6 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :- Aloft On A Jules Verne Adventure, 28 January 2000
Author:
Ron Oliver (revilorest@juno.com) from Forest Ranch, CA
London, the 1800's. Victoria rules her Empire. But overseas,
the forces of oppression & evil nibble at the edges. Meanwhile,
a gruff old Scots professor takes his latest invention, a
huge
hot-air balloon, for a trial flight over Moslem Africa, picking
up
assorted companions along the way. They will meet many
kinds
of danger, but they must not be stopped, for they are on
a
secret mission from the Prime Minister: to raise the British
flag
in a remote part of the Dark Continent before slavers can
claim
that territory for themselves. In order to succeed, however,
they must first spend FIVE WEEKS IN A BALLOON.
Based on a Jules Verne novel, the story is admittedly silly,
but
it is colorful and full of action and should appeal to kids.
Older
viewers will appreciate the unusually rich cast: Sir Cedric
Hardwicke & Fabián as the Professor & his assistant; Red
Buttons as a playboy reporter; Barbara Eden & Barbara Luna
as
rescued slaves; Richard Haydn as a stuffy old explorer;
and
Peter Lorre as a slave trader.
The guest stars & bit players are equally impressive: Raymond
Bailey, Henry Daniell, Billy Gilbert, Ronald Long, Mike
Mazurki,
Herbert Marshall & Reginald Owen. All told, they turn this bit
of
fluff into enjoyable family viewing.
6 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :- The most enjoyable Jules Verne adaptation., 26 August 2000
Author:
SanDiego from The Beach
Easily the most enjoyable film version of a Jules Verne story "Five Weeks
in
a Balloon" never slows down it's pace. Awash with color, humor, adventure,
exotic sets, and a balloon that looks like it came from the designer of the
"Swiss Family Robinson" treehouse, the film keeps up a brisk pace, tells a
simple story, and wraps things up in a timely manner. Other reviews
mention
the rich cast and still manage to miss major performances by Red Buttons
and
Peter Lorre (that tells you something about the cast). Irwin Allen at his
best.
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- various factors even it out, 10 February 2007
Author:
Lee Eisenberg (eisenberg.lee@gmail.com) from Portland, Oregon, USA
No doubt we'll probably cringe a little at the portrayals of non-white
people in "Five Weeks in a Balloon": the Arabs are slave traders and
the Africans dance around in loin cloths and carry spears. Of course,
Jules Verne wrote the novel, so we can't totally blame the movie for
the portrayals. So if we can get past these depictions, it's a
perfectly entertaining experience. The movie portrays English scientist
Cedric Hardwicke inventing a balloon-powered dirigible and having to
fly to West Africa to stop slave traders (as if the British weren't
doing creepy things in their own colonies?). He brings along military
man Richard Haydn, young Canadian guy Fabian, and accident-prone
American reporter Red Buttons. Through numerous stops, they pick up
freed slave Barbara Luna, slave trader Peter Lorre, American teacher
Barbara Eden, and chimpanzee Chester.
The characters come across as a real mixture. Most of the cast members
do a good job, but Fabian seems out of place, Red Buttons's role just
seems silly, and Barbara Luna has little more than her looks (I've
never read the novel, so I can't comment on possible changes). In
almost any other movie, this combo would drag the whole thing down
significantly, but not here; if anything, it makes the picture more
entertaining. Even if there's a lot of continuity errors and such
things, it's impossible not to have fun while watching "FWIAB". Also
starring Herbert Marshall, Billy Gilbert, Henry Daniell and Mike
Mazurki (Gilbert and Daniell previously co-starred in "The Great
Dictator").
One more thing. Among the DVD's special features is footage from the
movie's debut in Denver. One of the best things about this footage is
that we get to see Barbara Eden in a shell dress! Such a sight, in my
opinion, means that there is a God! Aside from her Jeannie outfit, a
shell dress is the only thing that I can imagine Barbara Eden wearing.
If these sorts of thoughts make me a pervert, then I'm proud to be one.
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- Taller Than An Elephant, 9 February 2007
Author:
sheenafilm from Hamburg, Germany
The title song assures us that, if you fly in a balloon, nothing is
impossible. "I'm taller than an elephant and twice as powerful, too."
From the first minute you know, "5 Weeks in a Balloon" will be fun with
a capital F. Sure, it's easy to analyze this movie and come to the
conclusion it's childish and full of clichés. But my point is,
grown-ups rarely manage to make movies that really show the world as it
is in the imagination of a 10 year old - an admirable quality. While
the real Africa is struck by war, starvation and disease, this is the
fantasy Africa where rogues were colorful costumes for good looks and
the heroes will have a break in the middle of the wilderness, not
worrying about the lions around, to sing a song before they go on -
because they know, in a dream no-one can actually be harmed. "5 Weeks
in a Balloon" may not be Irwin Allen's best movie, but I still like it
as much as I did when I watched it for the first time, because only
movie theater entertainment at its best can take us away from the real
world for an hour and a half to forget all our worries. Can't be
grateful enough for that sometimes!
5 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :- It's a shame The 5th Dimension couldn't have written the theme song!, 18 November 2004
Author:
Poseidon-3 from Cincinnati, OH
Before he gathered hordes of Hollywood A, B and C-list stars in
overturned luxury liners and sky-high burning buildings, Irwin Allen
gave the world a couple of colorful, simplistic, adventure films with
casts full of name stars, past and present. This one concerns Hardwicke
and his attempts to take his experimental hot air balloon to the edge
of Africa and claim the territory for Great Britain before slave
traders can do it first. Along for the ride are perky assistant Fabian,
calamity-plagued reporter Buttons and uptight military man Haydn. They
are soon joined by runaway slave Luna and shady slave trader Lorre and
one of his recent captives Eden. Together, they brave various dangers
such as outraged natives, drunken sheiks, sandstorms and waterfalls
(nearly every Allen film ever made includes some type of natural
threat.) The film is simple-minded, non-think entertainment made
watchable by it's pallet of stars and it's varying locales. Hardwicke,
wearing a fluffy wig and with his pants up near his nipples, is a long
way off from "The Ten Commandments" and other, greater roles. Seeing
him paired with Fabian (!) is about the most unexpected teaming
imaginable. Fabian, with his adorable 5-inch-high pompadour, looks cute
throughout, but is saddled with a hilariously awkward title song that
he sings more than once. Apparently his accordion lessons only got him
that far. Another surprising pair is that of Buttons and Eden. He is a
charming character actor, but has no business headlining an adventure
film! That's what an early Oscar win can do for (or to!) a career,
though. He acquits himself fairly well, however. Eden is free of the
overstated qualities that she brought to "I Dream of Jeannie" and is
refreshingly subdued and attractive. Haydn gives a very stylized,
mannered performance that may baffle those more familiar with his
chummy Uncle Max character from "The Sound of Music". His inflection
does begin to grate after a while. Lorre manages to toss off a few dry
witticisms in one of his last roles. Luna, trotting around in an
abbreviated costume and a teased hairdo, is mere decoration. In case
all these people weren't wacky enough, there's a female chimpanzee on
board! Several famed actors pop up in cameo roles. An ill-looking
Marshall has a bit as The Prime Minister and legendarily tart Daniell
has a role as a Sheik. Most of the Arabian characters are portrayed by
white men in make-up, which was customary at the time. Logistical
oddities and camp factors abound. The balloon can barely get off the
ground with just four men at the beginning (half the luggage gets
tossed), yet before long there's seven passengers and a monkey on it!
Watch for the screamingly funny scene in which Eden, running across a
perfectly flat, open field, manages to trip over the lone branch that
has fallen in the way. All those oranges gone to waste! The humor is
pretty lame and the situations are hardly realistic, yet somehow the
cornball movie winds up being fairly entertaining.
6 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- Pretty Forgettable for all That, 11 December 2004
Author:
theowinthrop from United States
I remember when this film came out in 1962. It was one of the first
motion pictures that used television to advertise it's scenes and cast
and excitement (including it's theme song). And the film did moderately
well if at all.
Jules Verne had written several failed plays (boulevard farces) and a
few short stories before this novel was written. Taking advantage of
current interest in African exploration (the brouhaha regarding Burton
and Speke and the source of the Nile - see THE MOUNTAINS OF THE MOON -
as well as the discoveries of the first gorilla by French explorer Paul
du Chaillu), Verne joined this to the growing interest in ballooning,
and man's conquest of the air. The book was Verne's first published
novel, and it turned out to be a success. Ironically, despite it's
title mentioning "balloons", most people now think that Verne's
ballooning novel is AROUND THE WORLD IN 80 DAYS. While that is a better
written novel (and a more frequently read one) there is no scene in it
of Phileas Fogg and Passepartout flying in a balloon. In fact, the
first time the heroes of AROUND THE WORLD met ballooning was in the
1957 film. Mike Todd invented the sequence (with an assist by his
script writers) to remind the movie audience of Verne as father of
modern science fiction.
For a first novel FIVE WEEKS IN A BALLOON is okay. Professor Samuel
Ferguson and two companions decide to do some explorations of Africa by
flying a balloon from Zanzibar (where Burton and Speke took off from)
and flying westward. They succeed in crossing the continent, and their
observations about Africa (it's peoples, flowers, fauna, etc.) mingle
with various adventures by the balloonists. In comparison with later
novels by Verne it is fairly tame - it is hard to believe he wrote A
JOURNEY TO THE CENTER OF THE EARTH (1864) only one year later. He was
improving by then, but he had to start somewhere.
The movie, despite many nice performances like Hardwicke as Ferguson,
Red Buttons as a newspaper owner's spoiled son, Fabian, Peter Lorre (as
a reformed villain), and Richard Haydn is not much better than a cute
kid's film that gave employment to many character actors. It is nice to
see Herbert Marshall in his last role as England's Prime Minister (Lord
Palmerston?). He was not looking well, but he did give a nice brief
performance - in fact it was necessary to help the pitiably weak plot
of the novel. Fergusson is asked to assist the British Government in
preventing a group of slavers from planting their flag on some
important African territory - by planting the British flag there first.
Fergusson agrees to this, and from time to time we actually see the
slavers (led by Mike Mazurki) headed by land to the critical land spot.
In the end they are defeated.
Because of the infantile direction of the script (Lorre has lines like
"Kismet, we are doomed!") the film is never above serviceable for
entertaining kids. It remains in my memory only because it was the
first film I saw advertised on television that I remember. But I have
never run back to the television to watch it on any rerun - if it has
had any rerun. For all the famed character actors in it one feels that
they wasted their talents on a slightly acceptable turkey.
Having seen the horrendous "The Lost World" (1960) a few weeks ago, I
was afraid to revisit "Five Weeks in a Balloon." I had seen both films
when originally released, and had a good memory of them (including the
title song of this one, which everybody seems to like.) "The Lost
World" turned out to be static, with terrible performances by people
like Jill St. John and Fernando Lamas, surrounded by fake jungles,
caverns, dinosaurs and volcanoes. So when it was "Five Weeks in a
Balloon" turn, I had my doubts. Surprisingly, it is quite enjoyable
once one overlooks its Hollywood version of African cultures, people
and savannas, the stock footage, the (American) propaganda, the balloon
been pulled by a thread during a rain storm, or Irwin Allen's handling
of action scenes. Allen directed them awkwardly, and made the
proceedings look slower than what is actually happening, as the rescue
scene in the mesquite or the final scene by a river. In any case, it's
a colorful and good looking CinemaScope production, with an interesting
cast and many outdoors scenes that make it more attractive than Allen's
other movies. By his standards, this may be the film he directed best,
leaving his productions "The Poseidon Adventure" or "The Towering
Inferno" to more capable hands.
3 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- Adventurous Jules Verne Movie, 10 May 2002
Author:
camibear7 from USA
Barbara Eden is as beautiful as ever in this movie that reminded me a bit
of
Around the World in 80 Days. Mainly because of the group of people riding
high over the country in a hot air balloon.
They have many adventures as they land in different spots.
Some are exciting some are hair raising.
The whole movie is fun.
Can't miss with this movie.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- "Kismet, We Are Doomed", 14 February 2008
Author:
bkoganbing from Buffalo, New York
I well remember seeing Five Weeks In A Balloon in theaters as a lad and
after Fabian made his appearance peeking through the cabin door of the
balloon, the squeals from his teenage fans pretty much drowned out the
soundtrack the rest of the film. When I got to see it later on
television I found it to be an unassuming film, a nice adaption of
Jules Verne's story, but one strictly for the kid trade.
It seems a pity to waste the literate voices of Cedric Hardwicke and
Richard Haydn and Herbert Marshall on screaming teenyboppers. Not to
mention the comic talents of Red Buttons. Still that's what happened
because the audience this film drew was for that pompadoured kid from
Philadelphia.
The United Kingdom has always prided itself on the fact that it was the
first of western nations to outlaw the slave trade. So couched in those
terms, its imperial ambitions in Africa seem almost noble in Five Weeks
In A Balloon. Cedric Hardwicke is a balloonist who's invented an early
form of gas propulsion with which his assistant Fabian helps him. He's
planning to do some exploring of East Africa in and around Zanzibar.
But Her Majesty in the form of Prime Minister Herbert Marshall calls on
Hardwicke to undertake a 4000 mile journey across Africa to get to the
Upper Volta to beat a gang of slave traders of an unknown nation and
plant the flag for good old Britain.
Making the trip with them are Richard Haydn representing the Crown and
Red Buttons as a neutral American observer and reporter. Buttons is a
walking train wreck as he gets them in one scrape after another. Red
does redeem himself in the end however.
Along the way this merry bunch picks up two women rescued from the
clutches of slavery, Barbaras Luna and Eden and a slave-trader played
by Peter Lorre. Lorre has the best lines in the whole film, he actually
manages to see 'kismet, we are doomed' a few times without cracking up.
Richard Haydn is usually a very funny guy, but in this film he's down
right annoying. Playing his usual fussbudget character, you kind of
wonder is this the type of man who helped put together an Empire upon
which the sun never set.
Five Weeks In A Balloon is a nice film, but sad to say this cinema
version of Jules Verne is strictly for the juveniles or for those who
have a thing for Fabian.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- Classic Tongue-in-Cheek Adventure, 28 December 2007
Author:
tindog from Los Angeles, CA
This film is right in line with some of the better soft science
adventures from the 50s and 60s that hark back to 19th or early 20th
centuries; Journey to the Center of the Earth, Around the World in 80
Days; and touches on the humor and silliness at times of Those Daring
Young Men in their Jaunty Jalopies and The Daring Young Men in their
Flyings Machines or even How I Flew from London to Paris in 25 Hours 11
Minutes and The Great Race. Trying to take full advantage of
CinemaScope and the new technologies in Deluxe color, the filmmakers
concocted a fun and funny adventure that looks big and beautiful. Not
for everyone, I suppose, at times dry and at other times over-silly and
contrived, but always fun, and with the added bonus or a memorable
theme song performed by The Brothers Four.
Own the rights?
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6 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :-

Aloft On A Jules Verne Adventure, 28 January 2000
Author: Ron Oliver (revilorest@juno.com) from Forest Ranch, CA
London, the 1800's. Victoria rules her Empire. But overseas, the forces of oppression & evil nibble at the edges. Meanwhile, a gruff old Scots professor takes his latest invention, a huge hot-air balloon, for a trial flight over Moslem Africa, picking up assorted companions along the way. They will meet many kinds of danger, but they must not be stopped, for they are on a secret mission from the Prime Minister: to raise the British flag in a remote part of the Dark Continent before slavers can claim that territory for themselves. In order to succeed, however, they must first spend FIVE WEEKS IN A BALLOON.
Based on a Jules Verne novel, the story is admittedly silly, but it is colorful and full of action and should appeal to kids. Older viewers will appreciate the unusually rich cast: Sir Cedric Hardwicke & Fabián as the Professor & his assistant; Red Buttons as a playboy reporter; Barbara Eden & Barbara Luna as rescued slaves; Richard Haydn as a stuffy old explorer; and Peter Lorre as a slave trader.
The guest stars & bit players are equally impressive: Raymond Bailey, Henry Daniell, Billy Gilbert, Ronald Long, Mike Mazurki, Herbert Marshall & Reginald Owen. All told, they turn this bit of fluff into enjoyable family viewing.
6 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :-
The most enjoyable Jules Verne adaptation., 26 August 2000
Author: SanDiego from The Beach
Easily the most enjoyable film version of a Jules Verne story "Five Weeks in a Balloon" never slows down it's pace. Awash with color, humor, adventure, exotic sets, and a balloon that looks like it came from the designer of the "Swiss Family Robinson" treehouse, the film keeps up a brisk pace, tells a simple story, and wraps things up in a timely manner. Other reviews mention the rich cast and still manage to miss major performances by Red Buttons and Peter Lorre (that tells you something about the cast). Irwin Allen at his best.
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-

various factors even it out, 10 February 2007
Author: Lee Eisenberg (eisenberg.lee@gmail.com) from Portland, Oregon, USA
No doubt we'll probably cringe a little at the portrayals of non-white people in "Five Weeks in a Balloon": the Arabs are slave traders and the Africans dance around in loin cloths and carry spears. Of course, Jules Verne wrote the novel, so we can't totally blame the movie for the portrayals. So if we can get past these depictions, it's a perfectly entertaining experience. The movie portrays English scientist Cedric Hardwicke inventing a balloon-powered dirigible and having to fly to West Africa to stop slave traders (as if the British weren't doing creepy things in their own colonies?). He brings along military man Richard Haydn, young Canadian guy Fabian, and accident-prone American reporter Red Buttons. Through numerous stops, they pick up freed slave Barbara Luna, slave trader Peter Lorre, American teacher Barbara Eden, and chimpanzee Chester.
The characters come across as a real mixture. Most of the cast members do a good job, but Fabian seems out of place, Red Buttons's role just seems silly, and Barbara Luna has little more than her looks (I've never read the novel, so I can't comment on possible changes). In almost any other movie, this combo would drag the whole thing down significantly, but not here; if anything, it makes the picture more entertaining. Even if there's a lot of continuity errors and such things, it's impossible not to have fun while watching "FWIAB". Also starring Herbert Marshall, Billy Gilbert, Henry Daniell and Mike Mazurki (Gilbert and Daniell previously co-starred in "The Great Dictator").
One more thing. Among the DVD's special features is footage from the movie's debut in Denver. One of the best things about this footage is that we get to see Barbara Eden in a shell dress! Such a sight, in my opinion, means that there is a God! Aside from her Jeannie outfit, a shell dress is the only thing that I can imagine Barbara Eden wearing. If these sorts of thoughts make me a pervert, then I'm proud to be one.
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-

Taller Than An Elephant, 9 February 2007
Author: sheenafilm from Hamburg, Germany
The title song assures us that, if you fly in a balloon, nothing is impossible. "I'm taller than an elephant and twice as powerful, too." From the first minute you know, "5 Weeks in a Balloon" will be fun with a capital F. Sure, it's easy to analyze this movie and come to the conclusion it's childish and full of clichés. But my point is, grown-ups rarely manage to make movies that really show the world as it is in the imagination of a 10 year old - an admirable quality. While the real Africa is struck by war, starvation and disease, this is the fantasy Africa where rogues were colorful costumes for good looks and the heroes will have a break in the middle of the wilderness, not worrying about the lions around, to sing a song before they go on - because they know, in a dream no-one can actually be harmed. "5 Weeks in a Balloon" may not be Irwin Allen's best movie, but I still like it as much as I did when I watched it for the first time, because only movie theater entertainment at its best can take us away from the real world for an hour and a half to forget all our worries. Can't be grateful enough for that sometimes!
5 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :-
It's a shame The 5th Dimension couldn't have written the theme song!, 18 November 2004
Author: Poseidon-3 from Cincinnati, OH
Before he gathered hordes of Hollywood A, B and C-list stars in overturned luxury liners and sky-high burning buildings, Irwin Allen gave the world a couple of colorful, simplistic, adventure films with casts full of name stars, past and present. This one concerns Hardwicke and his attempts to take his experimental hot air balloon to the edge of Africa and claim the territory for Great Britain before slave traders can do it first. Along for the ride are perky assistant Fabian, calamity-plagued reporter Buttons and uptight military man Haydn. They are soon joined by runaway slave Luna and shady slave trader Lorre and one of his recent captives Eden. Together, they brave various dangers such as outraged natives, drunken sheiks, sandstorms and waterfalls (nearly every Allen film ever made includes some type of natural threat.) The film is simple-minded, non-think entertainment made watchable by it's pallet of stars and it's varying locales. Hardwicke, wearing a fluffy wig and with his pants up near his nipples, is a long way off from "The Ten Commandments" and other, greater roles. Seeing him paired with Fabian (!) is about the most unexpected teaming imaginable. Fabian, with his adorable 5-inch-high pompadour, looks cute throughout, but is saddled with a hilariously awkward title song that he sings more than once. Apparently his accordion lessons only got him that far. Another surprising pair is that of Buttons and Eden. He is a charming character actor, but has no business headlining an adventure film! That's what an early Oscar win can do for (or to!) a career, though. He acquits himself fairly well, however. Eden is free of the overstated qualities that she brought to "I Dream of Jeannie" and is refreshingly subdued and attractive. Haydn gives a very stylized, mannered performance that may baffle those more familiar with his chummy Uncle Max character from "The Sound of Music". His inflection does begin to grate after a while. Lorre manages to toss off a few dry witticisms in one of his last roles. Luna, trotting around in an abbreviated costume and a teased hairdo, is mere decoration. In case all these people weren't wacky enough, there's a female chimpanzee on board! Several famed actors pop up in cameo roles. An ill-looking Marshall has a bit as The Prime Minister and legendarily tart Daniell has a role as a Sheik. Most of the Arabian characters are portrayed by white men in make-up, which was customary at the time. Logistical oddities and camp factors abound. The balloon can barely get off the ground with just four men at the beginning (half the luggage gets tossed), yet before long there's seven passengers and a monkey on it! Watch for the screamingly funny scene in which Eden, running across a perfectly flat, open field, manages to trip over the lone branch that has fallen in the way. All those oranges gone to waste! The humor is pretty lame and the situations are hardly realistic, yet somehow the cornball movie winds up being fairly entertaining.
6 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-
Pretty Forgettable for all That, 11 December 2004
Author: theowinthrop from United States
I remember when this film came out in 1962. It was one of the first motion pictures that used television to advertise it's scenes and cast and excitement (including it's theme song). And the film did moderately well if at all.
Jules Verne had written several failed plays (boulevard farces) and a few short stories before this novel was written. Taking advantage of current interest in African exploration (the brouhaha regarding Burton and Speke and the source of the Nile - see THE MOUNTAINS OF THE MOON - as well as the discoveries of the first gorilla by French explorer Paul du Chaillu), Verne joined this to the growing interest in ballooning, and man's conquest of the air. The book was Verne's first published novel, and it turned out to be a success. Ironically, despite it's title mentioning "balloons", most people now think that Verne's ballooning novel is AROUND THE WORLD IN 80 DAYS. While that is a better written novel (and a more frequently read one) there is no scene in it of Phileas Fogg and Passepartout flying in a balloon. In fact, the first time the heroes of AROUND THE WORLD met ballooning was in the 1957 film. Mike Todd invented the sequence (with an assist by his script writers) to remind the movie audience of Verne as father of modern science fiction.
For a first novel FIVE WEEKS IN A BALLOON is okay. Professor Samuel Ferguson and two companions decide to do some explorations of Africa by flying a balloon from Zanzibar (where Burton and Speke took off from) and flying westward. They succeed in crossing the continent, and their observations about Africa (it's peoples, flowers, fauna, etc.) mingle with various adventures by the balloonists. In comparison with later novels by Verne it is fairly tame - it is hard to believe he wrote A JOURNEY TO THE CENTER OF THE EARTH (1864) only one year later. He was improving by then, but he had to start somewhere.
The movie, despite many nice performances like Hardwicke as Ferguson, Red Buttons as a newspaper owner's spoiled son, Fabian, Peter Lorre (as a reformed villain), and Richard Haydn is not much better than a cute kid's film that gave employment to many character actors. It is nice to see Herbert Marshall in his last role as England's Prime Minister (Lord Palmerston?). He was not looking well, but he did give a nice brief performance - in fact it was necessary to help the pitiably weak plot of the novel. Fergusson is asked to assist the British Government in preventing a group of slavers from planting their flag on some important African territory - by planting the British flag there first. Fergusson agrees to this, and from time to time we actually see the slavers (led by Mike Mazurki) headed by land to the critical land spot. In the end they are defeated.
Because of the infantile direction of the script (Lorre has lines like "Kismet, we are doomed!") the film is never above serviceable for entertaining kids. It remains in my memory only because it was the first film I saw advertised on television that I remember. But I have never run back to the television to watch it on any rerun - if it has had any rerun. For all the famed character actors in it one feels that they wasted their talents on a slightly acceptable turkey.
2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :-

Allen's best directed film, 23 April 2006
Author: Edgar Soberón Torchia (estorchia@gmail.com) from Panama
Having seen the horrendous "The Lost World" (1960) a few weeks ago, I was afraid to revisit "Five Weeks in a Balloon." I had seen both films when originally released, and had a good memory of them (including the title song of this one, which everybody seems to like.) "The Lost World" turned out to be static, with terrible performances by people like Jill St. John and Fernando Lamas, surrounded by fake jungles, caverns, dinosaurs and volcanoes. So when it was "Five Weeks in a Balloon" turn, I had my doubts. Surprisingly, it is quite enjoyable once one overlooks its Hollywood version of African cultures, people and savannas, the stock footage, the (American) propaganda, the balloon been pulled by a thread during a rain storm, or Irwin Allen's handling of action scenes. Allen directed them awkwardly, and made the proceedings look slower than what is actually happening, as the rescue scene in the mesquite or the final scene by a river. In any case, it's a colorful and good looking CinemaScope production, with an interesting cast and many outdoors scenes that make it more attractive than Allen's other movies. By his standards, this may be the film he directed best, leaving his productions "The Poseidon Adventure" or "The Towering Inferno" to more capable hands.
3 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-

Adventurous Jules Verne Movie, 10 May 2002
Author: camibear7 from USA
Barbara Eden is as beautiful as ever in this movie that reminded me a bit of Around the World in 80 Days. Mainly because of the group of people riding high over the country in a hot air balloon. They have many adventures as they land in different spots. Some are exciting some are hair raising. The whole movie is fun. Can't miss with this movie.
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

"Kismet, We Are Doomed", 14 February 2008
Author: bkoganbing from Buffalo, New York
I well remember seeing Five Weeks In A Balloon in theaters as a lad and after Fabian made his appearance peeking through the cabin door of the balloon, the squeals from his teenage fans pretty much drowned out the soundtrack the rest of the film. When I got to see it later on television I found it to be an unassuming film, a nice adaption of Jules Verne's story, but one strictly for the kid trade.
It seems a pity to waste the literate voices of Cedric Hardwicke and Richard Haydn and Herbert Marshall on screaming teenyboppers. Not to mention the comic talents of Red Buttons. Still that's what happened because the audience this film drew was for that pompadoured kid from Philadelphia.
The United Kingdom has always prided itself on the fact that it was the first of western nations to outlaw the slave trade. So couched in those terms, its imperial ambitions in Africa seem almost noble in Five Weeks In A Balloon. Cedric Hardwicke is a balloonist who's invented an early form of gas propulsion with which his assistant Fabian helps him. He's planning to do some exploring of East Africa in and around Zanzibar. But Her Majesty in the form of Prime Minister Herbert Marshall calls on Hardwicke to undertake a 4000 mile journey across Africa to get to the Upper Volta to beat a gang of slave traders of an unknown nation and plant the flag for good old Britain.
Making the trip with them are Richard Haydn representing the Crown and Red Buttons as a neutral American observer and reporter. Buttons is a walking train wreck as he gets them in one scrape after another. Red does redeem himself in the end however.
Along the way this merry bunch picks up two women rescued from the clutches of slavery, Barbaras Luna and Eden and a slave-trader played by Peter Lorre. Lorre has the best lines in the whole film, he actually manages to see 'kismet, we are doomed' a few times without cracking up.
Richard Haydn is usually a very funny guy, but in this film he's down right annoying. Playing his usual fussbudget character, you kind of wonder is this the type of man who helped put together an Empire upon which the sun never set.
Five Weeks In A Balloon is a nice film, but sad to say this cinema version of Jules Verne is strictly for the juveniles or for those who have a thing for Fabian.
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Classic Tongue-in-Cheek Adventure, 28 December 2007
Author: tindog from Los Angeles, CA
This film is right in line with some of the better soft science adventures from the 50s and 60s that hark back to 19th or early 20th centuries; Journey to the Center of the Earth, Around the World in 80 Days; and touches on the humor and silliness at times of Those Daring Young Men in their Jaunty Jalopies and The Daring Young Men in their Flyings Machines or even How I Flew from London to Paris in 25 Hours 11 Minutes and The Great Race. Trying to take full advantage of CinemaScope and the new technologies in Deluxe color, the filmmakers concocted a fun and funny adventure that looks big and beautiful. Not for everyone, I suppose, at times dry and at other times over-silly and contrived, but always fun, and with the added bonus or a memorable theme song performed by The Brothers Four.
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