Harold Robbins’ guess-who novel about the jet-set and South American politics was as commercial as it was trashy – and this film version may be fairly said to make the novel look even better.
The story, reputedly inspired by the exploits of real-life jet-setter Porfirio Rubirosa (Dominican diplomat, racing car driver, soldier and polo player), is an overheated mixture of bedroom antics and political machinations.
The dialogue is banal, the acting is lifeless and embarrassing, the violence is indulgent, gratuitous and well, just plain boring, and the sex is luridly non-erotic.
At the centre of the story is troubled playboy Dax (Bekim Fehmiu). Raised far from his (fictional) South American homeland of Corteguay by his guardian, Fat Cat (Ernest Borgnine) amid the high society and political intrigue of Italy, Dax uses romance as a stepping stone to success and his own personal fortune, all the while scheming to wreak vengeance on those who raped and murdered his relatives when he was a boy.
Meanwhile, Corteguay descends into chaos, so Dax returns home and leads a military coup against his one-time benefactor, Rojo (Alan Badel).
On the romantic front, there is Candice Bergen, the only principal to salvage anything from the film, playing a fabulously wealthy girl who marries the hero but loses their baby in a swing accident and eventually turns lesbian.
Unsurprisingly, The Adventurers was savaged upon its initial release. In his autobiography, Ernest Borgnine called the movie “my worst experience in nearly 20 years of filmmaking.”
Dax Xenos
Bekim Fehmiu
Marcel Campion
Charles Aznavour
Rojo
Alan Badel
Sue Ann Daley
Candice Bergen
Sergei Nikovitch
Thommy Berggren
Caroline de Coyne
Delia Boccardo
Fat Cat
Ernest Borgnine
Baron de Coyne
Rossano Brazzi
Deborah Hadley
Olivia de Havilland
Dania Leonardi
Anna Moffo
Jaime Xenos
Fernando Rey
Amparo Rojo
Leigh Taylor-Young
Mrs Erickson
Yolande Donlan
Mr Hadley
John Ireland
Colonel Gutierrez
Sydney Tafler
Sergei’s father
Ferdy Mayne
Denisonde
Angela Scoular
Belinda
Jaclyn Smith
Dax’s mother
Roberta Haynes
Trustee banker
Peter Graves
Director
Lewis Gilbert