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Libre comme le vent

Original title: Saddle the Wind
  • 1958
  • 16
  • 1h 24m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
Libre comme le vent (1958)
Official Trailer
Play trailer2:19
1 Video
84 Photos
Classical WesternDramaWestern

Former gunslinger Steve Sinclair is now a peaceful rancher, but things go wrong after his wild brother Tony arrives with his new gun--and his new fiancée, former saloon girl Joan Blake.Former gunslinger Steve Sinclair is now a peaceful rancher, but things go wrong after his wild brother Tony arrives with his new gun--and his new fiancée, former saloon girl Joan Blake.Former gunslinger Steve Sinclair is now a peaceful rancher, but things go wrong after his wild brother Tony arrives with his new gun--and his new fiancée, former saloon girl Joan Blake.

  • Directors
    • Robert Parrish
    • John Sturges
  • Writers
    • Rod Serling
    • Thomas Thompson
    • Daniel Fuchs
  • Stars
    • Robert Taylor
    • Julie London
    • John Cassavetes
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    1.8K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Robert Parrish
      • John Sturges
    • Writers
      • Rod Serling
      • Thomas Thompson
      • Daniel Fuchs
    • Stars
      • Robert Taylor
      • Julie London
      • John Cassavetes
    • 33User reviews
    • 22Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Saddle the Wind
    Trailer 2:19
    Saddle the Wind

    Photos84

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    Top cast19

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    Robert Taylor
    Robert Taylor
    • Steve Sinclair
    Julie London
    Julie London
    • Joan Blake
    John Cassavetes
    John Cassavetes
    • Tony Sinclair
    Donald Crisp
    Donald Crisp
    • Dennis Deneen
    Charles McGraw
    Charles McGraw
    • Larry Venables
    Royal Dano
    Royal Dano
    • Clay Ellison
    Richard Erdman
    Richard Erdman
    • Dallas Hanson
    Douglas Spencer
    Douglas Spencer
    • Hemp Scribner
    Ray Teal
    Ray Teal
    • Brick Larson
    Stanley Adams
    Stanley Adams
    • Joe
    • (uncredited)
    Jay Adler
    Jay Adler
    • Hank
    • (uncredited)
    William Challee
    William Challee
    • Barfly
    • (uncredited)
    Wes Fuller
    • Cowboy
    • (uncredited)
    Nacho Galindo
    Nacho Galindo
    • Manuelo
    • (uncredited)
    Kelo Henderson
    • Cowboy
    • (uncredited)
    Lars Henderson
    • Jamie
    • (uncredited)
    Ethan Laidlaw
    Ethan Laidlaw
    • Barfly
    • (uncredited)
    Irene Tedrow
    Irene Tedrow
    • Mary Ellison
    • (uncredited)
    • Directors
      • Robert Parrish
      • John Sturges
    • Writers
      • Rod Serling
      • Thomas Thompson
      • Daniel Fuchs
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews33

    6.61.8K
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    Featured reviews

    7Nazi_Fighter_David

    Modestly effective, humorless Western drama...

    "Saddle the Wind" is the first of two 1958 Westerns in which Taylor plays a reformed outlaw... He is cast opposite a promising newcomer John Cassavetes... The sexy and flamboyant Julie London provides the love interest but her role is poorly defined and almost working from outside the plot...

    Robert Taylor is a personality on screen rather than an actor... He plays here an ex-gunfighter who has reformed and is living and working on his ranch peacefully... But fate will not allow him to retire... Cassavetes, his wild young unstable brother shows up carrying a six-gun, and with a sexy dance-hall singer London...

    Cassavetes' intensity did add excitement to the show... He shoots down a tough character and with his killer instinct now waked up, he attacks a group of homesteaders led by Royal Dano and sets fire to their belongings... This battle has much more cinematic electricity than the final confrontation between the two brothers...

    Strong landowner (Donald Crisp) imposes himself at this point, and asks the two brothers, now troublemakers, to leave the country...

    Shortly after that time, Cassavetes gets into a wild and confused struggle with Crisp's men and is wounded, but manages to escape... Taylor goes out to get him...

    With some magnificent Colorado Rockies scenery caught effectively by George Folsey's CinemaScope and Technicolor photography, "Saddle the Wind" is modestly effective, humorless Western drama...
    9hitchcockthelegend

    Loose cannon gets the method treatment.

    Steve Sinclair is an ex-gunfighter now contented with his lot as a peaceful farmer. His peace that is disrupted when his young brother, Tony, turns up with his intended new bride in tow. Tony has a thirst for gun play, and when he guns down a fellow gunman in the bar, things start to rapidly spiral out of control for the Sinclair family.

    Saddle The Wind has some top credentials coming with it. Written by one Rod Serling, and starring Robert Taylor and John Cassavetes as the Sinclair brothers, it's a film not short on quality. Into the mix is the splendid outdoor location work at Rosita, Colorado (courtesy of the prolific George J. Folsey) and the genre compliant score from Elmer Bernstein. But what of the film itself? Well the story is an over familiar one, gunfighter trying to leave his bad past behind (Steve was a one time member of Quantrill's Raiders), loose cannon youngster out to make a name for himself (Tony), and yes we get a female love interest causing conflict and confusion (Julie London in a stock and undemanding role). Yet in this instance familiarity definitely does not breed contempt.

    If new comers to this film are aware of John Cassavetes and his style of acting, then, in spite of the oddity of seeing him in Western surroundings, one can reasonably know what to expect. Cassavetes brings the method to young Tony Sinclair, instilling intensity, even borderline mania into the upstart hot shot, so much so that Robert Taylor's fine world weary turn as Steve gets lost until the splendid finale.

    To non Cassavetes fans it may be just too much to handle, but speaking personally I found it a terrific performance that lifts the picture way above average. Brilliant support comes in the form of Donald Crisp and Royal Dano (heart aching veteran of the Civil War) and the running time of under 90 minutes is just about right.

    Finally, it's with the ending that "Saddle The Wind" breaks away from the standard genre story and plotting. Played out on a lush lilac flowered hillside, the makers deviate from an expected cop out and give us something memorable and totally fitting to this method driven Western. 8/10
    6Irene212

    Two reasons this Western rises above formula.

    The plot is straightforward and the milieu is entirely familiar-- open range vs. fenced farming, reformed gunslinger vs. trigger-happy kid, lots of grizzled guys and leather vests, a pointless saloon girl-- but it has enough originality and a solid enough script to transcend formula. It also has two crucial bonuses:

    First, the location. There's only one long shot showing the entire Western town, but I've never seen a more decrepit or believable one- - because it's a real one. Rosita, Colorado, west of Pueblo, was well on its way to becoming a ghost town in the late 1950s (it actually is one now, in the middle of exurbs). It had only three or four wooden buildings, plus a few scattered homesteads between them and the mountains. It delivers total verisimilitude. Quite a few scenes are shot in the wilderness, too, with meadows bursting with purple wildflowers. A real Western settlement in a gorgeous wilderness-- it is iconic, far more than John Ford's Monument Valley, which is unrepresentative of any other Western landscape.

    Second, the supporting cast. The faces are all more familiar than the names. Royal Dano and Irene Tedrow as squatters, Charles McGraw, Ray Teal (Bonanza's sheriff), Douglas Spencer, and as barkeeps, the wonderful Stanley Adams (Cyrano Jones, tribble salesman) and the forever-unheralded Jay Adler (Stella's brother). Adler's worth his weight in silver-- Rosita was a silver-mining settlement-- and he's in the first scene so catch that at least.

    The reason that mother lode of character actors matters is because-- along with always-fine Donald Crisp and better-with-age Robert Taylor-- they carry this movie. The relative novices involved-- writer Rod Serling, actress/singer Julie London, and fish-out-of-water John Cassevetes -- handle their duties well enough. But they just can't measure up to that roster of seasoned pros, a cast that has been in so many Westerns, they feel as authentic as Rosita.
    7the red duchess

    Excellent, subversive Western.

    In the 1950s, the best way to attack an intolerably conformist society was to take a harmless 'popular' genre and subvert it, overturn its assumptions. Sirk did it with the woman's picture, Minnelli with the musical, Hitchcock with the thriller; Robert Parrish does it here with the Western, with a vision of Eisenhower family-values capitalist America as a medieval feudality, where everyone must pay obeisance to a landowner, where the stable family unit consists of a killer and a wild sexual neurotic, and where capitalism is actually destructive to the family and continuity, a sterile thing.

    Whether John Cassavetes is an embodiment of the Western hero gone wrong, the pressure of capitalism turned in on itself, or a rebel without a cause, the film is full of powerful incident - Cassavetes' first insane shooting spree, which he ends by shooting his own puddled reflection; the drunken attack by Cassavetes and friend on a family of homesteaders, uncomfortably reversing the old attacking-Indians routine; the Leonesque showdown between Cassavetes and Ellison backed by his own brother. Very much a post-'Searchers' Western, land here is synonymous with spilt blood not destiny.
    8judithh-1

    Hollywood vs. New York in the Wild West

    Saddle the Wind is the result of a creative conflict between golden era Hollywood and the cool method acting world of New York in the late 1950's. Both the writer, Rod Serling (of Twilight Zone fame) and John Cassavetes represented the new, "cool" world of New York. Robert Taylor, holder of the record for the longest employment by one studio) represented Hollywood with a capital "H." The director, Robert Parrish, was more on the New York wavelength.

    From what I've read, Cassavetes tried to antagonize Taylor with his difficult behavior and, when he failed, got even more outrageous. The New York crew regarded Taylor as incredibly "square." The result of all this is a fascinating conflict of styles. Taylor prided himself on not "mugging" and here his reserved style worked well as Cassavetes' older brother, a retired gunman. The pain of a man watching someone he brought up as son, not a younger brother, turn into an unstable, erratic killer is evident on Taylor's craggy face. The younger brother is in constant motion--he seems to mistake activity for accomplishment.

    Through a number of plot twists including disputed land ownership, romance (with Julie London) and brother-to-brother conflict, the film moves quickly and stylishly towards its inevitable end. The photography is excellent, making the best of the glorious scenery. Julie London is underused but does what she can.

    In the end, New York and Hollywood work well together to make a highly watchable film. Review by me for the IMDb.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      A first score was written and recorded by Jeff Alexander but had to be replaced due to extensive re-cutting.
    • Goofs
      The union "squatter" Ellison is holding a shotgun in all the scenes including when he is shot. After his death, Deneen picks up the gun and it is now a Winchester that he levers a shell into.
    • Quotes

      Steve Sinclair: I tried to bend that kid a certain way. I tried to shape him. He was some kind of tough leather that I had to make soft. But he didn't soften any. He wasn't made that way. He was just rotten leather and he came up hard.

    • Connections
      Referenced in The Swinging Sixties: Movie Marathon (2019)
    • Soundtracks
      Saddle the Wind
      By Jay Livingston and Ray Evans

      Sung by Julie London (uncredited)

      [Played over opening title card and credits; later sung by Joan to Tony in the house]

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    FAQ14

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • August 29, 1958 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Furia maldita
    • Filming locations
      • Rosita, Colorado, USA
    • Production company
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $1,479,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 24 minutes
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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