Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA groom and a bounty hunter go after his kidnapped bride.A groom and a bounty hunter go after his kidnapped bride.A groom and a bounty hunter go after his kidnapped bride.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Mike Hagerty
- Dyke Holland
- (as Michael G. Hagerty)
Kelly Junkerman
- Carson
- (as Kelly Junkermann)
David S. Cass Sr.
- Winslow
- (as David Cass)
Avis à la une
Why did they bother - I have spent a better couple of hours with the toothache -
Kenny Rogers should have stuck to singing - Could it be his singing pal Dolly Parton might have brought "something" to this movie? To think I could have watched "The Simpsons" on another channel.
OK movie but like most Westerns, directors seem to forget realism. Before the cons, one pro. Leech shoots holding his revolver with both hands. One handed shooting is or amateurs and "movie cowboys." I've ridden horses all my life and when you are out in the middle of nowhere and dismount, the last thing you do is turn your horse loose without tying them up. These guys do. How stupid! Gee, it's only thirty eight miles back to town, I don't have any water or food so I think I'll just turn O'l Buck loose. How unrealistic. Guns are LOUD. Yet no one ever flinches or even reacts to the noise. Shots inside a room would be deafening. And their horses don't even twitch. A lever action rifle pushes the first round into the chamber. Then each time the lever is worked an empty cartridge is ejected. But for dramatic effect, shooters work the lever and nothing comes out. I know water is scarce, but some of those guys looked like they hadn't washed in years. Typical western. Greasy, dirty guys and the hottest women in the west.
Laura Harring is kidnapped from her wedding by a gang who intend to sell her across the Rio Grande. Her groom, Travis Tritt, goes after her, and meets up with bounty hunter Kenny Rogers.
It's a very well shot TV movie, with DP David Connell capturing some nice nice landscape in Texas, including one shot that looks like it was stolen from Ford's Rio Grande. Rogers is pretty good in the first third of the movie, where obeys the classical dictum of talking low, talking slow, and not saying much. Eventually, as he and Tritt ride on, he becomes chattier and chattier, and a sojourn at Naomi Judd's safe house fills in his tragic back story.... which is pretty much standard alas.
This one visually looks like a 1950s Shaky A western, one with some money spent, but it lacks much int he way of the grand themes of such movies. Instead, it offers bits out of spaghetti westerns, but cleaned up for television broadcast. As such, it's neither fish nor fowl, nor good red meat, and Rogers doesn't even sing a title song.
It's a very well shot TV movie, with DP David Connell capturing some nice nice landscape in Texas, including one shot that looks like it was stolen from Ford's Rio Grande. Rogers is pretty good in the first third of the movie, where obeys the classical dictum of talking low, talking slow, and not saying much. Eventually, as he and Tritt ride on, he becomes chattier and chattier, and a sojourn at Naomi Judd's safe house fills in his tragic back story.... which is pretty much standard alas.
This one visually looks like a 1950s Shaky A western, one with some money spent, but it lacks much int he way of the grand themes of such movies. Instead, it offers bits out of spaghetti westerns, but cleaned up for television broadcast. As such, it's neither fish nor fowl, nor good red meat, and Rogers doesn't even sing a title song.
The typical motifs of the spaghetti westerns can be found also here. The Kenny Rogers character represents greed and the Travis Tritt character is fueled by revenge. His beautiful wife (played by Miss USA) got captured and they are both behind the baddies. Kenny Rogers seems to old as the merciless bounty-hunter and Travis Tritt doesn´t really convince, either. Photography is very well done and stylish, art direction is proper. The plot develops well without any logical flaws. The baddies are stock characters.
Neat and cute run-of-the-mill Hollywood production
5 / 10.
Neat and cute run-of-the-mill Hollywood production
5 / 10.
I always thought that when a bounty hunter kills the suspect, why do they always leave the suspects guns and equipment? If a handgun costs a cowboy a months or several months wages, they must be too valuable to leave. They should have a early form of recycling. At least in this movie the suspects property becomes a bonus for the bounty hunter.
Le saviez-vous
- GaffesAfter Ben leaves the posse and crosses the river, he is seen riding hard across the desert. His horse first shows no breast collar, then shows a collar, and then no collar again.
- ConnexionsReferenced in Changement de décors (1995)
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Rio Diablo - Djävulens flod
- Lieux de tournage
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
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