by Paramount
| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 5844 (lower is better) |
| Price Used: | $3.95 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| Director: | Howard Hawks |
| Release Date: | 2003-04-29 |
| Label: | Paramount |
| UPC: | 097363801146 |
| Binding: | DVD |
| Published By: | Paramount |
| ASIN: | B00008CMR6 |
| Category: | DVD |
Actors and Actresses
Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions
Product Description
After the civil war a union colonel goes to rio lobo to take revenge on two traitors. Studio: Paramount Home Video Release Date: 08/23/2005 Starring: John Wayne Run time: 114 minutes Rating: Nr
Amazon.com
The final film by the legendary director Howard Hawks, released in 1970, found him paired with longtime leading man John Wayne in a story slightly similar to their more familiar Rio Bravo and El Dorado. Set at the end of the Civil War, the story finds Wayne playing a Union army colonel who recovers some stolen gold and roots out a traitor. Though a little creaky (Hawks had been making films since 1926), Rio Lobo nevertheless has his trademark, crackling dialogue, appealing characters, and ensemble spirit among the cast. This was a worthy finish to a fantastic career by a first-rank filmmaker. --Tom Keogh
Customer Reviews
A later Waynestern with some well done confrontations - Reviewed on 2008-01-19
1 customer found this review helpful, 1 did not.
A pretty good Waynestern from 1970. While Wayne was ill during the filming of this movie, he hides it pretty well. His Col. Cord McNally is the hero of the movie, but not its romantic lead. The running joke is his being "comfortable" for the women in the movie. The romantic lead goes to Jorge Rivero as Capt. Pierre Cordona (Wayne calls him Frenchy). Jennifer O'Neill is the female lead and is OK, but delivers her lines a bit awkwardly. For my money Susana Dosamentes as Maria Carmen and Sherry Lansing (yes, the later head of 20th Century Fox) as Amelita are more convincing. Be that as it may, it is a good story and a very enjoyable film.
The story opens with Wayne and his Union troops waiting for a gold shipment. However, some Confederate Raiders know about the shipment and have a rather elaborate scheme to steal to gold as they have in previous shipments. Wayne pursues the Raiders, is captured and gets to know Cordona and Tuscadora Phillips (Christopher Mitchum). Wayne finds a way to turn the tables and after the war is over he meets up with Cordona and Tuscadora again to find out who the traitor was that tipped them off about the gold shipments. They give him what they know and Wayne helps them with some resources to get home.
Later, Cordona and McNally meet with Shasta Delany (O'Neill) when she involves them in a shootout as she is trying to escape from some obviously crooked lawmen. It turns out that she is from the border town where Tuscador lives and it is being run by a very bad man named Ketcham (Victor French). McNally, Cordona, and Shasta head to Rio Lobo to help their Tuscadora. Along the way they also meet Tuscadora's father (played wonderfully by Jack Elam) and a great confrontation is set up that takes the rest of the film. Quite a good Western, I think (my son calls them Waynesterns).
Watch for the Wanted poster for Hondo Lane when the action turns around the Sheriff's Office.
Recommended!
Reviewed by Craig Matteson, Ann Arbor, MI
A Great Train Robbery; Good-Shooter Women, etc. - Reviewed on 2007-08-14
4 customers found this review helpful.
The first part of this western is relatively unique; the second part is commonplace in John Wayne movies. The latter contains such themes as shootouts between posses of good and bad guys, a trade of kidnapped men (the bad guys' boss for Frenchie), and heavy drinking. In fact, McNally (Wayne) has this comment about a drink: "Boy, this stuff ain't for the young!"
The train robbery is creatively portrayed. A group of Confederate guerillas, evidently tipped off about a transport of gold, tap-in into a telegraph wire, and thereby correctly infer which train is going to carry the gold. Then they set up a trap: They grease a section of railway so that the targeted train will stall for lack of traction. Once this happens, they come out of hiding and ambush the train. They throw a bag of bees into a train compartment in order to put the men inside out of action and to force them to jump out of the train. Finally, they detach the gold-bearing wagon from the rest of the train, and steer it to a prearranged place where it can be ground to a halt and stripped of its gold-bearing chest.
Those who feel that westerns ignore women or always place them in passive roles will like this film. There are two women who are good with guns, and who put them to use when the men won't do their jobs to secure justice for them. One of the men gives a form of respect to one of these women: "She's got legs and she can shoot!"
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Book Subjects
- Adventure
- Color
- English
- Feature
- Light
- Movie
- Out For Revenge
- Romance
- Suitable for Children
- Tense
- Traditional Western
- Traitorous Spies/Double Agents
- USA
- Upbeat
- War
- Western
- Westerns