Baroud | |
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Directed by |
Rex Ingram Alice Terry |
Written by |
|
Produced by |
|
Starring |
|
Cinematography | |
Edited by | Lothar Wolff |
Music by |
Jack Beaver Louis Levy |
Production companies |
Gaumont British Picture Corporation Armor Films |
Distributed by |
Ideal Films (UK) Gaumont Film Company (France) |
Release date |
|
Running time | 79 minutes |
Countries | France United Kingdom |
Languages | French English |
Baroud is a 1932 British-French adventure film directed by Rex Ingram and Alice Terry and starring Felipe Montes, Rosita Garcia, and Pierre Batcheff. Actor Paul Henreid debuted in a small role. The film was released in separate French and English-language versions, the latter sometimes known by the title Love in Morocco. [1]
It was the final film of Ingram, a leading Hollywood director of the silent era, and the last film appearance by Alice Terry, a leading Hollywood star of the silent era and Ingram's wife. The title is the Berber word for war.
It is set in French Morocco. Two soldiers in the Spahis, one a Frenchman and the other the son of a chief allied to the French, are friends, but quarrel when the Frenchman becomes romantically involved with the other's sister. They join forces again to repulse an attack by a hostile tribe.
Baroud | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Directed by |
Rex Ingram Alice Terry |
Written by |
|
Produced by |
|
Starring |
|
Cinematography | |
Edited by | Lothar Wolff |
Music by |
Jack Beaver Louis Levy |
Production companies |
Gaumont British Picture Corporation Armor Films |
Distributed by |
Ideal Films (UK) Gaumont Film Company (France) |
Release date |
|
Running time | 79 minutes |
Countries | France United Kingdom |
Languages | French English |
Baroud is a 1932 British-French adventure film directed by Rex Ingram and Alice Terry and starring Felipe Montes, Rosita Garcia, and Pierre Batcheff. Actor Paul Henreid debuted in a small role. The film was released in separate French and English-language versions, the latter sometimes known by the title Love in Morocco. [1]
It was the final film of Ingram, a leading Hollywood director of the silent era, and the last film appearance by Alice Terry, a leading Hollywood star of the silent era and Ingram's wife. The title is the Berber word for war.
It is set in French Morocco. Two soldiers in the Spahis, one a Frenchman and the other the son of a chief allied to the French, are friends, but quarrel when the Frenchman becomes romantically involved with the other's sister. They join forces again to repulse an attack by a hostile tribe.