CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.1/10
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TU CALIFICACIÓN
Un exoficial del ejército mata accidentalmente al hijo de una mujer y trata de compensarlo escoltando el cortejo fúnebre a través de un peligroso territorio indio.Un exoficial del ejército mata accidentalmente al hijo de una mujer y trata de compensarlo escoltando el cortejo fúnebre a través de un peligroso territorio indio.Un exoficial del ejército mata accidentalmente al hijo de una mujer y trata de compensarlo escoltando el cortejo fúnebre a través de un peligroso territorio indio.
James O'Hara
- Cal, General Store
- (as Jim O'Hara)
Hank Gobble
- Bartender
- (sin créditos)
Big John Hamilton
- Gambler
- (sin créditos)
Chuck Hayward
- Card Sharp
- (sin créditos)
Riley Hill
- Gambler
- (sin créditos)
Buck Sharpe
- Apache Indian
- (sin créditos)
Robert Sheldon
- Gambler
- (sin créditos)
Argumento
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaMaureen O'Hara, her brother Charles B. Fitzsimons and writer Albert Sidney Fleischman formed Carousel Productions in order to get the film made. Sam Peckinpah was hired for $15,000, Brian Keith was paid $30,000; the entire picture was done for $300,000. Another brother, James O'Hara, has a small role in the opening scenes.
- ErroresThe impact of "Yellowleg 's" injured shoulder varies throughout the film, for example he has difficulty handling a gun or raising his arm in the doctor's office yet seems to have no problems using the same arm to mount his horse or to clamber up rocks.
- Citas
Kit Tilden: It's strange - I feel I know better than any man I've ever known, yet I hardly know you at all.
- Versiones alternativasThe print distributed by UPA for television in the seventies was in black and white.
- ConexionesEdited into Cynful Movies: Dangerous Companions (2019)
- Bandas sonorasRock of Ages
(uncredited)
Lyrics by Augustus Montague Toplady and music by Thomas Hastings
Sung in the church bar
Opinión destacada
This film is best seen as an apprentice work, falling neatly between Peckinpah's TV work (The Rifleman etc), and the string of Western masterpieces that began with Guns in The Afternoon/Ride the High Country. For the only time in the director's work there is no sense of the 'old West' passing, as Peckinpah still works broadly within the established Western tradition - one which he would shortly transform and make his own.
Brian Keith and O'Hara work surprisingly well together, even though in the light of the director's later work the insistance upon a strong and sympathetic female co-lead seems uncharacteristic. Apparently Maureen O'Hara's role in producing the film influenced the emphasis and development of her role.
The film suffers from a poverty of budget (most noticeable in the opening scenes where the bar room appears cramped and two dimensional), as well as over-insistent musical score - one which occasionally detracts from the rhythm of the film. The trademark Peckinpah montage editing has yet to make itself felt and, very unusually for this director, the first few moments of the film seem (to this viewer) slightly rushed and confusing - almost as if Peckinpah is just finding his feet, sketching on a larger canvas than he had previously been used to.
Peckinpah fans will find much to enjoy here, though: the character of 'Turkey' (played by Chill Wills) is as colourful and as rounded as any of the minor low-life characters that appear in the later films. He even hides a 'Major Dundee' military cap under his coat, - in retrospect one which can be seen as an appropriate cinematic "embryo". Even with a limited budget, the film is always in safe hands, the story intriguing and ironic. Riding into town, the desperate trio see a group of children playing and mildly tormenting each other - another Peckinpah trademark. When the desperadoes are confronted by a frontier prayer meeting, the anticipation of the grander meeting at the beginning of 'The Wild Bunch' is obvious. The preacher is in fact the first in a long line of religious failures and bigots featuring in Peckinpah's films.
Perhaps the biggest surprise to those used to Peckinpah's work is the lack of violence (even the end shoot out, although effective, is somewhat muted). Peckinpah, it seems, had yet to discover the stylistic hallmark which later was to mark his career in controversy.
Brian Keith and O'Hara work surprisingly well together, even though in the light of the director's later work the insistance upon a strong and sympathetic female co-lead seems uncharacteristic. Apparently Maureen O'Hara's role in producing the film influenced the emphasis and development of her role.
The film suffers from a poverty of budget (most noticeable in the opening scenes where the bar room appears cramped and two dimensional), as well as over-insistent musical score - one which occasionally detracts from the rhythm of the film. The trademark Peckinpah montage editing has yet to make itself felt and, very unusually for this director, the first few moments of the film seem (to this viewer) slightly rushed and confusing - almost as if Peckinpah is just finding his feet, sketching on a larger canvas than he had previously been used to.
Peckinpah fans will find much to enjoy here, though: the character of 'Turkey' (played by Chill Wills) is as colourful and as rounded as any of the minor low-life characters that appear in the later films. He even hides a 'Major Dundee' military cap under his coat, - in retrospect one which can be seen as an appropriate cinematic "embryo". Even with a limited budget, the film is always in safe hands, the story intriguing and ironic. Riding into town, the desperate trio see a group of children playing and mildly tormenting each other - another Peckinpah trademark. When the desperadoes are confronted by a frontier prayer meeting, the anticipation of the grander meeting at the beginning of 'The Wild Bunch' is obvious. The preacher is in fact the first in a long line of religious failures and bigots featuring in Peckinpah's films.
Perhaps the biggest surprise to those used to Peckinpah's work is the lack of violence (even the end shoot out, although effective, is somewhat muted). Peckinpah, it seems, had yet to discover the stylistic hallmark which later was to mark his career in controversy.
- FilmFlaneur
- 20 mar 2001
- Enlace permanente
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- The Deadly Companions
- Locaciones de filmación
- Old Tucson - 201 S. Kinney Road, Tucson, Arizona, Estados Unidos(photographed at the town of "Old Tucson")
- Productora
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 33 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1
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What is the French language plot outline for Obsesión de venganza (1961)?
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