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Television Review: Sandokan (1976)

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The 1976 Rai miniseries Sandokan occupies a peculiar niche in the annals of television history, a production that simultaneously embodies the fading grandeur of European prestige television and the enduring appeal of swashbuckling adventure narratives. At first glance, Rai, the Italian state broadcaster, seems an unlikely contender for crafting one of the 20th century’s most iconic small-screen spectacles. Yet, during the 1970s and 1980s, Rai leveraged its proximity to Rome’s Cinecittà studios—the beating heart of Italian cinema—and its state-funded ambition to mount lavish, high-concept series that rivalled the BBC in scope and ambition. This era birthed cultural touchstones like Jesus of Nazareth (1977) and Marco Polo (1982), but none achieved the mythic resonance of Sandokan. Directed by Sergio Sollima, a maestro of spaghetti westerns and gritty poliziotteschi crime dramas, the six-part miniseries fused old-fashioned escapism with sharp allegorical commentary on colonialism, geopolitics, and resistance. Its enduring legacy—screened in cinemas, adapted into a pop anthem, and immortalized in Panini sticker albums—proves that Rai’s golden age was no fluke, even as the miniseries itself grapples with the contradictions of its era.

The series draws its bones from two novels—The Tigers of Mompracem (1895) and The Pirates of Malaysia (1896)—by Emilio Salgari, a largely unknown figure in English-language literature but a titan of Italian popular fiction. Writing in the shadow of Italy’s belated colonial ambitions, Salgari wove tales of derring-do across the Malay Archipelago, populated by native heroes who defied Western imperialism. His protagonist, Sandokan, a dispossessed Malay prince turned pirate, became a symbol of anti-colonial resistance long before such themes entered mainstream discourse. Rai’s adaptation arrived nearly eight decades after Salgari’s death, yet it tapped into a lineage of Italian screen adaptations, from the 1941 black-and-white I pirati de Malesia to Umberto Lenzi’s 1970 The Tigers of Mompracem. Sollima’s vision, however, elevated the material beyond mere swashbuckling, framing Sandokan’s struggle as a parable for contemporary conflicts in Vietnam, Angola, and beyond.

Set in the mid-19th century South China Sea, Sandokan orbits the clash between British imperial forces and indigenous resistance. James Brooke (Adolfo Celi), the “White Rajah of Sarawak,” embodies the ruthless pragmatism of colonial expansion, manipulating local rulers through blackmail and military might. Sandokan (Kabir Bedi), a former prince whose family was slaughtered by the East India Company, wages a guerrilla war from his island stronghold, Mompracem, aided by his Portuguese ally Yanez de Gomera (Philippe Leroy). The plot thickens when Sandokan, lured into a trap by Brooke, washes ashore on Labuan, where he is mistaken for a local noble and nursed back to health by Marianna Guillonk (Carole André). This romance—equal parts tender and tragic—drives the narrative tension, as Sandokan’s love for Marianna threatens to expose him to British authorities. The storyline, while rooted in historical figures like the real James Brooke, transcends its period setting to critique the moral rot of empire, a theme that resonated deeply in post-Vietnam Europe.

Sollima’s transition from film to television was marked by an uncompromising commitment to authenticity. Known for directing gritty westerns like Face to Face (1967) and poliziotteschi classics like Revolver (1973), he brought a cinematic sensibility to Sandokan, insisting on location shoots in Malaysia and India. The use of local extras and minor actors lent the production a tactile realism absent from contemporary studio-bound epics. Sollima’s meticulousness extended to historical detail: period-accurate weaponry, Malay architectural styles, and the tactical nuances of naval warfare. The result was a series that felt less like a television drama and more like a living diorama of 19th-century Southeast Asia. Yet this ambition came at a cost; the production’s logistical demands delayed completion, and the decision to film in monsoon-prone regions tested crew and cast alike.

Central to the miniseries’ success was Kabir Bedi, an Indian actor cast against type in the lead role. Sollima initially envisioned Toshiro Mifune—a titan of Japanese cinema—as Sandokan, but Bedi’s raw charisma and physicality proved a masterstroke. At the time, Bedi was largely unknown in Europe, though his subsequent role as the villain’s henchman in Octopussy (1983) cemented his status as a screen presence. Here, he exudes the magnetism required to lead men into battle, balancing ferocity with vulnerability. His preparation—learning to ride and swim for the role—lent credibility to action sequences, particularly in scenes of hand-to-hand combat and naval skirmishes. Bedi’s performance avoids the pitfalls of exoticism; instead, he embodies Sandokan as a man of principle, his rage against the British rooted in personal trauma rather than mere vengeance.

Carole André, cast as Marianna Guillonk, transcends the archetypal “damsel in distress” with a performance that blends innocence and steel. Having previously worked with Sollima in Face to Face, André brought a nuanced understanding of his director’s penchant for moral ambiguity. Her Marianna is no passive love interest; as Sandokan’s wife at Mompracem, she takes active role on the island, caring for the wellbeing of local people and serving as children’s teacher. André’s ethereal beauty—highlighted by Giuseppe Rotunno’s luminous cinematography—contrasts with the brutality of her surroundings, symbolizing the fleeting hope of peace in a world defined by conquest. Her chemistry with Bedi, charged yet tender, anchors the miniseries’ romantic subplot, preventing it from devolving into melodrama.

Adolfo Celi, immortalized as Thunderball’s villainous Emilio Largo, delivers a performance of chilling intelligence as James Brooke. Rather than a mustache-twirling tyrant, Celi portrays Brooke as a calculating strategist, his power rooted in manipulation rather than brute force. His exchanges with Bedi crackle with ideological tension; Brooke admires Sandokan’s tenacity even as he seeks his destruction. Philippe Leroy, as Yanez de Gomera, provides comic relief and moral grounding, his sardonic wit undercutting the narrative’s darker themes.

Modern viewers may initially bristle at Sandokan’s deliberate pacing and 4:3 aspect ratio, a relic of television’s pre-widescreen era. The first episode, steeped in world-building and historical exposition, risks alienating those accustomed to rapid-fire storytelling. Yet Sollima’s direction rewards patience. The miniseries unfolds like a historical epic, with each episode layering political intrigue, martial arts sequences (a nod to the 1970s kung fu craze), and sweeping romanticism. The director’s background in action cinema ensures that set pieces—ship battles, jungle ambushes—are executed with visceral precision, while Rotunno’s camera captures the lush Malaysian landscapes with painterly grace.

The miniseries’ most provocative layer lies in its allegorical resonance. By the mid-1970s, Europe was reckoning with the aftermath of decolonisation, from the Portuguese withdrawal from Angola to the lingering trauma of Vietnam. Sollima frames Sandokan as a proto-revolutionary, his fight mirroring the struggles of 20th-century freedom fighters. The final episode, in which Brooke’s forces annihilate Mompracem’s inhabitants, echoes Che Guevara’s doomed campaign in Bolivia. Sandokan’s survival, aided by locals who vow to continue his struggle, offers a cautiously optimistic coda—a suggestion that resistance, though costly, is never futile.

Sandokan was a cultural phenomenon, repackaged as a two-part cinema film and spawning a chart-topping theme song by Oliver Onions. Parents across Europe named their children after the pirate prince, while Panini’s sticker album became a collector’s item. Sollima’s attempts to replicate this success—Black Corsair (1976), another adaptation of Saligari's work starring Bedi and André, and sequel La tigre è ancora viva (1977)—fell flat, lacking the original’s thematic depth. Bedi reprised the role in a 1996 miniseries, Return of the Sandokan, and its 1998 sequel, The Son of Sandokan, but these were pale echoes of the 1976 triumph.

Sandokan endures not merely as a relic of Rai’s golden age but as a testament to the power of ambitious, politically charged storytelling. Sollima’s fusion of spectacle and substance, aided by Bedi’s magnetic performance and André’s luminous presence, elevates it beyond genre fare. Its critique of imperialism, though filtered through a 19th-century lens, remains startlingly relevant—a reminder that the battles fought on the high seas of the Malay Archipelago resonate in every modern struggle against oppression. For all its technical limitations, Sandokan is a triumph of television as epic cinema, a series that dared to ask whether escapism could also be a vehicle for truth.

RATING: 7/10 (+++)

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