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Ancient Egypt: The wife (Nadia Sanders) of Pharao Ramses (Nerio
Bernardi) has conspired with the Assyrians to conquer Egypt, and to that
end drugs the Pharao's trusted strongman Maciste (Samson Burke) into
submission to lead the Assyrian army. Being short of his strongman, Ramses
is convinced Egypt is to fall - but then Totokamen (Totò) is discovered
at a nightclub, a man who doesn't look like much but who can bend steel,
break the strongest chains, and it's even said he's the son of god Amon.
Of course, that's all part of his act he puts on with his
assistant/impresario Tarantakamen (Nino Taranto), he doesn't really have
any strength outside the ordinary - and maybe not even that. However, his
strength is never really put to the test, and when a couple of attempts on
his life fail rather by mistake than design, that's seen as proof for his
divine origins. Now Totokamen and Tarantakamen trxy to desperately get out
of this jam, and once try to just walk away - but they're followed by the
entire Egyptian army, thinking that the pair lead them into battle.
Meanwhile, Ramses' daughter Nefertiti (Gabriella Andreini) sneaks into the
Assyrian camp to talk to her sweetheart, Maciste, and hearing him talk she
is quickly convinced he has been drugged, and by her stepmother, the
current Mrs. Ramses, too, but the Pharao's wife sees to it that Nefertiti
is arrested rather than spilling the truth about the coup she's planning.
When another assassination attempt on Totokamen fails, even he becomes
convinced he's Amon's son - after all, he never did know his father - and
he leads the Egyptian army into battle after all. And they're doing fine,
too - until Totokamen meets his actual father, an Assyrian soldier he was
about to kill (but then doesn't of course), he loses all his courage and
makes an escape, and the whole Egyptian army with him. So ultimately,
Maciste enters the Pharao's palace, also to make minced meat out of
Totokamen - but gradually, the drugs administered to him by the Pharao's
wife wear off, and sweet Nefertiti who still believes in him, and a giant
boulder to the head do their part to set the strongman straight again ... Now
a genre as formulaic and far-fetched as the peplum was of course ripe for
parody, and there were several - in fact, this movie's Maciste
Samson Burke played fellow strongman Hercules in The
Three Stooges Meet Hercules that very same year -, and the idea to
cross genre mainstays with the trademark comedy of popular Italian comic
Totò was at least gifted. The result isn't great, as it focuses too much
on Totò just doing his thing, reacting too little to his ancient Egypt
backdrops, and some of the comedy is silly and/or forced, but there are
some genuinely funny moments in Totò contro Maciste that sure
enough make this movie worthwhile.
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