[go: up one dir, main page]

    Calendario de lanzamientosTop 250 películasPelículas más popularesBuscar películas por géneroTaquilla superiorHorarios y entradasNoticias sobre películasPelículas de la India destacadas
    Programas de televisión y streamingLas 250 mejores seriesSeries más popularesBuscar series por géneroNoticias de TV
    Qué verÚltimos trailersTítulos originales de IMDbSelecciones de IMDbDestacado de IMDbGuía de entretenimiento familiarPodcasts de IMDb
    OscarsEmmysSan Diego Comic-ConSummer Watch GuideToronto Int'l Film FestivalPremios STARmeterInformación sobre premiosInformación sobre festivalesTodos los eventos
    Nacidos un día como hoyCelebridades más popularesNoticias sobre celebridades
    Centro de ayudaZona de colaboradoresEncuestas
Para profesionales de la industria
  • Idioma
  • Totalmente compatible
  • English (United States)
    Parcialmente compatible
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Lista de visualización
Iniciar sesión
  • Totalmente compatible
  • English (United States)
    Parcialmente compatible
  • Français (Canada)
  • Français (France)
  • Deutsch (Deutschland)
  • हिंदी (भारत)
  • Italiano (Italia)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Español (España)
  • Español (México)
Usar app
  • Elenco y equipo
  • Opiniones de usuarios
  • Trivia
  • Preguntas Frecuentes
IMDbPro

Camino de la venganza

Título original: The Scalphunters
  • 1968
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 42min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.7/10
4.9 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Burt Lancaster, Ossie Davis, Telly Savalas, and Shelley Winters in Camino de la venganza (1968)
Forced to trade his valuable furs for a well-educated escaped slave, a rugged trapper vows to recover the pelts from the Indians and later the renegades that killed them.
Reproducir trailer3:14
1 video
78 fotos
ComediaDramaParodiaSátiraSlapstickWesternWestern clásico

Un rudo trampero, obligado a intercambiar sus valiosas pieles por un esclavo fugitivo educado, jura recuperar las pieles de los indios y luego de los renegados que los mataron.Un rudo trampero, obligado a intercambiar sus valiosas pieles por un esclavo fugitivo educado, jura recuperar las pieles de los indios y luego de los renegados que los mataron.Un rudo trampero, obligado a intercambiar sus valiosas pieles por un esclavo fugitivo educado, jura recuperar las pieles de los indios y luego de los renegados que los mataron.

  • Dirección
    • Sydney Pollack
  • Guionista
    • William W. Norton
  • Elenco
    • Burt Lancaster
    • Shelley Winters
    • Telly Savalas
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    6.7/10
    4.9 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • Sydney Pollack
    • Guionista
      • William W. Norton
    • Elenco
      • Burt Lancaster
      • Shelley Winters
      • Telly Savalas
    • 56Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 25Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Premios
      • 3 nominaciones en total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 3:14
    Official Trailer

    Fotos78

    Ver el cartel
    Ver el cartel
    Ver el cartel
    Ver el cartel
    Ver el cartel
    + 73
    Ver el cartel

    Elenco principal32

    Editar
    Burt Lancaster
    Burt Lancaster
    • Joe Bass
    Shelley Winters
    Shelley Winters
    • Kate
    Telly Savalas
    Telly Savalas
    • Jim Howie
    Ossie Davis
    Ossie Davis
    • Joseph Lee
    Dabney Coleman
    Dabney Coleman
    • Jed
    Paul Picerni
    Paul Picerni
    • Frank
    Dan Vadis
    Dan Vadis
    • Yuma
    Armando Silvestre
    Armando Silvestre
    • Two Crows
    Nick Cravat
    Nick Cravat
    • Yancy
    Tony Epper
    Tony Epper
    • Scalphunter
    Chuck Roberson
    Chuck Roberson
    • Scalphunter
    John Epper
    • Scalphunter
    Jack Williams
    • Scalphunter
    Gregorio Acosta
    • Scalphunter
    • (sin créditos)
    Pedro Aguilar
    • Kiowa
    • (sin créditos)
    Marco Antonio Arzate
    • Scalphunter
    • (sin créditos)
    Alicia De Lago
    • Scalphunter's woman
    • (sin créditos)
    Néstor Domínguez
    • Kiowa
    • (sin créditos)
    • Dirección
      • Sydney Pollack
    • Guionista
      • William W. Norton
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios56

    6.74.8K
    1
    2
    3
    4
    5
    6
    7
    8
    9
    10

    Opiniones destacadas

    6Wuchakk

    Amusing late 60s Western with Lancaster, Ossie Davis and Savalas

    A rugged trapper (Burt Lancaster) is forced by a band of Kiowas to trade his valuable furs for an educated runaway slave (Ossie Davis). To get the furs back, they follow the Indians and, then, a band of scalphunters, led by a boisterous bald guy (Telly Savalas). Shelley Winters is also on hand.

    What's notable about "The Scalphunters" (1968), besides the cast, is that the entire story takes place in the Southwest wilderness. There are no towns, buildings or teepees in sight. But there's some gorgeous location photography.

    While there are entertaining comedic bits, don't expect anything outrageous like "Blazing Saddles" (1974). This is more in the mode of contemporaneous Westerns like "Bandoleros" (1968), "The War Wagon" (1967) and "The Undefeated" (1969). It's not as great as the first or as good as the second, but it's about on par with the latter.

    The film runs 1 hour and 42 minutes and was shot in Arizona (Quartzsite, Parker & Harquahala Mountains) and Mexico (Barranca del Cobre, Chihuahua, Durango & Sierra de Organos).

    GRADE: B-
    7Bogmeister

    They're after Burt and Ossie's Scalps!

    Wildly entertaining western romp with the still athletic Lancaster (as a frontier trapper) and Davis (as runaway slave) reluctantly teamed against a band of bandits led by Savalas. I noticed this pic as good time fun during a TV showing as a kid, way way before the nice DVD version, and still have fond memories of an easygoing adventure. Lancaster is exuberant in this, despite being well into his middle-aged years; he still comes across as someone who can outfight any man and rassle a grizzly bear on the side. He also presents an iconoclastic character here, supremely content onto himself, with not much use for civilization OR anarchy (represented by the barbaric bandits). Just leave him to do his own thing; if you don't, you're in for a fight - don't matter who you are, as Savalas and his band find out.

    Savalas is great as the bandit leader, dangerous blow-hard that he is; though not too intelligent, he's still a lot smarter than the other idiots under his rule (including a bearded Dabney Coleman in an early role). His main squeeze is the cigar-chomping floozy Shelley Winters, hamming it up as much as the otherwise all-male cast. Davis, in an odd contrast, comes across as the most sophisticated of the whole bunch, despite supposedly being a slave his entire life; he also proves to be the most duplicitous; he's not simply honorable and disappoints Lancaster more than once. Maybe director Pollack was sneaking in some commentary on the outmoded superior standing of the white race by this point, though I think it was wishful thinking that Davis could get away with as much as he does here in the 19th century. In all, the actors prove to be good hams to the very end.
    7bkoganbing

    "Oh Well, They're Only Men"

    The Scalphunters was the first of two films Sydney Pollack directed with Burt Lancaster. In fact according to a recent biography of Lancaster, Burt was literally trying Pollack out on this western before giving him an opportunity to direct the very expensive Castle Keep for him the following year. Personally I think The Scalphunters is a far better film.

    It's a rollicking good mixture of comedy with some very serious themes involved. It's also the last time Lancaster did any really athletic roles as he was 55 when making The Scalphunters. We all bow to old age at some point.

    Sydney Pollack actually started his association with Burt Lancaster on the set of The Young Savages where he was an acting coach to some of the street kids who were playing gang members. It was his first introduction into motion pictures, he had previously directed and acted in a number of television productions.

    Burt is fur trapper Joe Bass who gets an offer from the Kiowa Indians he can't refuse. They'll relieve him of his year's trappings in beaver pelts and he'll get an educated house slave in Ossie Davis. Davis seems born to be a slave, he escapes it from the south, then he's captured by the Comanches who then trade him to the Kiowas and then he's forced on Lancaster.

    Lancaster is planning to get his pelts back, but a murderous gang of Scalphunters beat him to it and massacre almost the whole band and take Lancaster's furs along with horses and scalps that bring a good bounty. Burt's Joe Bass is not exactly a boy scout, but this crowd truly nauseates him.

    The Scalphunters are headed by Telly Savalas and his cigar smoking refugee from a bordello of a woman, Shelley Winters. Winters has the best performance in the film, this is her third film with Lancaster with whom she had a self documented fling back in the day. Later on Davis gets captured by The Scalphunters and he has to use his wits to survive among them. But they're going to Mexico where slavery has been abolished.

    The laughs are mixed in with some serious racial issues all around. Lancaster can't quite accept Davis as an equal, Davis is perfectly willing to go along with The Scalphunters and their genocidal war on the Indians if he'll obtain his freedom through them. And Savalas and his crowd are as mean a bunch as you'll ever see in a film, yet some of the funniest bits in the film involve Winters and Savalas.

    The Scalphunters is a really funny western that if you think about it teaches some good lessons we could all use.
    gengene

    'Scalphunters' reverses expectations

    I first saw Scalphunters during its original release run in the spring of 1969. The audience' reaction to the scene at the waterhole, Bass and Lee indistinguishable in the mud, and the Indians laughing at them was one of the most raucous reactions I've ever heard at a movie; cheers, applause and much laughter. That is indicative of what makes the film so much better than its title leads one to think. It fairly consistently, and regularly, reverses the stereotypes we have come to expect of films with titles like "The Scalphunters." Bass, the white man, is completely at home in the wilderness, "an ill-mannered, unlettered oaf" to be sure, but highly skilled and fearless. Lee, a runaway slave, is articulate, literate, and completely out of place - not what we would expect of a plantation slave. The exchanges between Bass and Lee as they pursue the Kiowas and Bass's furs, particularly as they eat their first meal together, reveal's the film's real purpose. Bass says Lee ought to retail out for a number of bales of cotton in Saint Louis. Lee asks if Bass thinks it's right to sell a man like that. Bass responds, "Read your Bible." Lee's retort is that, "God didn't invent slavery. The Egyptians did." and "Julius Caesar made slaves out of all you Englishmen." This pointed banter carries on throughout the film, until Bass confronts Lee, who has asked for a drink of whiskey, with "Whiskey's a man's drink, and you ain't no man. You're a mealy-mouth, shuffle-butt slave, so don't be askin' to take no drink with a man." This all culminates finally in their last tit-for-tat struggle, that neither wins - or loses, either, completely unaware of their surroundings and imminent jeopardy, until that last great reversal of stereotype when it's the Indians who ride to the rescue, not the cavalry. The closing image with Bass and Lee riding not only the same, but also the only (and very smart) horse they have, makes a powerful statement about what our common circumstances are, and how pointless racial strife truly is. The film came and went quietly in 1969, I think because the country was not ready to find anything funny about race relations. Chris Rock, Richard Pryor and Bill Cosby aside, are we ready yet?
    7ma-cortes

    Fun Western in which a trapper is forcibly traded an educated ex-slave for his pelts by an Indian group

    Light Western comedy about the particular relationship between a fur trapper and a highly polish slave , including a colour-coded cultural confrontation . It's an entertaining story with a touch of peculiarity , some great characters , a colorful cinematography , an amazing music and is funny enough . Solid western with interesting events , violent fights , emotions , humor , thrills and spectacular outdoors . Forced to trade his valuable furs for a well-educated escaped slave (Ossie Davis) , a rugged trapper (Burt Lancaster) vows to recover the pelts from the Indians and later the renegades that killed them . As the pair forms an uneasy alliance , as when the pelts are in turn and result to be appropriated , they set off in pursuit a band of cutthroats led by a cynic bandit (Telly Savalas) . The trapper will stop at nothing to take back what's his .

    An amusing enough liberal comedy western that has its fun moments , entertainment , action and some violence . Enjoyable as well as amiable screenplay by William Norton , it is exciting enough and glosses both the interdependence among protagonists and their racial antagonism . This plot about a peculiar conflict between a rough , illiterate trapper and a cultured slave is well worked through a chronic circular premise . Very good acting by the great Burt Lancaster as a fur trapper who sets out in pursuit the robbers . Sympathetic Ossie Davis as Joseph Lee , a slave who helps Lancaster to fight enemies and retrieve the pelts . Perfect Telly Savalas as leader of a gang of Scalphunters who has appropriated the furs . Secondary cast is frankly nice such as Shelley Winters as Kate , Dabney Coleman as Jed , Dan Vadis as Yuma , Armando Silvestre as Two Crows and the Lancaster's best friend , Nick Cravat , as Yancy . Splendid cinematography in Panavision and glimmer Technicolor by Duke Callagham and Richard Moore as is reflected on spectacular outdoors filmed in sighting , gorgeous natural landscapes. As it was shot on location in wonderful natural parks from Durango , Mexico . Lively and rousing musical score by the maestro Elmer Bernstein composing one of his best soundtrack .

    Professionally produced by a great production company formed by Arnold Laven , Jules Levy and Arthur Gardner . The first Levy-Gardner-Laven movie was 1952's "Without Warning"'; in the decades since, they have produced and directed dozens of additional features and especially Westerns . They are experts on Western genre as cinema as television as they produced and directed several TV series including "The Rifleman," "Law of the Plainsman," , "The Big Valley" . The motion picture was well directed by the recently deceased Sidney Pollack with a thankfully light hand . Sydney was an excellent director , producer and secondary actor with several hits on all kind of genres as ¨The Interpreter¨ , ¨The firm¨ , ¨Out of Africa¨ , ¨Tootsie¨, ¨Yakuza¨ and directed two magnificent Westerns , ¨Jeremiah Johnson¨ and this ¨Scalphunters¨ . Rating : Good , better than average and worthwhile watching . The flick will appeal to Burt Lancaster fans and Western buffs .

    Más como esto

    Valdez Is Coming
    6.7
    Valdez Is Coming
    Castle Keep
    6.1
    Castle Keep
    Yo soy la ley
    7.0
    Yo soy la ley
    Cómo casi se perdió el oeste
    6.5
    Cómo casi se perdió el oeste
    Con la vida en un hilo
    7.0
    Con la vida en un hilo
    Billy Two Hats
    6.3
    Billy Two Hats
    Apache
    6.3
    Apache
    Lo que no se perdona
    6.5
    Lo que no se perdona
    Lucha de gigantes
    6.8
    Lucha de gigantes
    Los valientes andan solos
    7.5
    Los valientes andan solos
    Sin miedo y sin tacha
    7.1
    Sin miedo y sin tacha
    Comes a Horseman
    6.3
    Comes a Horseman

    Argumento

    Editar

    ¿Sabías que…?

    Editar
    • Trivia
      Burt Lancaster had met Ossie Davis on the historic Martin Luther King "Civil Rights March on Washington" on Aug. 28, 1963. This chance meeting led to the talented Davis being cast as "Joseph Winfield Lee", the runaway slave who uses his clever, resourceful ways to manipulate fur trapper "Joe Bass" (Lancaster) in the film. Lancaster also stated that first time screenwriter William W. Norton submitted such a unique, clever script, that he just had to do the film.
    • Errores
      Set in 1860, Joseph mentions the planet Pluto, discovered in 1930.
    • Citas

      Joseph Lee: [walking behind Joe Bass and his horse] What about me, sir?

      Joe Bass: I'll just sell you to the highest bidder.

      Joseph Lee: Could you mske that to a Comanche, sir?

      Joe Bass: You seem to have an uncommon prejudice against service to the white-skinned race!

      Joseph Lee: I don't mean to be narrow in my attitude. Could I ask you what's your name, sir?

      Joe Bass: Joe Bass.

      Joseph Lee: Well, Mr. Bass, couldn't you kind of consider me a captured Comanche?

      Joe Bass: [both Joe Bass and his horse turn around and do a 'take']

      Joseph Lee: I came on my own two feet as far as those Comanches. It was my intent to circle south as far as Mexico. The Mexicans have a law against the slavery trade, and since those Indians captured me from other Indians. I have now got full Indian citizenship.

      Joe Bass: Joseph Lee, you ever study the law?

      Joseph Lee: No, sir.

      Joe Bass: Well, neither did I, but you ain't got a chance in hell of calling yerself an Indian! You're an African slave by employment, black by color!

    • Conexiones
      Featured in Film Review: Burt Lancaster (1968)
    • Bandas sonoras
      In Our Lovely Deseret
      (uncredited)

      Lyrics by Eliza R. Snow

      Music by George Frederick Root

      Performed by Shelley Winters

    Selecciones populares

    Inicia sesión para calificar y agrega a la lista de videos para obtener recomendaciones personalizadas
    Iniciar sesión

    Preguntas Frecuentes14

    • How long is The Scalphunters?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 26 de diciembre de 1968 (México)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • The Scalphunters
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Quartzsite, Arizona, Estados Unidos
    • Productoras
      • Bristol Films
      • Norlan Productions
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 1h 42min(102 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 2.35 : 1

    Contribuir a esta página

    Sugiere una edición o agrega el contenido que falta
    • Obtén más información acerca de cómo contribuir
    Editar página

    Más para explorar

    Visto recientemente

    Habilita las cookies del navegador para usar esta función. Más información.
    Obtener la aplicación de IMDb
    Inicia sesión para obtener más accesoInicia sesión para obtener más acceso
    Sigue a IMDb en las redes sociales
    Obtener la aplicación de IMDb
    Para Android e iOS
    Obtener la aplicación de IMDb
    • Ayuda
    • Índice del sitio
    • IMDbPro
    • Box Office Mojo
    • Licencia de datos de IMDb
    • Sala de prensa
    • Publicidad
    • Trabaja con nosotros
    • Condiciones de uso
    • Política de privacidad
    • Your Ads Privacy Choices
    IMDb, una compañía de Amazon

    © 1990-2025 by IMDb.com, Inc.