Army deserter Capt. Viktor Kaleb is offered a pardon and reinstatement in the cavalry if he agrees to lead a special forces group in a raid against an Apache stronghold into Mexico.Army deserter Capt. Viktor Kaleb is offered a pardon and reinstatement in the cavalry if he agrees to lead a special forces group in a raid against an Apache stronghold into Mexico.Army deserter Capt. Viktor Kaleb is offered a pardon and reinstatement in the cavalry if he agrees to lead a special forces group in a raid against an Apache stronghold into Mexico.
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Well, it has to be first Nixon doctrine spaghetti western with a frustrated general complaining about the rules of engagement that prevent him launching a search-and-destroy mission on an Apache stronghold in Mexico (Hmmmm...substitute Apaches for the Vietcong and Mexico for Vietnam...) It even has a buckskin Rambo, that being Captain Kaleb, who wants to take out the entire Apache nation after his wife is murdered.
Well, this gets me to the movie. It is one of those movie that used to get made in the Sixties and Early Seventies where scores of actors are assembled in various stock roles, with a screenplay that has recycled every action movie convention without much spark or imagination. And then there's Bekim Fehmiu. I've seen more vivid performances from driftwood.
In short, it's one of those movies you watch on a Saturday afternoon, when nothing else is on and pay very little attention to it.
The only exception I would have to make it for Piero Piccioni's score. It's got that cheezy late sixties jazz thing going on (apologies to Dennis Miller..)
Other than that, it is nothing terribly memorable...
Captain Viktor Kaleb, convincingly played by the largely unknown then Yugoslav actor Fekim Behmiu, finds his wife skinned and otherwise tortured by marauding Apaches, and he kills her to end her misery. After doing that, he returns to base only to be threatened with court martial by the unsympathetic and bureaucratic Major Brown (played by Crenna, in a largely thankless role as ineffective fort commander).
Kaleb decides to desert the army and go on on the path of revenge right in the heart of Apache territory.
By all accounts, Kaleb is more successful on his ace than Brown's entire troop of misfits that include a lieutenant blandly played by Brandon de Wilde (a child star in SHANE who lost luster as he grew older and sadly died at 30); a chaplain who is a dynamite expert (Chuck Connors, possibly in his most memorable supporting role after THE BIG COUNTRY); Jackson, the Afro-American who hates Kaleb for no particularly clear reasons; the extremely reliable British actor, Ian Bannen, as guest officer of the Imperial Majesty's Army; and Kaleb's only friends, Tattinger (played by the always interesting to watch Slim Pickens) and Natchai (Ricardo Montalban, with a superlative minimalist performance).
And then you get John Huston as Gen. Miles. Montalban and he steal the show. Miles sees the need to use the revenge-driven Kaleb to hit at Apache Chief Durango, who's weaving nefarious plans to overrun the fort from his hideout in Mexico. Behmiu, always accompanied by his trusted wolf, has no sense of humor: he is out to do a job, picks the men for it, and heads them across territory that CHATO'S LAND would seem inspired by, two years later.
Thus Gen. Miles gives Kaleb the mission to strike at Durango and his marauding braves. Kaleb picks a team of men that he knows will test and undermine his authority. He knows that he will have to prove himself and his leadership capacity every step of the way. He and his lone wolf will do it in a relentless atmosphere of desert sand, sun, sweaty men, struggle for survival. Everyone knows the odds are very much against.
THE DESERTER is no masterpiece but it has the great merit of never seeking the easy way out and it certainly avoids any type of hypocritical political correctness. These are human beings pushing against the elements and against a barbaric enemy. No quarter given, none taken. Even children are no saints here.
Footnote: I found it interesting to see Behmiu close the eyes of the lieutenant played by de Wilde. There is something premonitory about that scene: de Wilde would be killed in a car accident in Denver just over a year later.
Did you know
- TriviaWhen Burt Kennedy came on board, he wanted Henry Fonda, Martin Balsam, Ernest Borgnine or Martin Landau or Karl Malden for the part of Gen. Miles. Malden looked for $250,000 plus $1,500 a day expenses. A much cheaper John Huston got the part.
- GoofsAt 38:50, the captain says to be there at daybreak. Yet the next scene when they are preparing to depart, the height of the sun is at least 10 am.
- Quotes
Captain Viktor Kaleb: O'Toole made two mistakes. He didn't test his skills...
Cpt. Crawford: And he yelled when he was falling.
Captain Viktor Kaleb: An Apache wouldn't.
Cpt. Crawford: Damn it! If a man is dying, he has a right to be a little bit disturbed by it!
Captain Viktor Kaleb: Not if he cares anything about the men he was with.
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Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
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- Also known as
- The Deserter
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 40 minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1