Mentre il maresciallo Cahill è fuori città, i suoi due figli sentendosi trascurati dal padre, reagiscono aiutando tre fuorilegge a rubare una banca, mentre il fratello minore nasconde il bot... Leggi tuttoMentre il maresciallo Cahill è fuori città, i suoi due figli sentendosi trascurati dal padre, reagiscono aiutando tre fuorilegge a rubare una banca, mentre il fratello minore nasconde il bottino.Mentre il maresciallo Cahill è fuori città, i suoi due figli sentendosi trascurati dal padre, reagiscono aiutando tre fuorilegge a rubare una banca, mentre il fratello minore nasconde il bottino.
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Recensioni in evidenza
John Wayne looks pretty tired in this although he still has a great screen presence. The film is essentially about a man's relationship with his sons and as such there is relatively little action. This is itself is no bad thing but it's just that the plot is a little too thin to carry the film. As a result it's just intermittently interesting mainly when George Kennedy is on screen.
This is John Wayne in reflective mood but it's just not comparable to his great performance in the brilliant 'The Shootist'.
Overall although watchable there's just not enough of interest here to make this anything but an average western.
The Duke had some great or near great Westerns in the final two decades of his career (e.g. "The Horse Soldiers," "The Alamo," "The Comancheros," "El Dorado," "True Grit," "The Cowboys," "The Train Robbers" and "Rooster Cogburn"), but "Cahill" isn't one of 'em. While I appreciate that Wayne tried to do something different by having the story focus on the ramifications of his neglected kids, the movie simply isn't very compelling and the boys aren't interesting as characters. It doesn't help that Kennedy is decidedly cartoony as the villain. Disregarding the awesome Western locations, the storytelling smacks of a 60s or 70's TV show Western.
Yet, if you're a Duke fan, "Cahill" is mandatory viewing. The relationship between Cahill and the tracker (Brand) is a highlight, as is the Western scenery. Speaking of the latter, the movie is further hampered by three nighttime sequences obviously shot in the studio, which appear at the beginning, middle and end, but that's a minor cavil.
The film runs 103 minutes and was shot in Sonora, Mexico; Arizona; and Calderon Ranch, California. The screenplay was written by Harry & Rita Fink based on Barney Slater's story.
GRADE: C
Wayne catches up with some nefarious characters who fit a general description and have a chunk of cash on them. They're not the right guys and he suspects as much. The rest of the story concerns what happens as Grimes and O'Brien are conscience stricken and how that brings about a general righting of wrongs.
My problem with the story is that marshal's kids or not, they've committed a major league felony. In another film Grimes would have hung for it. Two law enforcement officials were killed in the performance of their duty. You do recall in Hang 'Em High those two kids who did not help Bruce Dern overpower Clint Eastwood still hung in the end. Or in True Grit, John Wayne shoots without hesitation some young criminals there.
But this is a John Wayne film involving his family so the Duke is trapped by certain parameters that his fans expect. It makes for some weakly resolved issues in the plot.
But if you're a fan of the Duke, Cahill U.S. Marshal will fill your bill.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizJohn Wayne was sixty-five years old at the time the movie was filmed. He had had a cancerous lung removed in 1964, and was suffering from emphysema in his remaining lung. Wayne was so weakened that he had to use a stepladder to climb onto his horse in the film. In addition to his own declining health, news that his friend and mentor, John Ford, was dying of cancer forced the actor to consider his own mortality. After Ford's death in August, 1973, Wayne told reporters, "I'm pretty much living on borrowed time."
- BlooperAfter Cahill catches onto his sons' involvement in the bank robbery, he and Lightfoot watch the boys as they're fishing. After the boys have traveled a while in the buckboard, the two men are seen watching the boys again from afar. The medium shot of Wayne and Brand shows that they're sitting on their horses in the very place from which they had been watching the boys fishing.
- Citazioni
Lightfoot: Give me my five dollars. If you get shot tonight, I'll disappear. Oh, I'll come back and bury you... and mumble something Christian over your grave.
J.D. Cahill: Lightfoot, your kindness overwhelms me.
- ConnessioniFeatured in The Man Behind the Star (1973)
- Colonne sonoreA Man Gets to Thinkin'
Music by Elmer Bernstein
Lyrics by Don Black
Sung by Charlie Rich (courtesy of Epic Records)
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 43min(103 min)
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 2.39 : 1








