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IMDbPro

A Última Etapa

Título original: Quantez
  • 1957
  • Approved
  • 1 h 21 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,0/10
664
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
John Gavin, Sydney Chaplin, John Larch, Fred MacMurray, and Dorothy Malone in A Última Etapa (1957)
Gang of robbers heads for Mexican border, meets unexpected opposition along the way.
Reproduzir trailer2:13
1 vídeo
44 fotos
DramaOcidenteWestern clássico

Uma gangue de ladrões se dirige à fronteira mexicana e encontra uma oposição inesperada pelo caminho.Uma gangue de ladrões se dirige à fronteira mexicana e encontra uma oposição inesperada pelo caminho.Uma gangue de ladrões se dirige à fronteira mexicana e encontra uma oposição inesperada pelo caminho.

  • Direção
    • Harry Keller
  • Roteiristas
    • R. Wright Campbell
    • Anne Edwards
  • Artistas
    • Fred MacMurray
    • Dorothy Malone
    • James Barton
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,0/10
    664
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Harry Keller
    • Roteiristas
      • R. Wright Campbell
      • Anne Edwards
    • Artistas
      • Fred MacMurray
      • Dorothy Malone
      • James Barton
    • 14Avaliações de usuários
    • 11Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Vídeos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:13
    Trailer

    Fotos44

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    Elenco principal10

    Editar
    Fred MacMurray
    Fred MacMurray
    • Gentry…
    Dorothy Malone
    Dorothy Malone
    • Chaney
    James Barton
    James Barton
    • Minstrel
    Sydney Chaplin
    Sydney Chaplin
    • Gato
    John Gavin
    John Gavin
    • Teach
    John Larch
    John Larch
    • Heller
    Michael Ansara
    Michael Ansara
    • Delgadito
    Foster Hood
    • Indian
    • (não creditado)
    Charles Soldani
    Charles Soldani
    • Indian
    • (não creditado)
    Tony Urchel
    • Indian
    • (não creditado)
    • Direção
      • Harry Keller
    • Roteiristas
      • R. Wright Campbell
      • Anne Edwards
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários14

    6,0664
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    10

    Avaliações em destaque

    4kfo9494

    Could have been a good story but was just too slow.

    Even though this film had a great set of actors and character development that was quite interesting, the pace of this story was so slow that it took away from the entire project.

    The movie begins as we see four bank robbers that was attempting to outrun a posse that was following them. Plus you throw-in a sexy looking female that was also along for the ride and you can see that this is a unique set of people. Anyway, they shake the cops and end up in an old abandon town. And now, nearly through the entire picture, the writer starts to show all the distinct personalities of each character. The only bad thing is that the introduction of the characters takes so long that viewers begin to lose interest in the movie.

    The first forty minutes of the movie is uneventful. You have pleasant conversation, people watering the horses and some wandering where they should go to split-up the money. The only hint of trouble comes when one of the characters stumbles on a Indian war stick that might just lead to some excitement.

    The last half of the movie was so much better. There were actually action on the screen to break the tedious dialog that viewers were suffering. And if viewers were still watching and not turned off by the dull first half, then you saw a story that was actually interesting.

    John Larch, Fred MacMurray, Dorothy Malone and Michael Ansara all did an outstanding job with their character. The problem is that it took so long developing the characters that it was easy to get bored and turn to another form of entertainment. This was a hard watch but the ending made the long tiresome viewing a bit more enjoyable.
    5Marlburian

    Tedious, too much talk

    I'm going to go against the positive few reviews so far posted here. I was very disappointed, and found it the poorest of "gang in a ghost town" Westerns that I've seen. Pity, because the cast was reasonably strong. About the only interesting thing in it was what I thought was John Larch's resemblance to Gary Cooper.

    None of the characters is at all likable and most of the could be a stage play, with so much action confined to one room. These aren't necessarily bad things for a film, but all the talking and no action was tedious, as were the white characters turning on each other and the inevitable interaction between Chaney and each of the four gangsters.

    I nearly turned off my recording of the film but struggled through to the ending, which was OK.
    8hitchcockthelegend

    John Coventry the lonely one, began and ended with a gun.

    Quantez is directed by Harry Keller and written by R. Wright Campbell and Anne Edwards. It stars Fred MacMurray, Dorothy Malone, James Barton, Sydney Chaplin, John Gavin and John Larch. A CinemaScope production in Eastman Color, with music scored by Herman Stein (supervision Joseph Gershenson) and cinematography by Carl E. Guthrie.

    A gang of robbers hole up for the night in the ghost town of Quantez. But what is the greater threat to their well being? The Indians out in the hills? Or each other?

    Maybe you get to be a killer? But you will be sick to the stomach because of it.

    A smartly written and acted psychological Western, Quantez deserves to be better known and appraised. This is all about characterisations and the hot bed situation they dwell within, the emphasis on dialogue and interactions as suspicion, passions, racism and treachery show their hands. Standard characters do apply, the girl with a past she's not proud of, the loose cannon, the greenhorn kid, the duplicitous one and the guy with a secret tucked away. There's even a late addition of a wandering minstrel (Barton), splendidly calling himself Puritan. These characters are well blended for narrative strength by Keller, the director keeping things on the slow burn, an impending sense of implosion permeating proceedings. Technical aspects are smart, the exterior filming, when the film comes out of the claustrophobic confines of the ghost town, is most pleasing, while the Eastman Color is gorgeous and never garish. Cast score well, notably a stubble and grungy MacMurray, a pretty and emotionally fragile Malone and Larch, who is unstable and enjoying his chance for villainy.

    Except for a fist fight, an opening pursuit and the odd moment of macho posturing, the action is saved for the excellent last quarter, so first time viewers after a high energy Oater are advised that this is not the film for them. But for those who like some psychological discord in their Westerns, where plot dynamics are simmering until the denouement, then seek this out if you can. 8/10
    8jromanbaker

    A Very Fine Western

    I have seen two of Harry Keller's films; this one and ' The Unguarded Moment ' where he superbly directed Esther Williams in a thriller without a swimming pool in sight. In ' Quantez ' he directs Dorothy Malone, and elicits from her an equally fine performance. He also gets performances to remember from Fred MacMurray, John Larch and from a young John Gavin, and the latter despite his working with Douglas Sirk never did better. So what of the plot, and giving as few spoilers as possible ? It reminded me of the group holed up in an hotel in ' Key Largo '. It is equally claustrophobic and yes, just as in ' Key Largo ' there is a lot of dialogue as well as brutal action. The way Dorothy Malone is made to sing and fails reminded me of Claire Trevor, and just as good, and instead of a hurricane to face in ' Key Largo ' it is Native Americans out to kill at dawn in ' Quantez '. Appropriately here it is a deserted town in the back of nowhere and ostensibly there is no place to run. John Larch gives a good and mean performance as a controlling thug of a cowboy that reminded me of Edward G. Robinson and just as nuanced. I have no idea if the script had a semi-remake of ' Key Largo ' in mind, but if they did not, then it is a minor miracle of coincidence. Other than a few scenes with rugged landscapes the film is set mainly in a deserted saloon and the tortured dialogue is savage and well worth hearing and when the brutality kicks in it kicks in even harder. A seemingly lost adult Western this should be better known as it beats many other Westerns which have been overrated. A uniformly good cast, and all of them give of their best. My only criticism is a few cardboard exterior scenes by night, and reluctantly I have reduced a 10 rating to 8. Not quite a masterpiece of its genre, but it almost is, and is way above the standard of other lesser, but more well known films.
    6ma-cortes

    An indoors and outlandish Western, slowly-paced but with nice performances

    An offbeat and claustrophobic Western in limited budget with too much talking and a little bit boring, until a thrilling finale in which eventually the Apache Indians attack and pursue the thieves. Several bandits head for Mexican frontier decide to carry out a stopover and arriving in a ruined village in the middle of desert, called Quantez . They are the following ones : A unexperienced and green but eager newcomer gunslinger : John Gavin, a white man who was raised by Indians : Sydney Chaplin, a nasty and ambitous pistolero : John Larch, a beautiful woman with a dark past : Dororhy Malone, and the veteran and wise gunfighter : Fred MacMurray. Shortly after, there arrives a minstrel : James Barton who reluctantly joins the motley group of thieves . The cutthroats start to accuse and confront each other concerning the stolen loot and soon the gunplay and killing begins. Meanwhile, Apache Indians led by Michael Ansara are lurking around and about to attack. They rode to Quantez town.. Half-way to freedom but all the way to hell!!!

    A classic and traditional Western in psychological trendy of the 50s in the wake of Yellow Sky or High Noon. Developed almost entirely at a lonely location in a desert, as it has much in common with a theatre play. The limited budget shows, and the whole psychologist thrill that you depend on the interior sets and relationship among them, the subsequent confrontation, as well as the excessive dialogues are not built up well enough. It is an offbeat Western which doen't work too well but has its moments of interest here and there . Stars Fred McMurray who gives a good acting as a good thief. This is one of a clutch of acceptable horse operas Fred made in the Forties , in the late of 50s and early Sixties, such as : A gun for coward, Good day for a hanging, Texas Rangers, The trail of the Lonesome Pine, At gunpoint, and this Quantez. Although he also played other genres as drama, adventure, warlike, Children fiilms as The happiest millionaire, The shaggie dog, Son of the flubber, The absent-minded professor, The princess come across, The Caine mutiny, Dive bomber, Above suspicion, The miracle of the bells, among others. He is finely accompanied by a fine cast as the recently deceased Dorothy Malone, the usual villian John Larch, the Charles Chaplin's brother, Sydney Chaplin and a fresh John Gavin, next to take a long career as a main star.

    It contains colorful and brilliant cinematography in Technicolor by Carl Guthrie. As well as attractive and agreeable musical score by Herman Stein, Universal's regular , including enjoyable songs. As the song The Lonely One is sung by James Barton behind the credits, and the song True Love sung by Dorothy Malone. The motion picture produced by Universal Pictures along with Gordon Kay was professionally directed by Harry Keller. Harry was a good craftsman who directed a lot of Westerns and several episodes of TV series.

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    • Erros de gravação
      In the night scene where the minstrel rides out, the general store windows are lit from within and obviously connected to the saloon interior, thus showing the set storefronts are a single facade and not individual exteriors. It's a common mistake in old westerns.
    • Trilhas sonoras
      THE LONELY ONE
      Music by Arnold Schwarzwald (as Arnold Hughes)

      Lyrics by Frederick Herbert

      Sung by James Barton behind credits

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    Detalhes

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    • Data de lançamento
      • 4 de outubro de 1957 (França)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idiomas
      • Inglês
      • Espanhol
    • Também conhecido como
      • Los malditos de Quantez
    • Locações de filme
      • Sonoita, Arizona, EUA
    • Empresa de produção
      • Universal International Pictures (UI)
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

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    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 21 min(81 min)
    • Proporção
      • 2.35 : 1

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