Year: 1964
Runtime: 126 mins
Language: English
Director: Jack Cardiff
Moorish ruler El Mansuh seeks a legendary golden bell, the “Mother of Voices.” Viking explorer Rolfe also hunts the mythic treasure, sailing his crew from Scandinavia to Africa. Though forced to cooperate, the two leaders and their men pursue the elusive prize, knowing only one can claim it—if it exists at all.
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Read the complete plot breakdown of The Long Ships (1964), including all key story events, major twists, and the ending explained in detail. Discover what really happened—and what it all means.
The legend of the Mother of Voices drives a sweeping adventure that blends myth, voyage, and rival empires. At the heart of the tale is a colossal, gilded bell whose very existence is debated—a myth that Moorish king Aly Mansuh believes to be real and within reach. He amasses every fragment of legend he can find and sets out to locate the bell, convinced that it will crown his rule and grant him a power beyond palace walls. The pursuit begins not with a map, but with faith in a story that many dismiss as folklore.
In a bustling harbor marketplace, a shipwreck survivor named Rolfe, Richard Widmark, repeats the legend with a stubborn certainty that unsettles Mansuh and his men. Although Rolfe protests that he knows no more than the tale itself, Mansuh sees in him a possible guide to the bell’s whereabouts. The Moorish court doubts the veracity of the tale, yet the promise of the Mother of Voices is enough to rally an expedition. Rolfe’s escape from a torture chamber and his subsequent return home set in motion a chain of choices that will burden three generations of men with quests, debts, and loyalties.
Rolfe’s father, Krok, Oskar Homolka, and his brother Orm, Russ Tamblyn, inhabit a world where fortune can be squandered on grand projects. A funeral ship built for the Danish king Harald Bluetooth leaves Krok financially ruined, a debt Harald refuses to reimburse because he does not yet own the ship’s purpose in death. This twist of fate pushes the family toward desperation and, eventually, toward the crimes that reshape the voyage. With a plan born of necessity, Rolfe and Orm steal Harald’s ship and recruit a ragtag crew of inebriated Vikings, a risky move that entwines their fates with the fate of the bell. To secure his position and the ship, Rolfe also takes Harald’s daughter as a hostage, forcing the king into a high-stakes pursuit that will echo through every harbor and shore they touch.
The voyage itself is a study in superstition and stubborn courage. The crew’s luck appears cursed from the start, and their superstition hinges on a grim ritual: a supposed sacrifice to the gods. Rolfe’s quick trick—killing a sheep instead and then revealing the ruse—becomes a telling moment about his willingness to bend ritual to necessity. The crew’s anxiety grows as the sea tests them with a maelstrom, and their ship is dashed toward a Moorish coastline where they are captured and condemned to die. Mansuh’s determination to reclaim the bell intensifies, and his wife Aminah, the steadfast Aminah, Rosanna Schiaffino, becomes a pivotal voice urging mercy and cunning in the perilous tug-of-war between destinies.
Within the Moorish city, the stakes rise even higher. Aminah’s influence helps steer Mansuh toward using the longship and the hostages as leverage for a second bid at the Mother of Voices. The voyage to the Pillars of Hercules becomes a stage for political and personal reckonings as Rolfe and Mansuh navigate a corridor of alliances, betrayals, and the lure of a power so intoxicating that it could rewrite history. The expedition finally reaches a small, domed chapel whose bronze bell seems to be the bell’s shape and sound. In a symbolic moment, Rolfe hurls the hanging bell against a wall, and the wall—seemingly plain and unassuming—releases a resonant chorus that reveals the true Mother of Voices: the dome itself is the instrument of the bell, and its hidden architecture is the vessel for something greater than metal and sound.
The discovery triggers a dramatic reversal. A costly collapse of the chapel’s surroundings sends the bell spiraling into the sea, allowing the Moorish expedition to return to Aly Mansuh’s city with the prize in hand. Yet the victory is short-lived. Harald’s forces, led by Harald’s powerful command and aided by Krok’s cunning, have moved to reclaim the city, and a climactic clash erupts between the Vikings and Mansuh’s Moors. The battlefield is chaotic and fierce until the bell itself becomes a symbol of fate—slipping from the city’s edge and tucking the new order into history. In a brutal turn, the bell topples and crushes Aly Mansuh, sealing the Moors’ defeat and sealing Mansuh’s fate in a twist that leaves the Vikings standing and the city’s new crown unbalanced.
As the smoke clears, Rolfe faces one final push of pragmatism and persistence. He tries to persuade Danish king Harald to mount another expedition in pursuit of the “three crowns of the Saxon kings,” a plan that leaves Krok amused and the living to pick up the pieces of a fragile peace. The tale leaves audiences with a sense that the pursuit of legend—whether for glory, justice, or simple survival—can bind people together across borders and generations, even as the world shifts beneath their feet.
Rolfe, Richard Widmark, becomes the thread tying sea, myth, and power together, as his choices ripple through the ships, the hostages, and the people who share his peril.
Aly Mansuh, Sidney Poitier, pursues the dream of the bell with a ruthless resolve that tests loyalty and throne alike.
Krok, Oskar Homolka, and Orm, Russ Tamblyn, carry echoes of family debt and duty into each perilous turn.
Harald, Clifford Evans, the Danish king who bears in his name the weight of the past, becomes a catalyst for both alliance and betrayal.
Aminah, Rosanna Schiaffino, proves to be the voice of balance in a whirlwind of conquest and myth.
Gerda, Beba Lončar, and the rest of the cast populate a world where legends are not merely told, but lived, fought for, and paid for in full.
If you’re exploring a film that blends mythic ambition with maritime peril, this story offers a tapestry of ambition, deceit, and redemption where a single bell’s true nature can alter the course of nations.
Last Updated: October 09, 2025 at 11:27
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