The Snows of Kilimanjaro is a 1952 American Technicolor film
based on the short story of the same name by Ernest Hemingway. The film version
of the short story was directed by Henry King, written by Casey Robinson, and
starred Gregory Peck as Harry, Susan Hayward as Helen, and Ava Gardner as
Cynthia Green (a character invented for the film). The film's ending does not
mirror the book's ending.
The story centers on the memories of disillusioned writer,
Harry Street, who is on safari in Africa. He has a severely infected wound from
a thorn prick, and lies outside his tent awaiting a slow death, though in the
film it is pointed out he may have acquired the infection from leaping into a
muddy river to rescue one of the safari's porters from a hippo after he falls
in the river. His female companion, Helen, nurses Harry and hunts game for the
larder.
On his deathbed, Harry reflects on his time fighting in the Spanish Civil War
(in which he dons a good Basque beret and wears the typical Republican worker's coveralls).
Considered by Hemingway to be one of his finest stories,
"The Snows of Kilimanjaro" was first published in Esquire magazine in
1936 and then republished in The Fifth Column and the First Forty-Nine Stories
(1938).
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