The Ghost and the Darkness - actors, characters and roles

All actors and their roles in the film "The Ghost and the Darkness"
The Ghost and the Darkness (1996)
Timing: 1:49 (109 min)
The Ghost and the Darkness - TMDB rating
6.823/10
1111
The Ghost and the Darkness - Kinopoisk rating
7.603/10
39017
The Ghost and the Darkness - IMDB rating
6.8/10
70000

Actors and characters

Photo Michael Douglas #8863Photo Michael Douglas #8864Photo Michael Douglas #8865Photo Michael Douglas #8866

Michael Douglas

Michael Douglas
Character Charles Remington
Photo Val Kilmer #7483Photo Val Kilmer #7484Photo Val Kilmer #7485Photo Val Kilmer #7486

Val Kilmer

Val Kilmer
Character Col. John Henry Patterson
Photo Tom Wilkinson #29052Photo Tom Wilkinson #29053Photo Tom Wilkinson #29054Photo Tom Wilkinson #29055

Tom Wilkinson

Tom Wilkinson
Character Sir Robert Beaumont
Photo John Kani #20784

John Kani

John Kani
Character Samuel
Photo Emily Mortimer #20236Photo Emily Mortimer #20237Photo Emily Mortimer #20238Photo Emily Mortimer #20239

Emily Mortimer

Emily Mortimer
Character Helena Patterson
Photo Bernard Hill #12241Photo Bernard Hill #12242

Bernard Hill

Bernard Hill
Character Dr. David Hawthorne
Photo Brian McCardie #82864

Brian McCardie

Brian McCardie
Character Angus Starling
Photo Om Puri #89564Photo Om Puri #89565Photo Om Puri #89566

Om Puri

Om Puri
Character Abdullah
Photo Jack Devnarain #89567
Jack Devnarain
Character Nervous Sikh Orderly
Henry Cele
Character Mahina
Kurt Egelhof
Character Indian Victim
Satchu Annamalai
Character Worker
Teddy Reddy
Character Worker
Raheem Khan
Character Worker
Glen Gabela
Character Orderly
Richard Nwamba
Character Orderly #2
Nick Lorentz
Character Photographer
Photo Alex Ferns #14765Photo Alex Ferns #14766Photo Alex Ferns #14767

Alex Ferns

Alex Ferns
Character Stockton
Kaycey Padayachee
Character Beaumont's Valet
Giles Masters
Character Beaumont's Clerk
Justin Gifford
Character Patterson's Son
Patrick Gifford
Character Patterson's Son
George Middlekoop
Character Station Master
Photo Caesar the Lion #387312

Caesar the Lion

Caesar the Lion
Character Lion (uncredited)
Photo Bongo the Lion #387313

Bongo the Lion

Bongo the Lion
Character Lion (uncredited)

What's left behind the scenes

  • Completely different actors were considered for the role of Colonel Patterson, namely Mel Gibson, Tom Cruise, and Kevin Costner.
  • Paramount Pictures, which released the film 'The Ghost and the Darkness,' initially wanted to film most of the movie in Kenya, where the events actually took place. However, the political situation in the country at that time was far from hospitable, which forced the production to move filming to South Africa.
  • The film's title originates from a legend about two monstrous lions endowed with such intelligence and mystical power that the Masai gave them the names 'Ghost' and 'Darkness'.
  • A lot of money was spent creating special effects to generate animated lions, but the producers concluded that they would have to include live lions in most scenes. Five lions were used for the filming: Bongo and Caesar from Canada, who filmed together without any issues (lions of the same sex generally instinctively attack each other); two from France: Voltan and Roman (they were filmed separately, confirming the aforementioned rule); and 12-year-old screen veteran Sudan from California, capable of acting like a real performer – simulating an attack without harming a person, which is extremely rare among domesticated animals, especially lions.
  • The heroes' weapons were chosen quite carefully – they correspond to their time. Colonel Patterson arrived in Africa with a “Lee-Metford Mk.II” carbine, in a hunting version with a sporting stock and a shortened 6-round magazine. Incidentally, Patterson fired exactly that many times on his bridge at the end of the film. Professional hunter Remington, as befits a professional of those years, hunted with a “Holland & Holland”.
  • Although both lions are depicted with manes in the film, the real man-eating lions of Tsavo were completely devoid of manes.
  • The location of the historical bridge construction where the described events took place is Tsavo National Park in Kenya, a place with coordinates 2.993558°S 38.461458°E.
  • There is only one scene using an animatronic lion. All other scenes were filmed using two real lions – Bongo and Caesar. The same lions also appeared in the film “George of the Jungle” (1997).
  • After the lions were killed, their skins were used by Colonel Patterson as rugs. In 1924, Patterson sold them to the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago for $5000.
  • According to the book 'The Devil's Candy,' Brian De Palma was attached to direct the film in 1990. He was removed by the studio after the failure of 'The Bonfire of the Vanities' (1990). Kenneth Branagh was later briefly associated with the project following the success of 'Henry V' (1989).
  • Director Stephen Hopkins wanted his longtime collaborator Peter Levy to be the film's cinematographer, but he was rejected by the studio, which wanted to hire Vilmos Zsigmond.
  • The figure of hunter Remington is entirely fictional from a historical point of view. In reality, Patterson killed both lions on his own.
  • A great deal of money was spent creating special effects for animated lions, but the producers concluded that they would have to introduce live lions into most of the scenes. Five lions were used for filming: Bongo and Caesar from Canada, who filmed together without any issues (lions of the same sex instinctively attack each other, as a rule); two from France: Voltan and Roman (they were filmed separately, confirming the aforementioned rule); and 12-year-old screen veteran Sudan from California, capable of acting like a real actor – mimicking attacks without harming humans, which is extremely rare among trained animals, especially lions.
  • There is only one scene using an animatronic lion. All other scenes were filmed using two real lions – Bongo and Caesar. The same lions also appeared in the film “George of the Jungle” (1997).
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