IMDb-BEWERTUNG
5,7/10
856
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Als 1916 ein mexikanischer Rebell Kanonen aus der amerikanischen Armee stiehlt, schickt General Pershing eine Gruppe von Außenseitern aus, um die gestohlenen Waffen zurückzuholen.Als 1916 ein mexikanischer Rebell Kanonen aus der amerikanischen Armee stiehlt, schickt General Pershing eine Gruppe von Außenseitern aus, um die gestohlenen Waffen zurückzuholen.Als 1916 ein mexikanischer Rebell Kanonen aus der amerikanischen Armee stiehlt, schickt General Pershing eine Gruppe von Außenseitern aus, um die gestohlenen Waffen zurückzuholen.
Charles Stalnaker
- Capt. Riggs
- (as John Stalnaker)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
one states don't waste your time.......? I agree its not the best western around and it does resemble other movies of its genre. Peppard's is OK......but he did not carry the movie......for me. What surprised me, though it shouldn't have, was the nothing role of Andy Rice, Duel's performance was spot on and made the character pop when ever the camera was on him, Gordon also top notch and spot on. The whole movie I found myself looking for these 2 and if they were in the scene I was watching and hushing the room. But then Gordon has always played a great heavy and Duel....Well too bad we did not get a chance to see him push his way to the top, He definitely seemed to have the talent to have gone much further. so basically I liked it but I like action movies , the plot was OK and if your a Peppard fan its a must. Heck if you're a Duel fan it it showcases his talent even though it obviously was meant to. As I said before, you want to see some good acting that carries the film keep an eye out for Pete Duel and Don Gordon.
(1970) Cannon for Cordoba
WESTERN
The set up is like 30 minutes, and it involves a radical extremist Mexican General Cordoba (Raf Vallone) and his group of bandits successfully stealing six cannons from a train that made the mistake stopping by at a Mexican town headed toward the border. And with many soldiers either killed and injured, Captain Roderick Douglas (George Peppard) is then given instructions by his superior new orders. The first is to go undercover and locate the six cannons before destroying them, so that they would not be used against them. And then second order is to capture Cordoba alive so that he can face charges. And he does this with the help of his team, Jackson (Don Gordon), Andy (Peter Duel) and Peter (Nico Minardos). Two other people come to join his group as well of LT. Antonio Gutierrez (Gabriele Tinti) and Senorita Leonora Cristobal (Giovanna Ralli).
I did not care for the end of this movie, as well I did not care about the subplot regarding Jackson for not forgiving Douglas letting his brother shot and killed by Cordoba's men. I mean, why didn't Jackson direct his anger toward the person who committed the act. Douglas stopped him from saving him because between him and Jackson they were very much outnumbered, and that he himself would have gotten killed as well.
The set up is like 30 minutes, and it involves a radical extremist Mexican General Cordoba (Raf Vallone) and his group of bandits successfully stealing six cannons from a train that made the mistake stopping by at a Mexican town headed toward the border. And with many soldiers either killed and injured, Captain Roderick Douglas (George Peppard) is then given instructions by his superior new orders. The first is to go undercover and locate the six cannons before destroying them, so that they would not be used against them. And then second order is to capture Cordoba alive so that he can face charges. And he does this with the help of his team, Jackson (Don Gordon), Andy (Peter Duel) and Peter (Nico Minardos). Two other people come to join his group as well of LT. Antonio Gutierrez (Gabriele Tinti) and Senorita Leonora Cristobal (Giovanna Ralli).
I did not care for the end of this movie, as well I did not care about the subplot regarding Jackson for not forgiving Douglas letting his brother shot and killed by Cordoba's men. I mean, why didn't Jackson direct his anger toward the person who committed the act. Douglas stopped him from saving him because between him and Jackson they were very much outnumbered, and that he himself would have gotten killed as well.
Cannon for Cordoba (why not Cannons, Cordoba steals six!?) stars George Peppard (The A-Team, The Blue Max!) and is one of those movies playing in the times of Mexico's long phase of revolutions and counter-revolutions starting around 1910 and going on for some decades. The pros of the movie: good acting, some good action, good production. The cons: nothing really new if you already watched such classics like Kazan's Viva Zapata! (1952, Marlon Brando), Peckinpah's The Wild Bunch (1969) or Leone's Giù la testa (Duck, You Sucker!) among others, all playing in the same time frame. Compared Cannon for Cordoba can hold its ground but can't really add something new - solid.
Cannon for Cordoba is directed by Paul Wendkos and written by Stephen Kandel. It stars George Peppard, Giovanna Ralli, Raf Vallone, Pete Duel, Don Gordon, Nico Minardos, John Larch, John Russell and Francine York. A Panavision/De Luxe Color production, music is by Elmer Bernstein and cinematography by Antonio Macasoli.
"In 1912 the border between Texas and Mexico was aflame with the raids of Mexican bandit hordes who called themselves revolutionaries. To combat them the American government dispatched General John J. (Blackjack) Pershing to deal with the bandit raiders, one of the most dangerous of whom was General Hector Cordoba!"
A Paella Western crammed to the brim with machismo and action, Cannon for Cordoba is in desperate need of re-evaluation by the Pasta Western loving crowd.
The big problem the film has is that it is so indebted to a number of other "men on a mission" movies, it has struggled to gain credit for actually doing the format well. Undeniably the viewing experience is greatly helped if you are like me, a fan of such films like The Guns of Navarone, The Dirty Dozen, Where Eagles Dare, The Professionals and The Wild Bunch etc, because this is basically the Paella version of those films. Shot on location in Spain, with what now would be called a modest budget, it's pacey, explosive, pleasing in visuals and very well performed in the traditional Pasta Western sense. While the grim textures come courtesy of torture, sexual hostility and terrorism.
Plot basically entails U.S. Army Captain Rod Douglas (Peppard) taking a very small gathering of miscreants over the border into Mexico, their mission is to infiltrate Cordoba's (Vallone) mountain stronghold and destroy the cannons claimed by Cordoba's bandits earlier in the play. The threads that run through the plot see one of the group holding a grudge against his leader, another that has the lady of the mission operating on justifiable revenge driven ends, and with so many people wanting Cordoba dead, Douglas is up against it since he's under orders to bring the General back alive to face public trial and inevitable execution.
There's an unsubtle whiff of cynicism throughout the picture, the sly asides to the Vietnam War issue carrying a glint in the eye as cheeky as Peppard's performance. Oh it's no message movie, Wendkos and his team are firmly intent on tapping into the zeitgeist of those formula movies previously, there for sure is no overt attempts at political lecturing, but the scent is there and keeps the pic smelling wholesome.
Cast are the expected mixed bag for such a production. Peppard is every inch a Spaghetti Western anti-hero, perky blue eyes, stubbled face fuzz and constantly chomping on a cigar, he's the fulcrum of the viewing experience and he's great company to be in. Vallone is on wonderfully oily villain duties, yet charming into the bargain as well, Duel is nicely edgy and Ralli (I find it hard to write her name without swooning) is a sexual ball of deviousness. Wendkos favours tilted pan shots for his action scenes, which work to a point but then feel like, well, what's the point? While Bernstein provides a robust score that stirs the blood to boiling point.
Under seen and under valued? You betcha. 7.5/10
"In 1912 the border between Texas and Mexico was aflame with the raids of Mexican bandit hordes who called themselves revolutionaries. To combat them the American government dispatched General John J. (Blackjack) Pershing to deal with the bandit raiders, one of the most dangerous of whom was General Hector Cordoba!"
A Paella Western crammed to the brim with machismo and action, Cannon for Cordoba is in desperate need of re-evaluation by the Pasta Western loving crowd.
The big problem the film has is that it is so indebted to a number of other "men on a mission" movies, it has struggled to gain credit for actually doing the format well. Undeniably the viewing experience is greatly helped if you are like me, a fan of such films like The Guns of Navarone, The Dirty Dozen, Where Eagles Dare, The Professionals and The Wild Bunch etc, because this is basically the Paella version of those films. Shot on location in Spain, with what now would be called a modest budget, it's pacey, explosive, pleasing in visuals and very well performed in the traditional Pasta Western sense. While the grim textures come courtesy of torture, sexual hostility and terrorism.
Plot basically entails U.S. Army Captain Rod Douglas (Peppard) taking a very small gathering of miscreants over the border into Mexico, their mission is to infiltrate Cordoba's (Vallone) mountain stronghold and destroy the cannons claimed by Cordoba's bandits earlier in the play. The threads that run through the plot see one of the group holding a grudge against his leader, another that has the lady of the mission operating on justifiable revenge driven ends, and with so many people wanting Cordoba dead, Douglas is up against it since he's under orders to bring the General back alive to face public trial and inevitable execution.
There's an unsubtle whiff of cynicism throughout the picture, the sly asides to the Vietnam War issue carrying a glint in the eye as cheeky as Peppard's performance. Oh it's no message movie, Wendkos and his team are firmly intent on tapping into the zeitgeist of those formula movies previously, there for sure is no overt attempts at political lecturing, but the scent is there and keeps the pic smelling wholesome.
Cast are the expected mixed bag for such a production. Peppard is every inch a Spaghetti Western anti-hero, perky blue eyes, stubbled face fuzz and constantly chomping on a cigar, he's the fulcrum of the viewing experience and he's great company to be in. Vallone is on wonderfully oily villain duties, yet charming into the bargain as well, Duel is nicely edgy and Ralli (I find it hard to write her name without swooning) is a sexual ball of deviousness. Wendkos favours tilted pan shots for his action scenes, which work to a point but then feel like, well, what's the point? While Bernstein provides a robust score that stirs the blood to boiling point.
Under seen and under valued? You betcha. 7.5/10
This film takes place in 1912 along the border between Mexico and the United States where a Mexican bandit by the name of "General Hector Cordoba" (Raf Vallone) has been participating in a revolution against his government and often makes raids across the Rio Grande to acquire valuable merchandise to help supplement his army. Not content with the Mexican government's efforts to stop these raids the United States dispatches "General John J. 'Blackjack' Pershing" (John Russell) to put a stop to them. Unfortunately, not long after arriving there he suffers the loss of six of his cannon which are stolen by General Cordoba's forces. Furious at this setback -and unable to take his army into Mexico-General Pershing orders a small group of misfits under the command of "Captain Rod Douglas" (George Peppard) to infiltrate General Cordoba's headquarters, destroy the cannon and bring the bandit back alive to face trial. Needless to say, this is an extremely difficult assignment which becomes even more difficult by the fact that one of Captain Douglas' own men by the name of "Jackson Harkness" (Don Gordon) has vowed to kill him because of an earlier incident involving his brother. Now rather than reveal any more I will just say that this was an entertaining film for the most part even though it does have a couple of scenes which defy all sense of reality. I also thought that the ending could have been drawn out a bit more but all things considered I enjoyed this film and I have rated it accordingly. Slightly above average.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesFrancine York told an interviewer that she had no problem being topless in the movie. She said when she was offered the role, she thought, "I have beautiful breasts, so why not?".
- PatzerThe uniform stolen from a much shorter and stouter soldier fits Antonio perfectly.
- Zitate
Capt. Rod Douglas: The trouble being a hero is the morning after.
- VerbindungenReferenced in Guns for Hire: The Making of 'The Magnificent Seven' (2000)
Top-Auswahl
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Details
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 44 Min.(104 min)
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.35 : 1
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