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"The
Comancheros"
Movie Review
Reviewed by: Dave Ferrier |
(1961)
John Wayne, Stuart Whitman, Ina Balin, Nehemiah Persoff, Lee Marvin, Michael
Ansara, Patrick Wayne, Bruce Cabot, Bob Steele, Guinn "Big Boy" Williams,
Joan O'Brien, Jack Elam, Edgar Buchanan, Henry Daniell, Richard Devon, John
Dierkes, Roger Mobley, Steve Baylor, Luisa Triana, Aissa Wayne, Iphigenie
Castiglioni, Gregg Palmer, Don Brodie, George J. Lewis, Jon Lormer, Phil
Arnold, Alan Carney, Dennis Cole;
Directed by: Michael Curtiz; Color |
| Whenever the great films of John Wayne are
mentioned, one can be sure to hear about The Searchers, Red River,
The Quiet Man, and John Ford's "Cavalry Trilogy", but for vintage
Duke (in the perfect drive-in or Saturday matinee, big budget, action
Western), it's hard to top The Comancheros. Seeded with
all the familiar Wayne film characters (look for Guinn Williams' brilliant
turn as a jailed gun-runner), the plot involves renegade Indians, rogue
bandits, love in bloom (for Stuart Whitman and Ina Balin) and eventually
good conquering evil. In this film directed by
Michael Curtiz (Casablanca, Captain Blood, King Creole),
the Duke was at the top of his game playing Captain Jake Cutter, Texas
Ranger. When it is discovered that white renegades have been supplying
whiskey and guns to the Indians, the Duke, after being sent out to apprehend
Louisiana gambler Whitman, goes undercover, meets up and deals with one of
Wildest Westerns' 10 most dastardly villains (Lee Marvin as devilish
Tully Crow), reluctantly joins forces with Whitman (and the feelings are
mutual!), and gets captured by the renegades while trying to
infiltrate their camp................................. |
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