A girl is saved by a miracle after she falls from a cliff in the Argentine Andes, and is blessed with healing powers. A shrine is built on the site, and a whole city grows around it, rich wi... Read allA girl is saved by a miracle after she falls from a cliff in the Argentine Andes, and is blessed with healing powers. A shrine is built on the site, and a whole city grows around it, rich with gold from the grateful worshipers. Ruiz, an evil and sadistic general, captures the cit... Read allA girl is saved by a miracle after she falls from a cliff in the Argentine Andes, and is blessed with healing powers. A shrine is built on the site, and a whole city grows around it, rich with gold from the grateful worshipers. Ruiz, an evil and sadistic general, captures the city, confiscates the gold, and closes the shrine. But the Gaucho, the charismatic leader of ... Read all
- Awards
- 1 win total
- The Girl of the Shrine
- (as Geraine Greear)
- The Padre
- (as Nigel de Brulier)
- Undetermined Secondary Role
- (uncredited)
- Undetermined Secondary Role
- (uncredited)
- Virgin Mary
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
An atypical Douglas Fairbanks lavish entertainer with a spiritual zest. Far from Allan Dwan's swashbuckler flicks, Douglas Fairbanks found himself on a spiritual path with this F. Richard Jones's directorial. Counting every Fairbanks trademark right, be it scale, comedy, or surroundings, The Gaucho goes a step ahead with devotional fervour, mainly suitable for believers. The film starts with a young girl falling down from a height and yet getting up alright after the holy power saves her and blesses her with special powers. The girl prays from her heart and does miracles, which convert the place into a sacred shrine, and the place is called the town of miracles. Far up in the north, there is a disreputable leader of a group of bandits, El Gaucho, who is off to invade the sacred shrine and take all the wealth. A local strongman, Ruiz, is also after the same, which puts these two strong men against each other. Gaucho enters the place with his gang, but soon realises that the lady is no regular human. He can feel something but can't express or understand what it is. How fate turns the game against him and how he acknowledges the spiritual path are all you get to see in the film. Like I said, it's an atypical Fairbanks entertainer, so you might miss some of the trademark shots, but not much. He delivers enough for his audience; it's just a little different this time. Lupe Vélez looks beautiful as a Holy Girl, and not even for a moment did she look fake. Nigel De Brulier, Charles Stevens, and Gustav von Seyffertitz were okay, while Albert MacQuarrie left a better impact without showing his face (except once). The F. Richard Jones' movie has drama, comedy, action, and a spiritual message, and that's more than what you'd expect, I guess. "Just follow these; you need no rules."
RATING - 7/10*
By - #samthebestest.
And, this time, the girl pursues and tries to rescue him. Lupe Velez, as the easily-jealous, not damsel-y at all Mountain Girl, matches and sometimes exceeds Doug's exuberance. At one point, she tackles a guy and beats him up, and she likewise experiences a religious conversion. Usually, these type of religious pictures, complete with faith healing, a magical fountain and superimposed Virgin Marys would bore the hell out of me. I shudder at the thought of a film where the Girl of the Shrine, with her vacant expressions-supposedly alluding to spiritual superiority-were the protagonist.
But, Doug exudes charisma, his smile is contagious, and the religion, at least, slows his rollicking down for a moment. Otherwise, the guy is non-stop motion; he only sits down to briefly strike a pose and a match for his also-fervent cigarette smoking. Plus, The Gaucho does include the usual fare of Doug as the hero of the oppressed, defeater of dastardly villains. There's no sword fighting, but he does use a whip, performs some horse riding tricks, jumps all over the place and uses his wits to overcome large armies, including the climactic cattle stampede. The sets are also grand, per usual. Doug and his merry band of gauchos even help move one of them.
The plot is a mythical Argentina (with a tango thrown in to define the place, but it could take place anywhere, including Zorro's Early California. Fairbanks does wear an exotic costume, though.
Lupe Velez' Mountain Girl is the real departure. She is feisty, for one, and swashes every bit of buckle that Fairbanks does. These sort of characters are usually the one who DOESN'T get her man; here, it is with great satisfaction that she does--a woman ahead of her times!
Maybe it was for the fact, as a pallbearer for cinema's male sex symbol, Rudolph Valentino, and witnessing the female hysteria of the actor's sudden death, Fairbanks realized there was a void for a Latin lover on the screen. Soon after the near-riots on the streets surrounding Valentino's coffin, he sat down and wrote the scenario for "The Gaucho," set in the mountains of Argentina. His character, The Gaucho, goes after women with abandon, especially with The Mountain Girl (Lupe Velez). He even dances a provocative tango number with Velez, establishing a physical presence with the opposite sex never witnessed in a Fairbanks' movie before.
Of course, Fairbanks realized he couldn't disappoint his legion of fans by portraying a libidinous character throughout his adventurous motion picture. "The Gaucho" turns on its heels when he becomes infected by some unnamed disease (most likely leprosy). Once he takes his health seriously, he goes to the City of the Miracle, named after an event from a woman's miraculous survival of a fall from a nearby cliff. Fairbanks' wife in real life, Mary Pickford, plays the Madonna, who pays a visit to the city.
"The Gaucho" was directed by F. Richard Jones, the same person who brought back to Hollywood Mabel Normand, who was battling drug addiction for three years. He also worked with Stan Lauren on 19 films before his pairing with Oliver Hardy. Laurel credited Jones with teaching him everything he learned about cinematic comedy. Jones later directed Ronald Coleman in 1929's "Bulldog Drummond" in his first talkie.
For The Mountain Girl role, Fairbanks auditioned several soon-to-be famous young actresses, including Myrna Loy, Fay Wray and Loretta Young. He was especially impressed with Lupe Velez, his love interest in "The Gaucho." The movie gave the actress, a former Ziegfeld Follies dancer, visibility after appearing in just a couple of Hal Roach shorts, including "Sailors, Beware!" with Laurel and Hardy. Her private life lived up to her nickname "The Mexican Spitfire," including fiery relationships with Gary Cooper, Johnny Weissmuller, Charlie Chaplin and Clark Gable, among others.
Fairbanks himself was experiencing quite a year in 1927. He was one of the first to imprint his hands and feet into cement next to the Grauman's Chinese Theatre. Mel Brooks in his 1974 black comedy 'Blazing Saddles" has one of his characters say after spotting the actor's mold, "How did he do such fantastic stunts ... with such little feet?" The members of the Motion Picture Academy of Arts and Sciences also voted him to be the first president of that organization. "The Gaucho" was released one month after Hollywood's first talkie "The Jazz Singer." The Latino-flavored movie proved to be Fairbanks' last fully-silent movie; his next one, 1928's "The Iron Mask" contained a musical and sound effects track along with two short speeches by Fairbanks.
Did you know
- TriviaA new preservation print of the film, created by the Museum of Modern Art, was first shown at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in 2008. It has subsequently been screened at MoMA (2008), the San Francisco Silent Film Festival (2009), and the National Gallery of Art (2009) to promote the new book "Douglas Fairbanks" (UC Press/Academy Imprints, 2008) with the author introducing the screenings.
- Quotes
The Girl of the Shrine: All things whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive... Do you believe?
The Gaucho: I do not know. I do not understand. I do not understand *you*. You're like a beautiful sunset - something I can't embrace, yet I love... You're like one night on the pampas... I was alone... A full moon rose... A bird sang... I believe in *you*.
- ConnectionsEdited into La main derrière la souris - L'histoire d'Ub Iwerks (1999)
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 35m(95 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1