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Cary Grant | Cutter | |
Victor McLaglen | MacChesney | |
Douglas Fairbanks Jr. | Ballantine | |
Sam Jaffe | Gunga Din | |
Eduardo Ciannelli | Guru | |
Joan Fontaine | Emmy | |
Montagu Love | Colonel Weed | |
Robert Coote | Higginbotham | |
Abner Biberman | Chota | |
Lumsden Hare | Major Mitchell | |
John Alban | ||
Charles Bennett | Telegraph Operator | |
Joe De La Cruz | ||
Ray Dixon | ||
George Du Count | Pandu Lal | |
Ann Evers | Girl at Party | |
Richard Farnsworth | Bit Part | |
Olin Francis | Fulad | |
Bryant Fryer | Scottish Sergeant | |
Sam Harris |
Director |
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Producer |
George Stevens
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Writer |
Fred Guiol
Dudley Nichols Ben Hecht Rudyard Kipling |
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Cinematography | Joseph H. August
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Musician |
Alfred Newman
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British army sergeants Ballantine, Cutter and MacChesney serve in India during the 1880s, along with their native water-bearer, Gunga Din. While completing a dangerous telegraph-repair mission, they unearth evidence of the suppressed Thuggee cult. When Gunga Din tells the sergeants about a secret temple made of gold, the fortune-hunting Cutter is captured by the Thuggees, and it's up to his friends to rescue him. |
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Features
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