Villa Rides

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Villa Rides
Villa Rides 1968.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed byBuzz Kulik
Screenplay byRobert Towne
Sam Peckinpah
Story byWilliam Douglas Lansford
(Adaptation)
Based onPancho Villa
by William Douglas Lansford
Produced byTed Richmond
StarringYul Brynner
Robert Mitchum
Grazia Buccella
Herbert Lom
Robert Viharo
Charles Bronson
CinematographyJack Hildyard
Edited byDavid Bretherton
Music byMaurice Jarre
Production
company
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
  • May 29, 1968 (1968-05-29) (United States)
Running time
125 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$1.2 million (US/Canada rentals)[1]

Villa Rides is a 1968 American Technicolor western war film in Panavision directed by Buzz Kulik and starring Yul Brynner as Francisco Villa and Robert Mitchum as an American adventurer and pilot of fortune. The supporting cast includes Charles Bronson as Fierro, Herbert Lom as Huerta and Alexander Knox as Madero. Sam Peckinpah wrote the original script and was set to direct, but Brynner disliked Peckinpah's harsh depiction of Villa and had Robert Towne rewrite the script, with Kulik brought on as director. The screenplay is based on the biography by William Douglas Lansford.

Plot[]

Pulled into the Mexican Revolution by his own greed, Texas gunrunner and pilot Lee Arnold joins bandit-turned-patriot Pancho Villa and his band of dedicated men in a march across Mexico battling the Colorados and stealing women's hearts as they go. However, each has a nemesis among his friends: Arnold is tormented by Fierro, Villa's right-hand man, and Villa must face possible betrayal by his own president's naiveté.

Cast[]

Production[]

This film marked the first of many appearances by Jill Ireland in films with her future husband Charles Bronson, though her part in Villa Rides is brief.[2]

Reception[]

Critical response[]

Chicago Sun-Times film critic Roger Ebert gave the film a mixed review, writing, "You would think an interesting picture could be made about Pancho Villa and the Mexican Revolution, a subject most Americans know next to nothing about. But we learn nothing except that Pancho was a romantic fellow who had a mustache and liked to have people lined up three in a row and killed with one bullet. (That scene, incidentally, got a big laugh.) Frankly, this kind of movie is beginning to get to me. You can enjoy one, maybe, or two. Or you can enjoy a particularly well done shoot-em-up. But the Loop has been filled with one action-adventure after another for the last month, and if Villa Rides is not the worst, it is certainly not the best."[3]

Film critic A. H. Weiler wrote, "Yul Brynner, Robert Mitchum, cavalry, politicos and even the faint strains of "La Cucaracha" fail to disguise the fact that Villa Rides which dashed into the Forum Theater yesterday, is simply a sprawling Western and not history. As such it incessantly fills the screen with the din of pistols and rifles, and assorted warfare and wenching, shot in sharp color on rugged Spanish sites that strikingly simulate Mexico. Any resemblance to the 1912-1914 campaigns of the bandit-revolutionary in the cause of liberal President Madero and against General Huerta is purely coincidental."[4]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Big Rental Films of 1968", Variety, 8 January 1969 p 15. Please note this figure is a rental accruing to distributors.
  2. ^ Pitts, Michael R. (1999). Charles Bronson: The 95 Films and the 156 Television Appearances. McFarland & Company. p. 248. ISBN 0-7864-0601-1.
  3. ^ Ebert, Roger. Chicago Sun-Times, film review, June 25, 1968. Accessed: June 21, 2013.
  4. ^ Weiler, A.H. The New York Times, film review, July 18, 1968. Accessed: June 21, 2013.

External links[]

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