Secret of the Incas

1954 "Marrying Doc is my one chance ... Don't kiss it away for me, Harry ... please ... please ... please ..."
6| 1h40m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 06 June 1954 Released
Producted By: Paramount
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
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Harry Steele (Charlton Heston) is a tourist guide determined to make his fortune by finding the Sunburst, an Inca treasure.

Genre

Adventure, Action

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Director

Jerry Hopper

Production Companies

Paramount

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Secret of the Incas Audience Reviews

Jeanskynebu the audience applauded
ThedevilChoose When a movie has you begging for it to end not even half way through it's pure crap. We've all seen this movie and this characters millions of times, nothing new in it. Don't waste your time.
Merolliv I really wanted to like this movie. I feel terribly cynical trashing it, and that's why I'm giving it a middling 5. Actually, I'm giving it a 5 because there were some superb performances.
Rosie Searle It's the kind of movie you'll want to see a second time with someone who hasn't seen it yet, to remember what it was like to watch it for the first time.
zardoz-13 Jerry Hopper's escapist escapade "Secret of the Incas" is a harmless little action-adventure thriller with Charlton Heston cast as a soldier of fortune. Many film aficionados have argued that this colorful little 97-minute epic 'inspired' the Indiana Jones film franchise because Heston's adventurer Harry Steele (talk about a metaphorical name!) dressed himself in an outfit that closely resembled the apparel that Harrison Ford's daring archaeologist donned for his cliff-hanging shenanigans. Mind you, scenarists Ranald MacDougall of "Mildred Pierce" (he received an Oscar nod for the Joan Crawford murder-mystery) and Sydney Boehm of "The Big Heat" put our reckless hero in tense situations as he searches for fabled hidden treasure in the Peruvian jungles. Early in this carefree opus, our hero commanders a small, propeller-driven aircraft with the heroine aboard, Elena Antonescu (the exotic French actress Nicole Maurey of "The Day of the Triffids"), and they take off with the authorities pursuing them in a jeep with pistols blazing futilely in an effort to stop them. Equipped with eight hours of fuel, Harry sets the aircraft down in a high mountain pasture just shy of the intended airport so that they won't be arrested. Afterward, he digs up a conveniently stashed inflatable raft that Elena and he use to ply the river rapids with. This in itself is reminiscent of the breathless opening in Spielberg's "Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom." Mind you, the tame "Secret of the Incas" isn't a high-octane, white-knuckled exercise in cliffhanging suspense, but you can see how it is comparable to such fare. Of course, Hollywood had not attained the summit of technical perfection in the depiction of such antics back in 1954 when "Secret of the Incas" came out, but this simply means that Hopper and his scenarists can be credited with breaking the ice. Heston had starred earlier in Hopper's "Pony Express," and the director and star would re-team after "Secret of the Incas" with "The Private War of Major Benson." Hopper was strictly a contract director who endowed with films with a polish that reflected his competence. During the twilight of his career, he turned to helming television shows such as "Naked City," "The Rifleman," and "Have Gun-Will Travel." Charlton Heston toiled in B-movies like this until he got his big break in "Ben-Hur." Altogether, "Secret of the Incas" is a dandy little melodrama co-starring Oscar winning character actor Thomas Mitchell as Steele's treacherous adversary while Robert Young appears as an archaeologist who spends more time in his camp tent than on the trail of adventure.
James Hitchcock Charlton Heston made two films in 1954, and both have a South American setting. Whereas the first, "The Naked Jungle", was filmed in the USA, with Florida standing in for the Brazilian jungle, the second, "Secret of the Incas", was actually shot on location in Peru. It is often regarded as an inspiration for "Raiders of the Lost Ark" and the Indiana Jones franchise. Heston's character Harry Steele is, admittedly, not a professional archaeologist; he is an adventurer who poses as a tourist guide but whose real reason for being in Peru is to find an ancient gold and jewelled Inca treasure. Legend has it that the Inca Empire fell when this object was stolen from the Temple of the Sun and that the Empire will be reborn once it is found and returned to its rightful place. Steele's costume, including a leather jacket and fedora hat, is similar to that worn by Harrison Ford in the Indiana Jones films, and at one point he even wears a light beard, something unusual in the fifties when Hollywood's leading men were nearly always clean-shaven. (Many people were upset when Gregory Peck appeared with a historically-accurate moustache in "The Gunfighter", a fictionalised biography of the Wild West outlaw Johnny Ringo). Although Steele he is the hero of the film, he is by no means wholly admirable. This was something of a departure for Heston, who normally specialised in playing the good guys. Christopher Leiningen, his character in "The Naked Jungle", may be rather stiff and lacking in human warmth, even towards his wife, but morally he is wholly upright. Steele is not. His initial intention towards the Inca artifact is to steal it; he is only the "hero" by comparison with his ruthless rival Ed Morgan. Only at the end does Steele have a change of heart. A subplot deals with his romance with a glamorous Romanian refugee named Elena Antonescu. We never discover Elena's full back-story, but she must have been a person of some consequence because the Romanian secret police have sent an agent all the way to Peru to persuade her to return to her homeland. "Secret of the Incas" is in many ways a standard action/adventure flick, but Heston always makes a very watchable action hero, and the striking photography of the Andean scenery lifts it above the level of the average fifties B-movie. it is often credited with popularising Machu Picchu as a tourist destination. 6/10
earlytalkie This film has been called the predecessor of "Indiana Jones" and indeed, Charleton Heston has a very similar costume. The film holds up rather well, and it is uplifted by the glorious singing of Yma Sumac. Miss Sumac, who I will agree is an acquired taste, sings several amazing numbers in the course of the film, as well as singing over the opening and closing credits. The film also has some surprising sexual innuendo between Mr. Heston and Glenda Farrell. The Technicolor is good and there is good native atmosphere (the film was partly filmed on location). All in all, this is an interesting film with good 50's atmosphere and some amazing music.
stormy724 For those who have suggested that Indiana Jones was based on Heston's character in this movie, you are wrong, but not that far off. Jones was loosely based on Hiram Bingham, the Yale explorer who rediscovered Machu Picchu in 1911. Bingham, a very interesting character, later became a U.S. Senator.I don't know what movie everyone else was watching, but this one is on my short list of worst films I have ever seen. I have been to Machu Picchu and Cuzco ---and I thought this was an insult to Incan/Peruvian culture. The plot is predictable, the acting mediocre, and as someone else pointed out, Steele turning into a good guy at the end is a cop out.