
In 1885 a British regiment is sent to Sudan to fight Dervish rebels. Lieutenant Harry Faversham resigns to stay with fiancée Mary Burroughs, but his fellow officers brand him a coward with white feathers; Mary adds a fourth feather and ends the engagement. To restore his honor, Faversham joins the Sudan campaign incognito, fighting in the desert.
Does Storm Over the Nile have end credit scenes?
No!
Storm Over the Nile does not have end credit scenes. You can leave when the credits roll.
Explore the complete cast of Storm Over the Nile, including both lead and supporting actors. Learn who plays each character, discover their past roles and achievements, and find out what makes this ensemble cast stand out in the world of film and television.

James Robertson Justice
General Burroughs

Geoffrey Keen
Dr. Sutton

Christopher Lee
Karaga Pasha

Michael Hordern
General Faversham

Laurence Harvey
John Durrance

Ferdy Mayne
Dr. Harraz

Mary Ure
Mary Burroughs

Ian Carmichael
Tom Willoughby

Anthony Steel
Harry Faversham

Ronald Lewis
Peter Burroughs

Ben Williams
Faversham's Butler

Sam Kydd
Joe (uncredited)

Raymond Francis
Colonel's Aide

Roger Delgado
Native Spy

Jack Lambert
Colonel

Vincent Holman
Burroughs' Butler

Mabel Etherington
Wedding Guest

Frank Singuineau
Native Servant

Avis Scott
Sergeant's Wife

Paul Streather
Harry Faversham (as a boy)

N. Al Basri
Dervish

M.H. Gadalla
Dervish

Michael Argy
Dervish

Edwin Cary
Dervish

Brian Cooper
British Soldier (uncredited)
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Challenge your knowledge of Storm Over the Nile with this fun and interactive movie quiz. Test yourself on key plot points, iconic characters, hidden details, and memorable moments to see how well you really know the film.
Who is the main male protagonist of the film?
Harry Faversham
John Durrance
Peter Burroughs
Tom Willoughby
Show hint
Read the complete plot summary of Storm Over the Nile, including all major events, twists, and the full ending explained in detail. Explore key characters, themes, hidden meanings, and everything you need to understand the story from beginning to end.
Harry Faversham is a sensitive, bookish young man whose curiosity about ideas sits in quiet contrast to the martial legends that haunt his family. Raised amid stories of courage and the heavy weight of a veteran father, he grows up wondering whether he can live up to a soldier’s code. His father’s stern view—seeing Harry as fragile and faint of heart—casts a long shadow over Harry’s sense of self. As an adult, he accepts a commission in the Royal North Surrey Regiment and moves toward an engagement with Mary Burroughs, the daughter of his father’s friend, General Burroughs. The union promises respectability and a bridge between two influential lines, but it is challenged by the disapproval of his rival and fellow officer, John Durrance, who testingly questions whether Harry can endure the brutal tests of war.
After his father’s death, Harry’s regiment is ordered to the Sudan under the banner of General Herbert Kitchener to confront the memory of General Gordon and the siege that looms large in British memory. Harry, unwilling to take part in a war he does not believe in, resigns his commission, a decision that triggers a brutal social test: three white feathers—signs of cowardice—are pinned to him by his fellow officers: [John Durrance], Tom Willoughby, and Peter Burroughs. Mary’s disappointment weighs heavily on him, shaping a painful rift as he refuses to accept the expectations pressed upon him by lineage and duty. In a bold, albeit desperate move, he asks Mary to match his feather with her own, a gesture she reluctantly makes, sealing a moment of irreversible separation between them.
Months pass, and Harry finds solace in the counsel of Dr. Sutton. The doctor challenges the easy judgment of cowardice, insisting that Harry’s restraint may reflect a different kind of courage—the resolve to refuse a war he does not believe in and to seek a kinder, more principled path. Bolstered by this new voice, Harry resolves to redeem himself. He travels to Egypt, where a cunning disguise awaits him: he is dressed as a Sengali tribesman, a false tongue masking silence and a calculated physical transformation that marks him as an outsider to both language and allegiance. He bears a forehead brand and darkened skin to blend into a landscape where his true identity could be a fatal risk. With resolve, he sets off toward the cataracts, determined to find his old regiment and reclaim his place in the soldiers’ ranks.
Meanwhile, a fellow officer—John—fights his own battle in the heat. He hides in a sun-scorched crevice to dodge Sudanese forces, and the hours of exposure leave him permanently blind. That night, Harry quietly signals a warning of an impending assault and, in a moment of quiet bravery, saves John’s life. Yet the price of this mercy is steep: most of the company is killed or captured, including Peter and Thomas, who fall into enemy hands in Omdurman. Harry, still in disguise, cannot reveal himself yet, but he guides a weakened Peter back to British lines. The web of loyalties tightens as the war’s chaos unfolds.
Back in England, Sutton reveals to Mary that Harry went to Egypt and is now presumed dead. The news fractures Mary’s heart, and when John returns, he is soon engaged to Mary, though she remains haunted by the memory of the man she loved. At a dinner where stories of bravery and betrayal swirl, John speaks of the mysterious savior who appeared in the night, and Mary’s letter to her would-be fiancé surfaces, unknowingly bearing a feather. The feather’s presence confirms to her what she could not admit aloud: Harry is alive, and he has never ceased to be a part of Mary’s life.
In Egypt, the plot thickens as Harry, still undercover, infiltrates Omdurman and secretly delivers a crucial file to Peter and Thomas. The guards grow suspicious; a search reveals the remaining feathers, and Harry is forced to reveal his true identity. Yet the moment of risk becomes the catalyst for a larger turn of the tide. Kitchener’s attack on Omdurman distracts the defenses long enough for Harry to orchestrate a bold escape, rallying a cadre of British and Sudanese prisoners who seize the city from its defenders. The Union Jack is raised over Omdurman, signaling a turning point in the campaign and a personal vindication for Harry’s long and perilous gambit.
Back home, news of the victory reaches John, who learns that Peter and Thomas were saved by Harry’s intervention. The moral calculus of the story shifts as John realizes that Mary’s heart remains with Harry, not him. He writes a final letter in which he claims to be traveling abroad to seek treatment for his blindness, a lie designed to release Mary from the bond of a future she no longer desires to share. The lie is accepted in silence, and time moves forward toward a reunion that seems almost too good to be true. Sometime later, Harry finally returns home, and the couple’s long separation ends in a heartfelt reunion as the feather—once a symbol of shame, then a token of hope—finds its rightful place in Mary’s hands once more.
In this sweeping tale of courage, honor, and the costs of living by a code, the human heart remains the most enduring battlefield.
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