Jered Maddox, le shérif de Bannock, arrive dans le village voisin de Sabbath pour y arrêter les sept hommes qui ont tué un vieillard. Le peu de soutien que lui manifestent la population et l... Tout lireJered Maddox, le shérif de Bannock, arrive dans le village voisin de Sabbath pour y arrêter les sept hommes qui ont tué un vieillard. Le peu de soutien que lui manifestent la population et le shérif local n'entame en rien sa détermination.Jered Maddox, le shérif de Bannock, arrive dans le village voisin de Sabbath pour y arrêter les sept hommes qui ont tué un vieillard. Le peu de soutien que lui manifestent la population et le shérif local n'entame en rien sa détermination.
- Choctaw Lee
- (as William C. Watson)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesSome scenes were shot in the same Western location town as Howard Hawks's final film, Rio Lobo (1970). Michael Winner says in his autobiography that the crews of both films met in the middle of the town, as in a Western showdown, but without guns.
- GaffesWhen Maddox (Burt Lancaster) shoots the horse out from under Vernon Adams (Robert Duvall), the man who is thrown from the falling horse has a full head of hair, and is clearly a stunt double. Robert Duvall was totally bald on top in this movie. The stuntman even tries to hide the fact by placing his hand right on top of his head as he comes up, but the full head of hair is still visible.
- Citations
Bannock Marshal Jared Maddox: I remember you at Fort Bliss.
Sabbath Marshal Cotton Ryan: That's my trouble. Everybody remembers me at Fort Bliss.
- Versions alternativesAll UK video versions are cut by 4 secs to remove a cruel horse-fall.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Sven Uslings Bio: Lawman (2019)
Burt Lancaster plays Jered Maddox, the Sheriff of the small Western town of Bannock. Maddox has travelled to another small town, Sabbath, to arrest the cowboys who were responsible for the death of a man in Bannock. The local people of Sabbath, however, are not willing to help him, and the local Sheriff, Cotton Ryan, is a coward whose motto is `anything for a quiet life'. Despite this lack of cooperation, Maddox remains determined to do his duty, come what may.
The above summary might suggest that this is a story of right versus wrong along the lines of `High Noon', with Maddox standing as the lone representative of truth and justice against the forces of evil and cowardice. Things, however, are not so simple. It appears that the death was not deliberate murder, but an accidental shooting resulting from drunken gunplay. The cowboys' employer, a wealthy rancher named Vincent Bronson, is a popular figure in the town. Maddox himself admits that, even if he succeeds in bringing the men back to Bannock, they are unlikely to receive condign punishment, as the local Judge is notoriously corrupt and could easily be bought by a man of Bronson's wealth.
At first Maddox does seem to be a heroic figure, and he certainly shows great physical courage in facing his adversaries. Fearlessness alone, however, is not enough to make a man a true hero, and as the film progresses we begin to question whether he really is doing the right thing. Although the cowboys are likely to be acquitted if tried, and to receive a lenient sentence if convicted, their false pride and obsession with honour means that they cannot bring themselves to surrender without a fight. One by one, unafraid of his reputation as a lethal gunfighter, they challenge Maddox and are shot down. As the death toll mounts, we begin to see that he too is guilty of false pride and an obsession with upholding an abstract idea of justice, no matter what the human cost. `Fiat justitia, ruat caelum', said the Romans- let justice be done, though the heavens fall. When Maddox takes this idea to its absolute limits, the result is tragedy.
There are a number of good performances. Lee J Cobb gives a poignant performance as Bronson; cattle bosses are usually shown as villainous figures in Westerns (Bruce Cabot's character in `Dodge City' being a classic example), but Bronson is a decent man, regarded as a generous benefactor by the people of Sabbath. His tragedy stems from the conflict between his sense of personal honour and a growing realisation that violence is not the answer to life's problems. Robert Ryan is also good as Sheriff Ryan, a once-brave lawman whose character has been corrupted by years of compromise, as are Sheree North as Maddox's love interest and Richard Jordan as a young gunfighter out to make a name for himself. The real star, however, is Burt Lancaster as the steely, inflexible Maddox. This is a role which combines the two distinct sides of Lancaster's talent as an actor. On the one hand, he could play a swashbuckling action hero in Westerns and other films such as `The Crimson Pirate'. On the other, he was also the thoughtful, star of intelligent films like `Birdman of Alcatraz', `The Train' or `The Swimmer'. Maddox is a fearless gunfighter, but he is also a man whose actions give rise to philosophical questions about law enforcement, the nature of justice, and the nature of honour. One could therefore almost say that it is a role that Lancaster was born to play, and he does so brilliantly. The result is a complex film that asks difficult questions without providing easy answers. It is unfortunate that Winner did not make more films like this; none of his other films that I have seen come close to it in quality. 8/10
- JamesHitchcock
- 13 mai 2004
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Détails
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 5 940 000 $US
- Durée1 heure 39 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1