ISIS Use Gaddafi Funded Oliver Reed Film To Threaten Italy

ISIS have used scenes of Oliver Reed in 1981’s ‘Lion Of The Desert’ as part of their latest video threatening terrorist attacks against Europe.

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In ‘Lion Of The Desert’ Oliver Reed stars as General Rodolfo Graziani, the leader of Italian troops that invade Libya in 1929, but are ultimately kept at bay by Anthony Quinn’s Omar Mukhtar.

ISIS decided to use a clip of Reed’s Graziani to threaten Italy, as the group threatened to move across Europe until their “banner flutters” over the Italian capital of Rome.

According to The Guardian, it continued, “The leaders, they’ve achieved what they wanted, and what they demanded. They didn’t break in the service of the crusaders. We must continue to fight the spread of ignorance.”

Various other scenes from the ‘Lion Of The Desert’ were used too, while ISIS’ threat extended across Europe to France and Spain.

This use of ‘Lion Of The Desert’ is just the latest chapter in the film’s rather ignominious history. Not only was it funded by former Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi, but it was banned by Italian prime minister Giulio Andreotti in 1982 as it “damaged the honour of the army.”

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It also damaged Gaddafi’s bank balance too, because it returned just $1.5 million at the box office from its $35 million budget.

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[Allstar/Cinetext/FALCON]