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Barquero

  • 1970
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 55m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
2.2K
YOUR RATING
Barquero (1970)
At a river crossing, a stand-off between a gang of outlaws and local townsfolk ensues when the ferry barge operator refuses to ferry the gang across the river.
Play trailer2:38
1 Video
31 Photos
DramaWestern

At a river crossing, a stand-off between a gang of outlaws and local townsfolk ensues when the ferry barge operator refuses to ferry the gang across the river.At a river crossing, a stand-off between a gang of outlaws and local townsfolk ensues when the ferry barge operator refuses to ferry the gang across the river.At a river crossing, a stand-off between a gang of outlaws and local townsfolk ensues when the ferry barge operator refuses to ferry the gang across the river.

  • Director
    • Gordon Douglas
  • Writers
    • George Schenck
    • William Marks
  • Stars
    • Lee Van Cleef
    • Warren Oates
    • Forrest Tucker
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    2.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Gordon Douglas
    • Writers
      • George Schenck
      • William Marks
    • Stars
      • Lee Van Cleef
      • Warren Oates
      • Forrest Tucker
    • 31User reviews
    • 23Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:38
    Official Trailer

    Photos31

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    Top cast20

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    Lee Van Cleef
    Lee Van Cleef
    • Travis
    Warren Oates
    Warren Oates
    • Remy
    Forrest Tucker
    Forrest Tucker
    • Mountain Phil
    Kerwin Mathews
    Kerwin Mathews
    • Marquette
    Mariette Hartley
    Mariette Hartley
    • Anna
    Marie Gomez
    Marie Gomez
    • Nola
    Armando Silvestre
    Armando Silvestre
    • Sawyer
    John Davis Chandler
    John Davis Chandler
    • Fair
    Craig Littler
    Craig Littler
    • Pitney
    Ed Bakey
    • Happy
    Richard Lapp
    • Poe
    Harry Lauter
    Harry Lauter
    • Steele
    Brad Weston
    • Driver
    Thad Williams
    • Gibson
    Armand Alzamora
    Armand Alzamora
    • Lopez
    Frank Babich
    • Roland
    Terry Leonard
    Terry Leonard
    • Hawk
    Bennie E. Dobbins
    • Encow
    • (as Bennie Dobbins)
    • Director
      • Gordon Douglas
    • Writers
      • George Schenck
      • William Marks
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews31

    6.32.2K
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    Featured reviews

    7shotguntom

    Underrated and forgotten but classic Western

    Lee Van Cleef had already become an international star late in his career, following his success in the Sergio Leone Spaghetti Westerns, when he starred in "Barquero", made in 1970. The film is clearly influenced by the Spaghetti tradition, most clearly displayed in the drugged-up, psychotic villain, Jake Remy, who bares similarities to the character of Indio in "For a Few Dollars More". However "Barquero" is far superior to the many "Spaghetti" imitators and deserves to stand on its own as a great Western.

    The plot is fairly simple, beginning with the massacre and plundering of a peaceful town by Jake Remy and his crew of assorted bandits. Their only escape from capture is to cross the river to safety but the only person who can help them is the Barquero, played by Lee Van Cleef, who refuses, and a violent stand-off ensues.

    The film is aided immeasurably by the performance of Warren Oates as Jake Remy, in one of his best roles. Remy makes even most the evil Western characters look saintly in comparison, as he kills and butchers anyone who gets in his path (check out the scene in which he sleeps with a woman and then casually kills her) and his only redeeming feature is his loyalty to his men. This is perhaps the only Western in which the bad guy is given more screen time than the hero and is one of the most complex villains ever seen on screen. Remy has a past which he is haunted by, and is slowly driven mad by his determination to cross the river and by the stubbornness of the Barquero.

    The film does not really have a hero, as the only two characters to resemble this are the Barquero and Mountain Phil, a truly bizarre character, excellently played by Forrest Tucker. The Barquero is prepared to help the endangered townsfolk against Remy, but only because he wants to bed one of the women and Mountain Phil does not help out of kindness but more so because he is slightly insane.

    "Barquero" was directed by the undistinguished Gordon Douglas, although he did direct the classic 1954 Sci-Fi/horror "Them". Fans of Sam Peckinpah will be pleased to see the villainous pairing of Warren Oates and John Davis Chandler, although Van Cleef fans may be disappointed as he is given little to do, besides having to wear one of the worst shirts ever committed to film.

    "Barquero" should be seen by anyone who is serious about Westerns and is required viewing for fans of the great Warren Oates.
    6ma-cortes

    Duel of titans : Lee Van Cleef against Warren Oates

    The picture narrates as a renegade motley group (Warren Oates, Kerwin Matthews, Armando Silvestre) executes a massacre when they are robbing the village's inhabitants . They flee but are stopped by a barge's owner (Lee Van Cleef) in the frontier on river Grande . The barquero called Travis has his own life-style and his own death-style . He is only helped by a mountain man (Forrest Tucker) . The confrontation will be terrible and they will fight until death .

    The highlights of the movie are the initial slaughter by the cutthroats and facing off between the good and bad guys on the lumber barges . This picture along with ¨ Hang'em high¨ (by Ted Post with Clint Eatwood) belongs to numerous filmed in the 60s and 70s influenced by Spaghetti Western , thus it develops ordinary themes such as : revenge , violent facing , similar musical score , tough antiheroes , spectacular gun-down and excessive baddies , all of them common issues in Italian Western . Lee Van Cleef , recent his success in Leone Western (A few dollars more) is top-notch . Warren Oates is magnificent as the ominous and hideous villain . The secondary cast is excellent , Forrest Tucker as the wry and impulsive trapper , Kerwin Mathew as Marquette , Mariette Hartley as Anna , Armando Silvestre as Sawyer and John Davis Chandler plays a cocky villain , as always . Dominic Frontiere's musical score is atmospheric and adjusted to action western , similar to ¨Hang 'Em High¨ soundtrack that he also composed . The motion picture was well directed by Gordon Douglas , though Robert Sparr was originally set to direct, but he was killed in a plane crash while scouting locations , then Gordon was hired to replace him . Gordon Douglas direction is nice , he had formerly got a lot of experience in Western genre (Only the valiant and Chuka). The yarn will appeal to Lee Van Cleef fonds and Western movies fans.
    8funkyfry

    Unusual, involving western drama

    Finely crafted production by Aubrey Schenck, with most of its action confined to a spot on the Rio Grande where a bunch of "squatters" have set up a primitive frontier town and a man (the "barquero", Van Cleef) has built a barge connected by rope to cross the river. When a bandit leader (Oates) and his group plunder and burn a nearby town, killing everyone, they make fast tracks to the barge, only to find the town evacuated and the barge on the other side of the river, with Cleef and his woodsman friend (Tucker) reluctantly defending the mostly nebbish townspeople. The script's sardonic tone is probably indebted to contemporary Italian oaters, but its ferocious drive and its focus on a personal confrontation between to determined, opposed strangers is very effective. Cleef is good at showing that he has no real concern for the villagers, but is absolutely set on not letting Oates' bandits burn his barge. Oates is a bit over the top (method acting is the worst type to go over the top with), especially in the poorly-conceived scene where he shoots the river. Solid action film with a significant difference going for it.
    chaos-rampant

    Helluva casting combo with Van Cleef versus Oates but subpar execution

    Barquero has really no excuse for not living up to its full potential. The inspired casting choice of piting genre stalwarts Lee Van Cleef and Warren Oates in opposite sides of the river against each other and the idea behind the film – a group of ragtag cut-throats led by Oates transporting rifles and silver after a successful raid at a nearby town to the Sonoran territory in Mexico and desperately in need to cross the river before the army gets them while Lee Van Cleef as the boatman holds the barq at the other bank and refuses to pick them up. That should have been enough to keep Barquero afloat and my terrible puns at bay (ahem).

    What really keeps the film down is the unpolished, roughly sketched script. The first and closing acts sustain interest through lengthy bouts of gunfighting but some kind of semi-compelling plot needs to be assembled for the middle act where sadly Barquero fails to kick the conflict into high gear, a hard feat to accomplish with a story that seems to invite conflict and could have gone into so many different places. Instead what we get by the end of act two is the good guys outwitting the bad and saving the hostage Warren Oates was keeping tied up and Oates half mad and desperate (as the army draws closer with every passing moment) shooting holes at the water and saying to his henchman "I shot the river". Not particularly endearing, don't you think? Forrest Tucker steals scenes in the role of ant-eating Mountain Phil while Van Cleef and Oates seem to be representing two different western archetypes – Van Cleef the romantic hero eclipsed by the coming modernization of the west, represented in the movie by a bunch of squatters he's called to protect, Oates the rough-hewn, murderous son of a bitch, the gritty and hardboiled aspect of the western, pioneered at the time by spaghetti westerns of whose villains he's somewhat reminiscent of.

    Definitely better seventies westerns to keep the genre aficionado occupied out there but it's worth a watch for its marquee value, Van Cleef and Oates a dream match made in heaven and both in pretty good shape.
    6bkoganbing

    The Man With The Barge

    Like contemporaries Charles Bronson and Lee Marvin, Lee Van Cleef did his sojuourn in European films mostlywesterns and graduated to leads. Unlike Marvin, Bronson, and others like Claude Akins, Neville Brand, and Jack Elam, Van Cleef never did explore a comic side. Maybe he just didn't have one. He's also one strange hero as he is in Barquero.

    In this film Lee Van Cleef is the man with the barge who ferries people across a deep river. He doesn't even particularly like the settlers in the town on the river bank that has grown up. But when Warren Oates's gang of renegade cutthroats want to use that barge, Van Cleef proves to be the savior of the town.

    Oates who usually plays with a comic twist either as a good guy or a bad guy is one deadly serious villain here. His gang massacres a whole town to leave no witnesses to a shipment of arms that they are robbing. Van Cleef knows well what they are capable of.

    Forrest Tucker who can be comic here provides the comic relief as a mountain man. the last of a breed who proves to be Van Cleef's salvation. He rescues Van Cleef when he's captured by a couple of Oates's men who were sent to secure the ferry man for the gang. He has some sardonically funny scenes with John Davis Chandler, the captive.

    Mariette Hartley is in this and she's the wife of a local storekeeper who is also a most pious reverend. When he's left behind and captured by Oates, Hartley makes Van Cleef an offer that an old time gentlemanly cowboy hero would never take up. Think of Clint Eastwood in High Plains Drifter, that's the kind of hero Van Cleef is.

    This one is a must for fans of Lee Van Cleef.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The movie's poster shows Lee Van Cleef wearing the hat that is only worn by Warren Oates. At no point in the movie does this happen.
    • Goofs
      When Remy removes a rifle from the wagon to show his gang, the rifle looks as though he has just removed it from a saddle scabbard. Brand new rifles being stored and/ or transported would be coated in rifle grease and wrapped in some type of waxed paper to prevent rust.
    • Quotes

      Remy: [to prostitute during gun battle] You live in a lousy neighborhood, you oughta move.

    • Crazy credits
      Thanks in the final credits are given to the "Colorado Games, Fish and Parks Commission". Should have been the singular "Game"
    • Connections
      Featured in Warren Oates: Across the Border (1993)

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    FAQ15

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 29, 1970 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Barkuero
    • Filming locations
      • Buckskin Joe Frontier Town & Railway - 1193 Fremont County Road 3A, Canon City, Colorado, USA
    • Production company
      • Aubrey Schenck Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $135,381
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 55 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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