The Wild Geese

The Wild Geese

1978 • ActionR
A British multinational company seeks to overthrow a vicious dictator in central Africa. It hires a band of (largely aged) mercenaries in London and sends them in to save the virtuous but imprisoned opposition leader who is also critically ill and due for execution. Just when the team has performed a perfect rescue, the multinational does a deal with the vicious dictator leaving the mercenary band to escape under their own steam and exact revenge.
Runtime: 2h 14m

Why you should read the novel

Before pressing play, consider reading The Wild Geese by Daniel Carney. The novel delivers the same high-stakes mission with richer context, deeper character work, and a sharper look at the realpolitik driving every decision. Carney’s book gives you time inside the mercenaries’ heads—their loyalties, regrets, and survival instincts—so the tension cuts deeper. Expect more African geopolitical texture, more operational detail, and more moral complexity than any two-hour cut can offer. If you’re comparing book vs. movie, the novel rewards you with layered motivations, grounded tactics, and themes that resonate beyond the set pieces. Read The Wild Geese first to experience the story at its most complete.

Adaptation differences

Compared with the film adaptation, Daniel Carney’s book generally offers fuller backstories and interior monologue, clarifying why the mercenaries sign on, how they weigh risk, and what loyalty costs them. The movie condenses these beats to maintain pace, while the novel lets their choices breathe. Political and corporate intrigue is sketched in the film but explored more thoroughly on the page. The book typically provides clearer context about the fictional African state, the coup’s origins, and the financial interests pulling strings—useful for readers who want to grasp the stakes behind the firefights. On tactics and logistics, the movie streamlines training, insertion, and extraction to emphasize momentum. The novel tends to detail planning, equipment, chain of command, and the messy contingencies of a private military operation, making the action feel more procedural and realistic. Tone and resolution differ in emphasis. The film prioritizes spectacle and momentum; the book underscores moral fallout, aftermath, and the psychological toll. Expect compressed timelines, merged or omitted scenes, and character arcs that feel leaner on screen but more reflective and consequential in the novel.

The Wild Geese inspired from

The Wild Geese
by Daniel Carney