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7,3/10
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MA NOTE
En 1917, un millionnaire américain embauche quatre mercenaires pour aller chercher sa femme kidnappée par des révolutionnaires mexicains. Chacun est un «professionnel» aux compétences précis... Tout lireEn 1917, un millionnaire américain embauche quatre mercenaires pour aller chercher sa femme kidnappée par des révolutionnaires mexicains. Chacun est un «professionnel» aux compétences précises.En 1917, un millionnaire américain embauche quatre mercenaires pour aller chercher sa femme kidnappée par des révolutionnaires mexicains. Chacun est un «professionnel» aux compétences précises.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Nommé pour 3 Oscars
- 3 victoires et 9 nominations au total
José Chávez
- Revolutionary
- (as Jose Chavez)
Elizabeth Campbell
- Mexican Girl
- (non crédité)
Don Carlos
- Bandit
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
I've watched this terrific action-packed Western a couple of times in the past via my full-frame VHS and therefore I'll definitely upgrade now that this release is on its way. I'm certainly glad that Columbia has proved me wrong because I never thought they'd do it given that it's already available as a barebones disc.
Anyway, the fact that THE PROFESSIONALS is indeed something special is borne out by all the major awards (listed below) it was nominated for at the time of its original release and which are not commonly bestowed on this type of genre picture: Best Direction (Richard Brooks) Academy Awards; Best Adapted Screenplay (Richard Brooks) Academy Awards; Best Motion Picture Drama Golden Globes; Best Direction (Richard Brooks) Directors Guild Of America; Best Written American Drama (Richard Brooks) Writers Guild Of America
Featuring a great cast (Burt Lancaster, Lee Marvin, Robert Ryan, Jack Palance, Woody Strode, Ralph Bellamy and Claudia Cardinale), beautiful camera-work and a typically fine Maurice Jarre score, the film is highlighted by Richard Brooks' witty script and Lancaster's boisterous performance. It's worth noting here that Brooks had already directed Lancaster towards his only ever Academy Award in ELMER GANTRY (1960) and that the former made two other excellent Westerns in his career THE LAST HUNT (1956) and BITE THE BULLET (1975).
While THE PROFESSIONALS rarely crops up when classic Westerns are discussed, I'd say it lies somewhere between THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN (1960) where a bunch of "experts" on the fringes of the law are recruited for a seemingly impossible mission and THE WILD BUNCH (1969) where these same people realize they're getting on in their years and ultimately find themselves out of touch with the times they're living in.
Anyway, the fact that THE PROFESSIONALS is indeed something special is borne out by all the major awards (listed below) it was nominated for at the time of its original release and which are not commonly bestowed on this type of genre picture: Best Direction (Richard Brooks) Academy Awards; Best Adapted Screenplay (Richard Brooks) Academy Awards; Best Motion Picture Drama Golden Globes; Best Direction (Richard Brooks) Directors Guild Of America; Best Written American Drama (Richard Brooks) Writers Guild Of America
Featuring a great cast (Burt Lancaster, Lee Marvin, Robert Ryan, Jack Palance, Woody Strode, Ralph Bellamy and Claudia Cardinale), beautiful camera-work and a typically fine Maurice Jarre score, the film is highlighted by Richard Brooks' witty script and Lancaster's boisterous performance. It's worth noting here that Brooks had already directed Lancaster towards his only ever Academy Award in ELMER GANTRY (1960) and that the former made two other excellent Westerns in his career THE LAST HUNT (1956) and BITE THE BULLET (1975).
While THE PROFESSIONALS rarely crops up when classic Westerns are discussed, I'd say it lies somewhere between THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN (1960) where a bunch of "experts" on the fringes of the law are recruited for a seemingly impossible mission and THE WILD BUNCH (1969) where these same people realize they're getting on in their years and ultimately find themselves out of touch with the times they're living in.
This is one of those great, all-star movies where what happens is almost inconsequential because getting there is so much fun. Marvin and Lancaster give sharp-edged, self-assured performances, Palance is delightful as always, and the rest of the cast does their job in yeoman fashion. It has the edge and cynicism that marked the decline of western movie production, but it has enough fun with the audience, and itself to stand out from other westerns made at the same juncture. Richard Brooks deserves a lot of credit for keeping the genre going because few westerns made around this time were or are memorable. This movie is not always mentioned with the all-time great westerns...but it should be.
Oscar and Golden Globe nominations for the film, writer and director Richard Brooks, and cinematographer Conrad L. Hall. A western that is beautifully done, and seems to have been overlooked by those who rate Westerns.
A splendid cast with Lee Marvin (Cat Ballou), Burt Lancaster (Elmer Gantry, From Here to Eternity), Jack Palance (City Slickers, Claudia Cardinale (A Girl in Australia, Il giorno della civetta), and Robert Ryan (Crossfire). Also, of note is Marie Gomez, who got a Golden Globe nomination for her role as Chiquita.
Great action and an excellent script. An enjoyable western classic.
A splendid cast with Lee Marvin (Cat Ballou), Burt Lancaster (Elmer Gantry, From Here to Eternity), Jack Palance (City Slickers, Claudia Cardinale (A Girl in Australia, Il giorno della civetta), and Robert Ryan (Crossfire). Also, of note is Marie Gomez, who got a Golden Globe nomination for her role as Chiquita.
Great action and an excellent script. An enjoyable western classic.
A rich Texas landowner (the elderly Ralph Bellamy) hires three men (Robert Ryan, Burt Lancaster and Lee Marvin) to go into Mexico and return his beautiful wife (the ultra-erotic Claudia Cardinale) to him after she was kidnapped by a gang of ruthless thugs led by Jack Palance (made up to look Hispanic). The three accept the challenge, wanting to get paid handsomely of course, but as they advance and get closer to Cardinale a thin line develops and it becomes unclear if everything is really the way it appears to be. The scope of a quickly changing West before a backdrop of the Mexican Revolution only adds to a movie that nearly touches greatness. Writer/director Richard Brooks (Oscar-nominated in both categories) began to knock on the door with a potentially very dark Western here and in 1969 director Sam Peckinpah would knock that door down with the amazing "The Wild Bunch". Brooks, not known for this genre, created a legitimate winner here with this production. Sometimes though the characters lose out because of the beautiful cinematography by Conrad L. Hall (Oscar-nominated) and the fact that Cardinale is just illuminating when on the screen (she is the only actress with any substantial screen-time). Her amazing beauty overshadows all the males throughout. Thought-provoking, action-packed and highly interesting, "The Professionals" is a sometimes forgotten would-be masterpiece from the usually impressive genre. 4 stars out of 5.
By 1966, westerns were changing. The rise of the spaghetti western had introduced a grittier image of the old west than people had seen in John Wayne's movies. "The Professionals" still has traces of the old-style westerns - namely in the casting of Jack Palance as a Mexican - but leans more towards the new direction that the genre was taking. It was especially surprising to see a Hollywood western wherein two of the white protagonists fought under Pancho Villa's command, since the US was used to seeing Villa not as a principled revolutionary but rather as a wild bandit.
Richard Brooks's movie is not a masterpiece to the degree of "Once Upon a Time in the West", "Little Big Man" or "McCabe and Mrs. Miller" (which showed how the conglomerates in the old west had no qualms about crushing anyone who stood up to them), but it's certainly an impressive piece of work: the acting, direction, cinematography, editing and score all added up to some fun. And besides, how can you not admire the sight of Claudia Cardinale?
Richard Brooks's movie is not a masterpiece to the degree of "Once Upon a Time in the West", "Little Big Man" or "McCabe and Mrs. Miller" (which showed how the conglomerates in the old west had no qualms about crushing anyone who stood up to them), but it's certainly an impressive piece of work: the acting, direction, cinematography, editing and score all added up to some fun. And besides, how can you not admire the sight of Claudia Cardinale?
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesDuring the filming of the scene where Maria attempts to escape through a canyon wired with dynamite, Claudia Cardinale's stunt double was badly injured during the explosion. Cardinale, who had never ridden a horse before, performed the stunt herself for the final cut, and escaped uninjured.
- GaffesAt the end of the scene when the gang are sitting on a ridge talking about battles and promises, Fardan exits the shot. Dolworth puts his cigar in his mouth and puts the binoculars to his eyes backwards, ocular lenses out.
- Citations
[last lines]
J.W. Grant: You bastard.
Rico: Yes, Sir. In my case an accident of birth. But you, Sir, you're a self-made man.
- Bandes originalesProposition For The Professionals - Main Title
Written and Performed by Orchestra Maurice Jarre
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- How long is The Professionals?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 19 537 346 $US
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