Um xerife, que negocia com assaltantes de banco, acaba matando sua família durante a fuga. O xerife persegue a gangue até o México sozinho. Enquanto tenta se vingar, ele entra em conflito co... Ler tudoUm xerife, que negocia com assaltantes de banco, acaba matando sua família durante a fuga. O xerife persegue a gangue até o México sozinho. Enquanto tenta se vingar, ele entra em conflito com um policial mexicano.Um xerife, que negocia com assaltantes de banco, acaba matando sua família durante a fuga. O xerife persegue a gangue até o México sozinho. Enquanto tenta se vingar, ele entra em conflito com um policial mexicano.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Deputy Bill
- (as Bill Bryant)
Avaliações em destaque
Richard Harris is a sheriff with some rather strange notions about capture instead of killing in a lawless land. Rod Taylor and his gang rob the bank in Harris's town and kill the bank manager on a whim. Then when Harris tries to capture and use reason with Taylor, Harris's wife and son become dead also.
That gives our sheriff a whole new outlook and he hunts the gang into Mexico where he teams up with a federale played by Al Lettieri who has all the ideas Harris used to have.
This was the farewell performance of Al Lettieri and interesting that he went out as a good guy here. He created a great group of villains in The Godfather, McQ, Mr. Majestyk, and The Getaway. He was a great talent.
Some attention was paid to the fact that Harris is an Irish sheriff and for that matter Rod Taylor is Australian. But America is in fact a nation of immigrants and this should be no stranger than Errol Flynn's emergence as a western star in the heyday of the studio.
Memo: Whoever wrote the line `He shot the roses from her cheeks' should have been shot himself.
Irish sheriff Sean Kilpatrick (Richard Harris) looks after the Texas town of Santa Rosa and has made a point of solving crimes and capturing criminals without resorting to violence. In fact, he has never in his life fired a gun in anger, yet has somehow fostered total law, order and respect among the townsfolk. His methods are tested to the limit when outlaw Frank Brand (Rod Taylor in a surprisingly sadistic performance) and his gang rob the local bank. During their escape attempt, the outlaws inadvertently kill Kilpatrick's own wife and child. Devastated, Kilpatrick ditches his anti-gun, anti-violence attitude and pursues Brand and his cronies. The chase leads to Mexico, where Kilpatrick has no official authority and is viewed as little more than an outlaw himself. The Irish sheriff tracks down and kills Brand's gang one-by-one, until just he and Brand remain.
Just a year earlier, Barry Shear had made the film Across 110th Street, regarded as the most violent movie ever made up to that point, so it's perhaps no surprise that this film emphasises the gore and brutality to the extent it does. Harris is quite memorable as the Irish sheriff, giving another of his energetic performances, and Taylor's villainous turn reveals an ugly side rarely portrayed by the actor in his other films. However, in most aspects The Deadly Trackers fails to make the grade as a good, worthwhile film. It is far too simplistic for its own good, with no resonance beyond the immediate plot (and the plot itself is pretty basic, being nothing more than a straightforward chase narrative). The supporting performances are generally rather lacklustre, possibly because none of the characters beyond the two principal players carry much depth or interest. Also, the story is dismayingly familiar, with precious little that it fresh or original; just lots of tired and predictable scenes that have been begged, borrowed and stolen from many other sources (even the music is lifted directly from The Wild Bunch.... perhaps to keep the budget down?) On the whole, The Deadly Trackers is a dismal misfire in which the detail to violence and the intriguing lead performances are the sole points of interest.
Exciting western that displays an extreme battle of wits and strong story about a merciless vengeance among some spiteful characters . Being based on a story written by the great Samuel Fuller titled ¨Riata¨ and with an interesting screenplay by the prestigious Lukas Heller who also wrote ¨Dirty Dozen¨, ¨Monty Walsh¨ , ¨Too late the hero¨ , ¨What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?¨ and ¨Flight of the Phoenix¨ . Duo protagonist is frankly well , as Richard Harris and Rod Taylor , both of whom give excellent acting . Support cast is awesome such as Neville Brand , William Smith , Al Lettieri , Isela Vega , Paul Benjamin , William Bryant , Pedro Armendariz , among others . The picture is pretty well but it might have been more bearable if Samuel Fuller had not been bumped from the director chair as it is , he and other contributors refused to be listed in the credits . Furthermore , it is full of atmospheric musical score by Fred Steiner . And an evocative and colorful cinematography by Gabriel Torres .
The motion picture was professionally directed by Barry Shear , though it has some flaws and gaps . Barry took the filmmaking from uncredited Sam Fuller who was replaced as director at an early stage . Shear directed some nice films , such as ¨Across 110th Street¨ and ¨Wild in the streets¨ and a lot of TV episodes . Rating : 6 , acceptable and passable western
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesOne day during shooting, the stuntman needed for various scenes called in sick. There was no time to bring in another stunt double to the location in Mexico, so Rod Taylor, Richard Harris and Al Lettieri convinced the director they could do the stunts themselves. Harris wound up scraping off several inches of skin while making a tackle and Lettieri broke a finger by smashing through a door. Riding at a full gallop, Taylor was required to fall off his horse, which he did, and it was lucky that director Shear got it in one take because Taylor suffered a dislocated shoulder.
- Erros de gravaçãoWith the final member of the gang, the killing is done with a shotgun. At no time in the movies did the sheriff have any gun other than a pistol or Winchester.
- Citações
Katharine Kilpatrick: [as Sean sits with dead bodies of his wife and child he thinks back to Kevin's birthday] Come now, Sean. After all, it's the boy's birthday, and he has his heart set on it.
Sheriff Sean Kilpatrick: Katharine, I don't care if it's the boy's birthday.
Katharine Kilpatrick: It's only a toy gun. *All* little boys want toy guns.
Kevin Kilpatrick: Why can't I have a gun, Daddy?
Sheriff Sean Kilpatrick: 'Cause you can't reason with a gun, Kevin. I know it's hard for you to understand. If you have a gun, then another person wants to have a gun, and then another and another. And pretty soon, everyone has to live with a gun - that's very, very bad. We must not allow guns to do our thinking for us.
Kevin Kilpatrick: I don't wanna hear anymore! You're a mean daddy, and I don't love you anymore.
- Versões alternativasThe original UK cinema version was heavily cut by the BBFC to edit blows and punches from fight scenes, closeups of bloodied faces and a gunshot to a man's groin. The 1988 Warner video release featured the same cut print.
Principais escolhas
- How long is The Deadly Trackers?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 1.000.000 (estimativa)
- Tempo de duração1 hora 50 minutos
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 1.85 : 1