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IMDbPro

Deux Hommes dans l'Ouest

Original title: Wild Rovers
  • 1971
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 16m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
2.3K
YOUR RATING
William Holden and Ryan O'Neal in Deux Hommes dans l'Ouest (1971)
Official Trailer
Play trailer3:15
1 Video
89 Photos
DramaWestern

Tired of cow-punching for a living, two Montana cowboys rob a bank and flee but their employer's sons chase after them.Tired of cow-punching for a living, two Montana cowboys rob a bank and flee but their employer's sons chase after them.Tired of cow-punching for a living, two Montana cowboys rob a bank and flee but their employer's sons chase after them.

  • Director
    • Blake Edwards
  • Writer
    • Blake Edwards
  • Stars
    • William Holden
    • Ryan O'Neal
    • Karl Malden
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    2.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Blake Edwards
    • Writer
      • Blake Edwards
    • Stars
      • William Holden
      • Ryan O'Neal
      • Karl Malden
    • 35User reviews
    • 29Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Wild Rovers
    Trailer 3:15
    Wild Rovers

    Photos89

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    Top cast42

    Edit
    William Holden
    William Holden
    • Ross Bodine
    Ryan O'Neal
    Ryan O'Neal
    • Frank Post
    Karl Malden
    Karl Malden
    • Walter Buckman
    Lynn Carlin
    Lynn Carlin
    • Sada Billings
    Tom Skerritt
    Tom Skerritt
    • John Buckman
    Joe Don Baker
    Joe Don Baker
    • Paul Buckman
    James Olson
    James Olson
    • Joe Billings
    Leora Dana
    Leora Dana
    • Nell Buckman
    Moses Gunn
    Moses Gunn
    • Ben
    Victor French
    Victor French
    • Sheriff
    Rachel Roberts
    Rachel Roberts
    • Maybell
    Sam Gilman
    Sam Gilman
    • Hansen
    Charles H. Gray
    Charles H. Gray
    • Savage
    • (as Charles Gray)
    William Bryant
    William Bryant
    • Hereford
    • (as Bill Bryant)
    Jack Garner
    • Cap Swilling
    Caitlin Wyles
    • Bodine's Girl
    Mary Jackson
    Mary Jackson
    • Sada's Mother
    William Lucking
    William Lucking
    • Ruff
    • Director
      • Blake Edwards
    • Writer
      • Blake Edwards
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews35

    6.52.2K
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    Featured reviews

    8planktonrules

    Re-capturing the dull and utterly craptastic life of a cowboy.

    I was very surprised when I saw that "Wild Rovers" was written and directed by Blake Edwards. Edwards is more known for his comedies and occasional dramas...not westerns. Was he up to the task? Well, considering what sort of film it is, having a non-western writer/director is actually a very good thing!

    Why would I say this? Because "Wild Rovers" is a totally deconstructed view of cowboys. Instead of the usual macho theatrics you see in a western, this one is much more like the lives of REAL cowboys....their dull and somewhat pointless lives. In the film, the guys work hard, get paid little, visit prostitutes, fight because they are bored, puke, and die young...like a real cowboy of the era. There's nothing romanticized about the men in this film and, if anything, they are a bit sad and pitiful.

    In the story, two of these drifting cow punchers, Ross and Frank (William Holden and Ryan O'Neal) begin to question their lives and their futures. To escape this, they consider robbing a bank. After all, better to die this way than to die on the job. But if they follow through with their plan, it's pretty certain that it won't be easy and some folks will come gunning for them.

    In order to maintain the realistic style of the film, Edwards does not rush the film at all. Instead, it's slow and deliberate. Additionally, the cinematography often helps to convey a sense of loneliness--with wide screen shots of the lonely prairie. It's lovely...but stark. This could make for a dull film (like "Heaven's Gate") but the writer/director seemed to maintain the proper balance of dullness, scope and the story itself.

    So is it any good? Well, it's difficult to judge based on the IMDB reviews. They run the gamut...from those hating it, the indifferent as well as those who think it's a masterpiece. As for me, I really appreciated "Wild Rovers" because I used to be an American History teacher...and know Edwards' view of the west is far more realistic than 99% of the movies in this genre. Thoroughly exciting? No...but neither was life in the old west. Overall, very well made and well worth seeing provided you have an open mind and don't demand the usual western cliches and plot twists.
    5bkoganbing

    A Fresh Stake For A New Start

    The Wild Rovers had a lot of potential, but it needed someone versed in the western genre to make it come together. That it didn't have with Blake Edwards.

    Edwards certainly was eager enough in this assignment. Watching the film you can see some touches of Ford, of Peckinpah, even of guys like Lesley Selander and William Witney who directed hundreds of B westerns back in the day. But it's like a copy of a masterpiece.

    William Holden and Ryan O'Neal a pair of knockabout cowboys who up and decide one day that they're tired of breaking their backs for the local Ponderosa owner, Karl Malden. They decide to rob James Olson's bank and leave the territory with a fresh stake for a new start.

    Karl Malden is not just comparative to Ben Cartwright in the immense size of his property. He's a most upright individual who feels that the robbery of the bank where it's mostly his money inside is a blot on the character of his establishment. He charges his two sons Joe Don Baker and Tom Skerritt with bringing back Holden and O'Neal alive or dead.

    There's a subplot going on involving a range war with Karl Malden battling some sheepherders who want to invade his domain. The two parts of the story are not well knitted together. In fact, I'm not sure it was necessary to begin with.

    On the plus side Holden and O'Neal have a nice chemistry between them, in fact there's a bit of a hint of homosexuality between them. The camera work is fine, but it's more than a homage to Sam Peckinpah.

    Blake Edwards should stick to comedies. In fact he directed Holden in his last film, S.O.B., and that one is more in his element and it's a classic. That's the collaboration I strongly recommend.
    9artfisher

    Great feel for the outdoors!

    Overlong, but the wide-screen cinematography (a must-see in letter-box format), music score and character relationship of Holden and O'Neal, make this one of my favorite westerns. As a nature-lover, I find the outdoor scenes, especially the horse-breaking in the snow, among the best I've seen in any western. The cinematography in this scene is breath-taking, exhilarating and thrilling. The superb and beautiful music score by Jerry Goldsmith adds to the overall enjoyment of this film. Please, M-G-M, bring this film out on DVD. It needs to be seen in it's original, uncut, widescreen version so it can take it's place along other great western films.
    9hitchcockthelegend

    A reflective gem of an Oater.

    Wild Rovers is written and directed by Blake Edwards. It stars William Holden, Ryan O'Neal, Karl Malden, Joe Don Baker, Tom Skeritt and James Olsen. Music is scored by Jerry Goldsmith and the Panavision/Metrocolor cinematography is by Philip Lathrop.

    It's a Western that not only was butchered by cretinous execs at MGM, but has also proved to be divisive among the Western faithful - those that have seen the now thankfully available un-butchered version that is. Wild Rovers is one of those Oaters that is very much concerned with the changing of the West, where cowboys start to find themselves out of place with their era. Think Monte Walsh/Will Penny/Ride The High Country, with a bit of Wild Bunch/Butch & Sundance thrown in for good measure, and you get where Wild Rovers is at.

    Some critics were quick to accuse Edwards of merely copying Western films of past, but that is unfair. For this is a loving homage to those movies, also managing to be its own beast in the process. The tale is simply of two cowpokes, one aged and world weary, the other a young excitable buck, best friends who want more from life, so decide to rob the local bank and flee to Mexico to start afresh. Of course two men and destiny are quite often not the best of bed fellows...

    There's an elegiac beauty to Edwards' screenplay, with some of the scripted dialogue lyrical and poetic. And yet even though the harshness of the West, of the life of a cowboy, and the violence that is abound, is deftly pulsing within the story, there's plenty of dashes of humour as well. This is not a perpetually downbeat movie, slow moving? Absolutely, short on ripper action? Also correct. But as the themes of heroism and honour, of friendship and folly, are born out, and the many tender sequences draw you in, a pratfall is never far away.

    Technically it's high grade stuff. Holden is superb and he drags O'Neal along with him to avert what could have been a casting disaster. They make a fine and beguiling partnership and both men are turning in some of their best ever work here. The photography of the Arizona locations is outstanding, with Lathrop (Lonely Are the Brave) managing to add some ethereal beauty to the story. Goldsmith knocks out a triffic score, part blunderbuss Western excitement, part intimate pal to all and sundry.

    Skip any version that is under two hours, for that is an MGM crime. The MOD DVD comes complete with overture, intermission, entr'acte and exit music, while TCM shows the uncut version but minus the aforementioned roadshow segments. This is not a Western for those looking for a Magnificent Seven style actioner, for as fun as that great movie is, this is an altogether different and mature beast, and it deserves to be better known. 9/10
    DanielKing

    a little-seen gem

    This is not a film about which you hear a great deal, which is a shame because it is one of the most enjoyable westerns I have seen for a long time. I think the problem lies in the fact that it tries to be too many different things and cover too many bases. It is funny, but not as funny as BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID; it is elegaic, but not as elegaic as PAT GARRETT AND BILLY THE KID; it is violent, but not as violent as THE WILD BUNCH; and it is beautiful, but not as beautiful as JEREMIAH JOHNSON.

    It may sound odd but the film it most resembles, in as much as it combines all these elements, is THUNDERBOLT AND LIGHTFOOT. We have a mismatched pairing of a wise man and a headstrong youth who combine to pull off a major robbery. They are pursued relentlessly by an almost psychotic adversary. They meet a tragic end. This may sound like high praise and indeed it should because this is a fine movie and I never thought I'd say that about a Blake Edwards movie.

    There are moments within this film which you rarely get in a run of the mill western. For instance I never see a western which deals so well with the equivocal relationship between a cowboy and animals. This film is full of them: sheep, cows, horses, mules, cougars, cats and dogs. And not just in passing either. All the best westerns have a snowbound sequence but not many of them combine it with a horse-breaking scene, as this movie does to breathtaking effect.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    John Wayne and Harry Carey Jr. in La Prisonnière du désert (1956)
    Western

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Filming for this picture took place in Nogales, Arizona exactly 30 years after William Holden had shot his first western, Arizona (1940), also in Nogales. That Columbia Pictures release became one of the most successful films of its year, and strengthened the young actor's career.
    • Goofs
      When Post shoots Ben's tin cup, the "bullet hole" has metal shards curling out toward Post. But if Post had indeed fired a bullet at the tin cup, a bullet would have pushed the metal shards towards the inside of the cup. But with the metal shards curling outwards it clearly demonstrates that the so-called bullet hole was created by a small charge placed in the inside of the cup creating the outward curling shards.
    • Quotes

      Ross Bodine: You show me an old cowboy, a young cowboy or an in between cowboy with more than a few dollars in his poke and I'll show a cowboy that stopped being a cowboy and robbed banks.

      Frank Post: Well, let's rob us a bank.

      Ross Bodine: It'll be safer than getting married.

    • Alternate versions
      SPOILER: Originally released theatrically at 106 minutes; the extended "Director's Cut" runs 136 minutes. MGM cut 24 minutes of the film, including the scenes in which "Ross Bodine" gives some of the stolen money back to the "Billingses" and a slow-motion sequence in which "Walter Buckman" dies. The studio also added to the end of the film, after "Frank Post's" death, a recurrence of the sequence in which Post dances in the snow while Ross breaks the bronco.
    • Connections
      Featured in The Moviemakers (1971)
    • Soundtracks
      Ballad of the Wild Rovers
      (uncredited)

      Written by Jerry Goldsmith

      Sung by William Holden

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    FAQ14

    • How long is Wild Rovers?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 29, 1971 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Dos hombres contra el Oeste
    • Filming locations
      • Red Rock Crossing, Sedona, Arizona, USA
    • Production company
      • Geoffrey Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $277,092
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 16m(136 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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