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5.9/10
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TU CALIFICACIÓN
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaTwo men who have been friends since childhood find themselves on opposite ends of the law.Two men who have been friends since childhood find themselves on opposite ends of the law.Two men who have been friends since childhood find themselves on opposite ends of the law.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Jackson D. Kane
- Clem
- (as Jackson Kane)
Victor Mohica
- Big Eye
- (as Vic Mohica)
Henry Allin
- Policeman
- (sin créditos)
Richard Breeding
- Prisoner
- (sin créditos)
Mickey Burleson
- Young Man
- (sin créditos)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
Showdown is another version of the two buddies who take different turns in the road of life. It borrows elements from George Marshall's supremely enjoyable Texas which starred two very young players named Glenn Ford and Bill Holden.
The buddies here are Dean Martin and Rock Hudson. They're a little older than Bill and Glenn were. Rock Hudson is now a solid respectable citizen ranch owner, married to Susan Clark, and who also happens to be the sheriff.
Dino cleared out from the ranch they had and has been gone for two years so he doesn't know that Hudson is the new sheriff. Maybe he wouldn't have decided to rob that train with some very serious outlaw types. Unfortunately Dino was recognized and Hudson has to bring him in.
This turned out to be the last western film for both Dean Martin and Rock Hudson. Martin, starting with Rio Bravo in 1959, did a whole string of westerns of varying quality. But making them is hard work, a fact Dean discovered one day out in the desert heat making these films. The rest of his movies were done in modern dress.
Also for some reason two of the most agreeable stars to work with as attested to by numerous co-stars of both did not get along during the making of Showdown.
Yet this Damon and Pythias story is still good entertainment and nothing either Rock or Dean had any reason to be ashamed of.
The buddies here are Dean Martin and Rock Hudson. They're a little older than Bill and Glenn were. Rock Hudson is now a solid respectable citizen ranch owner, married to Susan Clark, and who also happens to be the sheriff.
Dino cleared out from the ranch they had and has been gone for two years so he doesn't know that Hudson is the new sheriff. Maybe he wouldn't have decided to rob that train with some very serious outlaw types. Unfortunately Dino was recognized and Hudson has to bring him in.
This turned out to be the last western film for both Dean Martin and Rock Hudson. Martin, starting with Rio Bravo in 1959, did a whole string of westerns of varying quality. But making them is hard work, a fact Dean discovered one day out in the desert heat making these films. The rest of his movies were done in modern dress.
Also for some reason two of the most agreeable stars to work with as attested to by numerous co-stars of both did not get along during the making of Showdown.
Yet this Damon and Pythias story is still good entertainment and nothing either Rock or Dean had any reason to be ashamed of.
I am quite satisfied by this western which looks very like an Andrew Mc Laglen's film from the early seventies; I mean a plot that sounds like a sixties scheme or late fifties but with the seventies melancholia touch. Nothing to do with Monte Hellman nor Sam Peckinpah's style, but it could be an Arnold Laven's film ; such as his ROUGH NIGHT IN JERICHO - with also Dean Martin as the villain, unlike FIVE CARDS STUD where he was the good guy and Bob Mitchum the bad one. Rock Hudson is better than ever here, totally different from his Douglas Sirk's films characters, not the handsome son in law anymore, but a rough, disillusioned and bitter, poignant man. Yes a good film to close a career, especially from a director for whom western was not the speciality. Donald Moffat in a very interesting supporting character, a villain, former ranch owner for whom we feel some empathy. In the Budd Boetticher - with Randolph Scott - manner...As Richard Boone in TALL T.
The plot for Showdown is so ordinary that you might just find yourself asking why you picked this up in the video rental place. But there's enough star power on the first through third tiers that this 1973 oater can't be a complete waste of time.
I remember seeing the movie on NBC some thirty years or more ago. I'd never heard of it, it had interesting people, and how badly could it be butchered for television? It was only PG back then.
Showdown is one of those movies you should see just so you can say something like, "Hey, I saw this old western with Rock Hudson and Dean Martin, and it wasn't too bad." Of course, if your time is just too valuable, then skip it.
But it's a decent excuse to eat some popcorn.
I remember seeing the movie on NBC some thirty years or more ago. I'd never heard of it, it had interesting people, and how badly could it be butchered for television? It was only PG back then.
Showdown is one of those movies you should see just so you can say something like, "Hey, I saw this old western with Rock Hudson and Dean Martin, and it wasn't too bad." Of course, if your time is just too valuable, then skip it.
But it's a decent excuse to eat some popcorn.
Though it breezes along at an amiable pace, there's really nothing special about this particular western. It has a lot of stuff that ends up being irrelevant, such as with the character of the sheriff's wife, and the multiple flashbacks. Though the technical side is professional, it resembles a made-for-TV movie of the time. Still, there is some interest here. In fact, I wouldn't be surprised if Hong Kong director John Woo saw this, because there are elements and themes here that can be found in his movies.
I have always had difficulty watching Rock Hudson getting into physically grittier parts; somehow he just doesn't ever quite convince me - he is just a bit too "clean cut" to be seen in a muddy outfit, or be in a fist-fight... This film sees him as the sheriff ("Chuck") out on the trail of old pal Dean Martin ("Billy") who has - almost playfully - helped a gang of outlaws rob a train. Things start to go south shortly after that and soon Hudson is on his trail and a local posse is on the trail of them both! It's not the most complex storyline you will ever see, and the stars - alongside a rather feisty Susan Clark as Hudson's wife provide a nicely paced western adventure. Apparently the two men were a bit like rutting stags during filming, but it doesn't cross into the production - it's a decent, if largely forgettable, 100 mins.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaSeaton's final film and Martin's last western. The two had previously worked together on "Airport."
- ErroresBilly's extra gun at the gunfight at the creek starts off as a single-action blue steel Colt Bisley, recognizable for the distinctive shape of its grip frame, and turns into a nickel-plated double action revolver when he crawls out to the log.
- Citas
Billy Massey: Art, I got to hand it to you. The whole thing went off as slick as spit on a round doorknob.
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- How long is Showdown?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 39 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1
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By what name was Showdown (1973) officially released in India in English?
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