

  • 1.75 hrs

Links

Gallery

Reviews

Swell! Arabesque is directed by Stanley Donen and collectively adapted by Julian Mitchell, Stanley Price and Pierre Marton from Gordon Cotler's novel The Cypher. It stars Gregory Peck, Sophia Loren, Alan Badel, John Merivale and Harold Kasket. A Panavision/Technicolor production with music by Henry Mancini and cinematography by Christopher Challis. Hieroglyphics expert David Pollock (Peck) …

Fun little espionage-romance-thriller featuring the wonderful duo of Gregory Peck and Sophia Loren. Gets a bit confusing and still don't quite understand the point of the cipher to begin with, but has some thrilling scenes and a solid finale. Nothing terribly memorable and certainly has shades of Charade (same writer and director) released three years prior, yet still worth checking out. **3.5/5**

This is quite an enjoyable romantic thriller that brings out the best in both Gregory Peck - as the hapless academic and Sophia Loren as the duplicitous girlfriend of our baddie Alan Badel. The premiss is a shade too convoluted - the professor is recruited to help track down and decipher an hieroglyphic scroll that may prevent the assassination of a Middle Eastern Prime Minister. There are loads …