The Kingfisher Caper

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Kingfisher Caper
Movie poster
Directed byDirk DeVilliers
Written byRoy Boulting
Lee Marcus
Based onthe novel The Diamond Hunters by Wilbur Smith (uncredited)
Produced byBen Vlok
StarringHayley Mills
David McCallum
Jon Cypher
Bill McNaught
CinematographyIvo Pellegrini
Edited byKenneth Connor
Music byJohn Dankworth
Distributed byCinema Shares International Distribution Corporation (USA)
Release dates
June 30, 1975 (South Africa)
July 1976 (USA)
Running time
86 minutes
CountrySouth Africa
LanguageEnglish

The Kingfisher Caper (released as Diamond Hunters in South Africa and as Diamond Lust on video) is a 1975 South African film directed by Dirk DeVilliers for Kavalier Films Ltd. It stars Hayley Mills (as Tracey van der Byl), David McCallum (Benedict van der Byl), Jon Cypher (Johnny Lance), Volente Bertotti (Ruby Lance), Barry Trengove (Cappy) and Bill McNaught (Hendrich van der Byl).

Cast[edit]

Main cast[edit]

Supporting cast[edit]

Production[edit]

Film rights were bought by Philip Vrasne, who wanted to make it in South Africa.[1]

Kingfisher Caper writer Roy Boulting was married to star Hayley Mills at the time of the filming. This was his final writing credit.[2]

Filmink magazine called it "typical of several South African movies from the 1970s that attempted to crack the international market (The Shangani Patrol, Funeral for an Assassin, Killer Force, Target of an Assassin, Golden Rendezvous, Game for Vultures): a half-baked action piece with B-list stars (Hayley Mills, David McCallum), iffy handling and one or two decent moments. Roy Boulting, married to Mills at the time, gets a script credit, his last; the film helped kill her career as a movie star."[3]

Remake[edit]

It was remade as the 2001 miniseries The Diamond Hunters with Alyssa Milano, Roy Scheider, Sean Patrick Flanery and Michael Easton in the Mills, McNaught, Cypher and McCallum roles respectively; Jolene Blalock, Armin Rohde and Hannes Jaenicke also featured.

References[edit]

  1. ^ With TV On Horizon & Filmgoing Off, Capetown's Noted 'Theatre Land' Dies Hanson, A. Variety; Los Angeles Vol. 268, Iss. 11, (Oct 25, 1972): 31.
  2. ^ Vagg, Stephen (19 March 2022). "Movie Star Cold Streaks: Hayley Mills". Filmink.
  3. ^ Vagg, Stephen (27 January 2022). "The Cinema of Wilbur Smith". Filmink.

External links[edit]