Élevé par des Amérindiens John Russell est dédaigné par ses compagnons de diligence « respectables », mais devient leur seul espoir de survie lorsque survient une attaque par des hors-la-loi... Tout lireÉlevé par des Amérindiens John Russell est dédaigné par ses compagnons de diligence « respectables », mais devient leur seul espoir de survie lorsque survient une attaque par des hors-la-loi.Élevé par des Amérindiens John Russell est dédaigné par ses compagnons de diligence « respectables », mais devient leur seul espoir de survie lorsque survient une attaque par des hors-la-loi.
- Prix
- 3 nominations au total
- Mrs. Delgado
- (uncredited)
- Apache
- (uncredited)
- Apache
- (uncredited)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesFilming on this movie coincided with that year's Academy Awards. Co-star Martin Balsam was a Best Supporting Actor nominee for A Thousand Clowns (1965), but did not receive permission to leave the set. Balsam sneaked off to attend the ceremony; he won the Oscar.
- GaffesWhen John Russell is coming to Delgado to see Mendez, in the background are 3 or 4 farm vehicles working in the distance. The sun can be seen gleaming from one of them as it moves through a dust cloud it is making.
- Citations
[Grimes lights a cigar]
Grimes: Smoke bother you?
Audra Favor: Would you put it out if I said it did?
Grimes: Oh, yeah. My momma taught me to remove my hat and my cigar in the presence of a lady. Whatever else I take off depends on how lucky I get.
- ConnexionsFeatured in The 67th Annual Academy Awards (1995)
Russell has been living off the land with his Apache brethren when he is left a boarding house in a will. Russell sells the boarding house, which leaves its beautiful-but-weathered caretaker Jessie (Diane Cilento) on a long stage ride with Russell and a number of others with varied reasons for wanting to leave town. Unfortunately for everyone, one of them is a particularly ornery character named Cicero Grimes (Richard Boone).
"Hombre" is a coming-out party of sorts for writer Elmore Leonard; he had works adapted for screen before, most notably "3:10 To Yuma," but "Hombre" brings out the quotability and toughness we associate with Leonard today. Credit Newman and director Martin Ritt, as well as cinematographer James Wong Howe, for giving the film the space and terse energy it needs to deliver the action without underselling the human drama. Russell doesn't want to stick his neck out for people, and you don't blame him, yet you understand why he helps them in the end.
Screenwriters Harriet Frank and Irving Ravetch provide many memorable lines. A favorite, when a thief is being robbed at gunpoint: "It looks like you did good and we did better." But there's a tendency to overexposition, of people giving their life story at a drop of a hat. Everyone except Russell, who keeps it very cool throughout. Maybe it helps Newman look better.
"Takes a lot to light a fire under you, don't it?" Jessie asks him.
The story doesn't exactly hold together well upon reflection, and there are a number of what Hitchcock called "icebox scenes." One character walks around for days after being gutshot. Another is developed at length without having anything to do with the story except dying in it. But with "icebox scenes" you don't notice the incongruities until later. You are caught up with the energy and vitality, especially when things begin to happen in the second hour.
Newman is working Eastwood/McQueen territory here, and working it quite well. An important conflict in the film pits him against Dr. Favor (Fredric March), a self-righteous Indian agent who looks down on Russell for his American Indian roots despite the fact Favor has done well off the Apaches. When Favor's jaded wife (Barbara Rush) scoffs at the Apaches for eating dogs, Russell tells her if she was as hungry as they were, "you'd eat it. You'd fight for the bones, too." Newman doesn't raise his voice, doesn't even lean forward, but his burning blues make his anger palpable.
Rush's character is especially interesting, a reflection perhaps on the classic Leonard opportunistic female, or maybe even worse. I'm still not sure what she was playing at, but I enjoyed her character enormously. With Cilento, March, and especially Boone as well, you have performances that would provide engaging centers for other films, yet Newman towers over them without resorting to histrionics or even much in the way of humor (his wisecracks are few, however well-placed.)
"Hombre" is a near-classic Western that doesn't play by classic rules. But it makes its points well, keeps you involved, and allows you to relish one of Paul Newman's most indelible roles.
- slokes
- 4 janv. 2011
- Lien permanent
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Hombre?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Man nannte ihn Hombre
- Lieux de tournage
- Helvetia Mine, Pima County, Arizona, États-Unis(portions of this picture were filmed in the)
- société de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 5 860 000 $ US (estimation)
- Durée1 heure 51 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1