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{{Infobox film
{{Infobox film
| name = The Comancheros
| name = The Comancheros
| image = Comancheros1961.jpg
| image = The Comancheros poster.jpg
| caption = DVD cover
| caption = Theatrical poster
| director = [[Michael Curtiz]]<br />'''Uncredited:'''<br />[[John Wayne]]
| director = [[Michael Curtiz]]<br />'''Uncredited:'''<br />[[John Wayne]]
| producer = [[George Sherman]]
| producer = [[George Sherman]]
Line 15: Line 15:
| editing = [[Louis Loeffler]]
| editing = [[Louis Loeffler]]
| color_process = Color by Deluxe
| color_process = Color by Deluxe
| studio = 20th Century Fox
| studio = [[20th Century-Fox]]
| distributor = [[20th Century Fox]]
| distributor = 20th Century-Fox
| released = November 1, 1961<ref name="nyt"/><!-- and TCM too -->
| released = {{Film date|1961|11|01|ref1=<ref name="nyt"/>}}
| runtime = 107 minutes<ref name="nyt"/>
| runtime = 107 minutes<ref name="nyt"/>
| country = United States
| country = United States
| language = English
| language = English
| budget = $4,260,000<ref>Solomon, Aubrey. ''Twentieth Century Fox: A Corporate and Financial History (The Scarecrow Filmmakers Series)''. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 1989. {{ISBN|978-0-8108-4244-1}}. p252</ref>
| budget = $4,260,000<ref>Solomon, Aubrey. ''Twentieth Century Fox: A Corporate and Financial History (The Scarecrow Filmmakers Series)''. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 1989. {{ISBN|978-0-8108-4244-1}}. p252</ref>
| gross = $3,500,000<ref name=revised/>

}}
}}
[[File:Stuart Whitman-Ina Balin in The Comancheros.jpg|thumb|262px|[[Stuart Whitman]] & [[Ina Balin]]]]
[[File:Stuart Whitman-Ina Balin in The Comancheros.jpg|thumb|262px|[[Stuart Whitman]] & [[Ina Balin]]]]
Line 29: Line 31:


==Plot==
==Plot==
In post-Civil War Texas, rogue gambler Paul Regret flees to avoid a [[death penalty]] after killing Emil Bouvier, the son of a [[Louisiana]] [[judge]], in a [[duel]]. Regret maintains that he intended to wound Bouvier (who arranged the duel) in the arm, but Bouvier sidestepped. Regret is eventually captured by [[Texas Ranger Division|Texas Ranger]] Captain Jake Cutter after a tryst with a mysterious lady, Pilar Graile. Regret manages to escape, but is recaptured after a chance encounter with Cutter in a saloon.
In pre-Civil War Texas, rogue gambler Paul Regret flees to avoid a [[death penalty]] after killing Emil Bouvier, the son of a [[Louisiana]] [[judge]], in a [[duel]]. Regret maintains that he intended to wound Bouvier (who arranged the duel) in the arm, but Bouvier sidestepped. Regret is eventually captured by [[Texas Ranger Division|Texas Ranger]] Captain Jake Cutter after a tryst with a mysterious lady, Pilar Graile. Regret manages to escape, but is recaptured after a chance encounter with Cutter in a saloon.


While returning Regret to Louisiana, Cutter is compelled to join forces with the condemned man to fight the "[[Comanchero]]s", a large outlaw gang headed by a former officer who smuggles guns and whisky to the [[Comanche]] Indians, to make money and keep the frontier in a state of violence. Cutter stops at a ranch owned by a friend, when the Comanche attack suddenly. During the attack, Regret jumps on a horse and flees; however, instead of making a clean getaway, he returns with a company of Texas Rangers, who repulse the attack. Because of Regret's act of valour, the Rangers and a Texas judge agree to [[perjury|perjure]] themselves, stating that Regret could not have been involved in the duel because he was helping them spy out the Comanchero's supply line. Regret is then sworn in as an official Ranger.
While returning Regret to Louisiana, Cutter is compelled to join forces with the condemned man to fight the "[[Comanchero]]s", a large outlaw gang headed by a former officer who smuggles guns and whiskey to the [[Comanche]] Indians, to make money and keep the frontier in a state of violence. Cutter stops at a ranch owned by a friend, when the Comanche attack suddenly. During the attack, Regret jumps on a horse and flees, but instead of making a clean getaway, he returns with a company of Texas Rangers, who repulse the attack. Because of Regret's act of valor, the Rangers and a Texas judge agree to [[perjury|perjure]] themselves, stating that Regret could not have been involved in the duel because he was helping them spy out the Comanchero's supply line. Regret is then sworn in as an official Ranger.


After encountering one of the Comancheros' suppliers and killing him in self-defence, Cutter and Regret take over his delivery wagon and infiltrate the self-sufficient Comanchero community at the bottom of a valley in the [[desert]]. Pilar reappears as the daughter of the ruthless Comanchero leader Graile, who uses a wheelchair. He is soon killed by an old woman in the community after he orders the death of her son, and Cutter and the other Texas Rangers defeat the Comanche and Comancheros. Regret and Pilar leave together for Mexico, and Jake rides off into the sunset to rejoin the Ranger company.
After encountering one of the Comancheros' suppliers and killing him in self-defense, Cutter and Regret take over his delivery wagon and infiltrate the self-sufficient Comanchero community at the bottom of a valley in the [[desert]]. Pilar reappears as the daughter of the ruthless Comanchero leader Graile, who uses a wheelchair. He is soon killed by an old woman in the community after he orders the death of her son, and Cutter and the other Texas Rangers defeat the Comanche and Comancheros. Regret and Pilar leave together for Mexico, and Jake rides off into the sunset to rejoin the Ranger company.


==Cast==
==Cast==
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* [[Leigh Snowden]] as Evie – Blonde in Hotel Room (uncredited){{citation needed|date=April 2012}}
* [[Leigh Snowden]] as Evie – Blonde in Hotel Room (uncredited){{citation needed|date=April 2012}}
* [[George J. Lewis]] as Chief Iron Shirt (uncredited)
* [[George J. Lewis]] as Chief Iron Shirt (uncredited)
* [[Aissa Wayne]] as Bessy Marshall (uncredited)
* [[John Wayne#Personal life|Aissa Wayne]] as Bessy Marshall (uncredited)
{{div col end}}
{{div col end}}


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According to [[Tom Mankiewicz]], who worked on the film as an assistant, Curtiz was often ill during production and John Wayne took over the directing.<ref name="tom">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xAnj8rJPcVwC&q=9780813136059 |author=Tom Mankiewicz and Robert Crane |title=My Life as a Mankiewicz: An Insider's Journey Through Hollywood |publisher=University Press of Kentucky |year=2012 |pages=50–52 |isbn=9780813136059 |access-date=2014-04-03}}</ref> Wayne told Mankiewicz to remove his [[John F. Kennedy]] button.<ref>Mankiewicz, Tom ''My Life as a Mankiewicz: An Insider's Journey Through Hollywood'' (2012) p. 50</ref>
According to [[Tom Mankiewicz]], who worked on the film as an assistant, Curtiz was often ill during production and John Wayne took over the directing.<ref name="tom">{{cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xAnj8rJPcVwC&q=9780813136059 |author=Tom Mankiewicz and Robert Crane |title=My Life as a Mankiewicz: An Insider's Journey Through Hollywood |publisher=University Press of Kentucky |year=2012 |pages=50–52 |isbn=9780813136059 |access-date=2014-04-03}}</ref> Wayne told Mankiewicz to remove his [[John F. Kennedy]] button.<ref>Mankiewicz, Tom ''My Life as a Mankiewicz: An Insider's Journey Through Hollywood'' (2012) p. 50</ref>


Parts of the film were shot in Professor Valley, [[Dead Horse Point]], King's Bottom, [[La Sal Mountains]], Fisher Valley, Onion Creek, [[Hurrah Pass]] and Haver Ranch in [[Utah]].<ref>{{cite book|last1=D'Arc|first1=James V.|title=When Hollywood came to town: a history of moviemaking in Utah|date=2010|publisher=Gibbs Smith|location=Layton, Utah|isbn=9781423605874|edition=1st}}</ref> Despite being set in [[Texas]] in 1843, all the characters use [[Winchester rifle|Winchester lever-action rifles]] and [[Colt Single Action Army|Colt Peacemaker]] pistols which were not in production until almost three decade later.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://winchestercollector.org/models/model-1866/|title=Model 1866|access-date=November 17, 2018|website=www.winchestercollector.org}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.americanrifleman.org/articles/2016/12/5/a-look-back-at-the-colt-single-action-army/|title=Single Colt Army|access-date= November 17, 2018|website=www.americanrifleman.org}}</ref>
Parts of the film were shot in Professor Valley, [[Dead Horse Point]], King's Bottom, [[La Sal Mountains]], Fisher Valley, Onion Creek, [[Hurrah Pass]] and Haver Ranch in [[Utah]].<ref>{{cite book|last1=D'Arc|first1=James V.|title=When Hollywood came to town: a history of moviemaking in Utah|date=2010|publisher=Gibbs Smith|location=Layton, Utah|isbn=9781423605874|edition=1st}}</ref> Despite being set in [[Texas]] in 1843, all the characters use [[Winchester rifle|Winchester lever-action rifles]] and [[Colt Single Action Army|Colt Peacemaker]] pistols which were not in production until almost three decades later.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://winchestercollector.org/models/model-1866/|title=Model 1866|access-date=November 17, 2018|website=www.winchestercollector.org}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.americanrifleman.org/articles/2016/12/5/a-look-back-at-the-colt-single-action-army/|title=Single Colt Army|access-date= November 17, 2018|website=www.americanrifleman.org}}</ref>


A tie in with the release was a comic book adaption from [[Dell Comics|Dell]] which was published in [[Four Color]] #1300 (February 1962)<ref>{{gcdb issue|id=17349|title=Dell Four Color #1300}}</ref><ref>{{comicbookdb|type=issue|id=314301|title=Dell Four Color #1300}}</ref>
A tie-in with the release was a comic book adaption from [[Dell Comics|Dell]] which was published in ''[[Four Color]]'' #1300 (February 1962)<ref>{{gcdb issue|id=17349|title=Dell Four Color #1300}}</ref><ref>{{comicbookdb|type=issue|id=314301|title=Dell Four Color #1300}}</ref>


[[Claude King]]'s version of the theme song was a top 10 country hit, and peaked at #71 on the pop charts in [[Billboard Magazine]].
[[Claude King]]'s version of the theme song was a top 10 country hit, and peaked at #71 on the pop charts in [[Billboard Magazine]].


==Reception==
==Reception==
''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]'' magazine wrote, "''The Comancheros'' is a big, brash, uninhibited action-western of the old school about as subtle as a right to the jaw... Wayne is obviously comfortable in a role tailor-made to the specifications of his easygoing, square-shooting, tight-lipped but watch-out-when-I'm-mad screen personality. Lee Marvin makes a vivid impression in a brief, but colorful, role as a half-scalped, vile-tempered Comanchero agent."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://variety.com/1960/film/reviews/the-comancheros-1200419891/|title=The Comancheros|website=Variety.com|publisher=[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]|date=December 31, 1960}}</ref>

[[Bosley Crowther]] called the film "so studiously wild and woolly it turns out to be good fun"; according to Crowther, "[t]here's not a moment of seriousness in it, not a detail that isn't performed with a surge of exaggeration, not a character that is credible."<ref name="nyt">{{cite web | title=John Wayne Stars in 'The Comancheros'| first= Bosley |last=Crowther | author-link=Bosley Crowther| date= November 2, 1961 | url= https://movies.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9900E1D9143DEF32A25751C0A9679D946091D6CF | work= The New York Times | access-date=2012-04-19}}</ref>
[[Bosley Crowther]] called the film "so studiously wild and woolly it turns out to be good fun"; according to Crowther, "[t]here's not a moment of seriousness in it, not a detail that isn't performed with a surge of exaggeration, not a character that is credible."<ref name="nyt">{{cite web | title=John Wayne Stars in 'The Comancheros'| first= Bosley |last=Crowther | author-link=Bosley Crowther| date= November 2, 1961 | url= https://movies.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9900E1D9143DEF32A25751C0A9679D946091D6CF | work= The New York Times | access-date=2012-04-19}}</ref>

The film earned [[theatrical rental]]s of $3.5 million in the United States and Canada.<ref name=revised>{{cite magazine|magazine=[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]|date=8 January 1964|page=71|title=Some Revisions}}</ref>


==See also==
==See also==
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[[Category:1961 films]]
[[Category:1961 films]]
[[Category:1961 Western (genre) films]]
[[Category:1961 Western (genre) films]]
[[Category:American Western (genre) films]]
[[Category:1960s American films]]
[[Category:1960s English-language films]]
[[Category:1960s English-language films]]
[[Category:Films directed by Michael Curtiz]]
[[Category:Films directed by John Wayne]]
[[Category:Films scored by Elmer Bernstein]]
[[Category:20th Century Fox films]]
[[Category:20th Century Fox films]]
[[Category:American Western (genre) films]]
[[Category:CinemaScope films]]
[[Category:Films adapted into comics]]
[[Category:Films based on American novels]]
[[Category:Films based on American novels]]
[[Category:Films based on Western (genre) novels]]
[[Category:Films based on Western (genre) novels]]
[[Category:Films directed by Michael Curtiz]]
[[Category:Films directed by John Wayne]]
[[Category:Films scored by Elmer Bernstein]]
[[Category:Films set in 1843]]
[[Category:Films set in 1843]]
[[Category:Fiction set in 1843]]
[[Category:Films set in Texas]]
[[Category:Films set in Texas]]
[[Category:Films shot in Utah]]
[[Category:Films shot in Utah]]
[[Category:Films adapted into comics]]
[[Category:Texas Ranger Division in fiction]]
[[Category:CinemaScope films]]
[[Category:1960s American films]]

Revision as of 01:41, 16 July 2024

The Comancheros
Theatrical poster
Directed byMichael Curtiz
Uncredited:
John Wayne
Screenplay byJames Edward Grant
Clair Huffaker
Based onThe Comancheros
1952 novel
by Paul I. Wellman
Produced byGeorge Sherman
StarringJohn Wayne
Stuart Whitman
Ina Balin
Lee Marvin
Nehemiah Persoff
Bruce Cabot
CinematographyWilliam H. Clothier
Edited byLouis Loeffler
Music byElmer Bernstein
Color processColor by Deluxe
Production
company
Distributed by20th Century-Fox
Release date
  • November 1, 1961 (1961-11-01)[1]
Running time
107 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$4,260,000[2]
Box office$3,500,000[3]
Stuart Whitman & Ina Balin

The Comancheros is a 1961 American CinemaScope Western film directed by Michael Curtiz, based on a 1952 novel of the same name by Paul Wellman, and starring John Wayne and Stuart Whitman. The supporting cast includes Ina Balin, Lee Marvin, Nehemiah Persoff, Bruce Cabot, Jack Elam, Joan O'Brien, Patrick Wayne, and Edgar Buchanan. Also featured are Western-film veterans Bob Steele, Guinn "Big Boy" Williams, and Harry Carey, Jr. in uncredited supporting roles.

When terminal illness prevented Curtiz (director of Casablanca and The Adventures of Robin Hood) from finishing the film, Wayne took over as director, though his direction remained uncredited. Curtiz died shortly after the film was completed.

Plot

In pre-Civil War Texas, rogue gambler Paul Regret flees to avoid a death penalty after killing Emil Bouvier, the son of a Louisiana judge, in a duel. Regret maintains that he intended to wound Bouvier (who arranged the duel) in the arm, but Bouvier sidestepped. Regret is eventually captured by Texas Ranger Captain Jake Cutter after a tryst with a mysterious lady, Pilar Graile. Regret manages to escape, but is recaptured after a chance encounter with Cutter in a saloon.

While returning Regret to Louisiana, Cutter is compelled to join forces with the condemned man to fight the "Comancheros", a large outlaw gang headed by a former officer who smuggles guns and whiskey to the Comanche Indians, to make money and keep the frontier in a state of violence. Cutter stops at a ranch owned by a friend, when the Comanche attack suddenly. During the attack, Regret jumps on a horse and flees, but instead of making a clean getaway, he returns with a company of Texas Rangers, who repulse the attack. Because of Regret's act of valor, the Rangers and a Texas judge agree to perjure themselves, stating that Regret could not have been involved in the duel because he was helping them spy out the Comanchero's supply line. Regret is then sworn in as an official Ranger.

After encountering one of the Comancheros' suppliers and killing him in self-defense, Cutter and Regret take over his delivery wagon and infiltrate the self-sufficient Comanchero community at the bottom of a valley in the desert. Pilar reappears as the daughter of the ruthless Comanchero leader Graile, who uses a wheelchair. He is soon killed by an old woman in the community after he orders the death of her son, and Cutter and the other Texas Rangers defeat the Comanche and Comancheros. Regret and Pilar leave together for Mexico, and Jake rides off into the sunset to rejoin the Ranger company.

Cast

Production

John Wayne in The Comancheros

Wellman's novel had been bought for the screen by George Stevens, who wanted to direct it after Giant (1956). He then became interested in making The Diary of Anne Frank and sold the film rights to Fox for $300,000. Clair Huffaker was signed by the studio to adapt it for producer Charles Brackett, with Gary Cooper to star. Robert Wagner was in line to play Cooper's co-star.[4]

Cooper was in ill health and in early 1961 Douglas Heyes was announced as writer and director. John Wayne and Charlton Heston were announced as stars but Heston dropped out and was replaced by Tom Tryon, then Heyes dropped out and was replaced by Michael Curtiz. Fox had the script rewritten by Wayne's regular writer James Edward Grant.[5]

Whitman, who later played a similar lead in the 1964 Rio Conchos, played the character Paul Regret, who was the lead in the novel, and Wayne's part had to be amplified for the film version. Wellman had envisioned Cary Grant as Regret as he wrote the novel. Gary Cooper and James Garner were originally set to be the leads but Cooper's ill health and Garner's blackballing over a dispute with Jack L. Warner ruled them out.[6]

According to Tom Mankiewicz, who worked on the film as an assistant, Curtiz was often ill during production and John Wayne took over the directing.[7] Wayne told Mankiewicz to remove his John F. Kennedy button.[8]

Parts of the film were shot in Professor Valley, Dead Horse Point, King's Bottom, La Sal Mountains, Fisher Valley, Onion Creek, Hurrah Pass and Haver Ranch in Utah.[9] Despite being set in Texas in 1843, all the characters use Winchester lever-action rifles and Colt Peacemaker pistols which were not in production until almost three decades later.[10][11]

A tie-in with the release was a comic book adaption from Dell which was published in Four Color #1300 (February 1962)[12][13]

Claude King's version of the theme song was a top 10 country hit, and peaked at #71 on the pop charts in Billboard Magazine.

Reception

Variety magazine wrote, "The Comancheros is a big, brash, uninhibited action-western of the old school about as subtle as a right to the jaw... Wayne is obviously comfortable in a role tailor-made to the specifications of his easygoing, square-shooting, tight-lipped but watch-out-when-I'm-mad screen personality. Lee Marvin makes a vivid impression in a brief, but colorful, role as a half-scalped, vile-tempered Comanchero agent."[14]

Bosley Crowther called the film "so studiously wild and woolly it turns out to be good fun"; according to Crowther, "[t]here's not a moment of seriousness in it, not a detail that isn't performed with a surge of exaggeration, not a character that is credible."[1]

The film earned theatrical rentals of $3.5 million in the United States and Canada.[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Crowther, Bosley (November 2, 1961). "John Wayne Stars in 'The Comancheros'". The New York Times. Retrieved April 19, 2012.
  2. ^ Solomon, Aubrey. Twentieth Century Fox: A Corporate and Financial History (The Scarecrow Filmmakers Series). Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 1989. ISBN 978-0-8108-4244-1. p252
  3. ^ a b "Some Revisions". Variety. January 8, 1964. p. 71.
  4. ^ WAGNER STEPS UP WORK IN MOVIES: Actor Forms Concern, Signs 3-Picture Columbia Deal By HOWARD THOMPSON. New York Times 21 Jan 1961: 18.
  5. ^ Nat Segaloff, Final Cuts: The Last Films of 50 Great Directors, Bear Manor Media 2013 p 75-76
  6. ^ "James Garner: You Ought to be in Pictures". Movieline. May 1, 1994. Archived from the original on November 28, 2011. Retrieved April 19, 2012.
  7. ^ Tom Mankiewicz and Robert Crane (2012). My Life as a Mankiewicz: An Insider's Journey Through Hollywood. University Press of Kentucky. pp. 50–52. ISBN 9780813136059. Retrieved April 3, 2014.
  8. ^ Mankiewicz, Tom My Life as a Mankiewicz: An Insider's Journey Through Hollywood (2012) p. 50
  9. ^ D'Arc, James V. (2010). When Hollywood came to town: a history of moviemaking in Utah (1st ed.). Layton, Utah: Gibbs Smith. ISBN 9781423605874.
  10. ^ "Model 1866". www.winchestercollector.org. Retrieved November 17, 2018.
  11. ^ "Single Colt Army". www.americanrifleman.org. Retrieved November 17, 2018.
  12. ^ "Dell Four Color #1300". Grand Comics Database.
  13. ^ Dell Four Color #1300 at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)
  14. ^ "The Comancheros". Variety.com. Variety. December 31, 1960.