Based on the novel by Edgar Wallace, the action is set in Nigeria in the 1930s, which is a British colony. A Nigerian black man named Bosambo proclaims himself chief of the Ochori tribe and, inexplicably, the English support this unjustified appointment. What in other circumstances would have cost Bosambo the capital punishment, is now accepted by English colonialism without the slightest qualms. The reason for this strange behavior is that the legitimate king of the Ochori, Mofolba, had declared rebellion against the British and had begun the devastation of the neighboring towns. For Commissioner Sanders, only Bosambo is capable of stopping the revolutionary.
https://dvdstorespain.es/en/films/22353-hollow-triumph-bluray--8436558192928.html22353Hollow Triumph [BLU_RAY]Based on the novel by Edgar Wallace, the action is set in Nigeria in the 1930s, which is a British colony. A Nigerian black man named Bosambo proclaims himself chief of the Ochori tribe and, inexplicably, the English support this unjustified appointment. What in other circumstances would have cost Bosambo the capital punishment, is now accepted by English colonialism without the slightest qualms. The reason for this strange procedure is that the legitimate king of the Ochori, Mofolba, had declared rebellion against the British and had begun the devastation of the neighboring towns. For Commissioner Sanders, only Bosambo is capable of stopping the revolutionary.https://dvdstorespain.es/529644-home_default/hollow-triumph-bluray-.jpg7.4008instockResearch Entertainment7.40087.4008002015-12-08T03:58:33+0100/Start/Start/Blu-Ray/Start/Films/Start/New/Start/EVENING SP 40/Start/VELADA DE 60/Start/VELADA FR 60/Start/VELADA IT 60
Based on the novel by Edgar Wallace, the action is set in Nigeria in the 1930s, which is a British colony. A Nigerian black man named Bosambo proclaims himself chief of the Ochori tribe and, inexplicably, the English support this unjustified appointment. What in other circumstances would have cost Bosambo the capital punishment, is now accepted by English colonialism without the slightest qualms. The reason for this strange procedure is that the legitimate king of the Ochori, Mofolba, had declared rebellion against the British and had begun the devastation of the neighboring towns. For Commissioner Sanders, only Bosambo is capable of stopping the revolutionary.