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La Poussière, la Sueur et la Poudre

Original title: The Culpepper Cattle Co.
  • 1972
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 32m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
2K
YOUR RATING
La Poussière, la Sueur et la Poudre (1972)
Watch Trailer
Play trailer2:55
1 Video
23 Photos
DramaWestern

Young farmboy who always wanted to be a cowhand talks a tough trail boss into hiring him on a cattle drive.Young farmboy who always wanted to be a cowhand talks a tough trail boss into hiring him on a cattle drive.Young farmboy who always wanted to be a cowhand talks a tough trail boss into hiring him on a cattle drive.

  • Director
    • Dick Richards
  • Writers
    • Dick Richards
    • Eric Bercovici
    • Gregory Prentiss
  • Stars
    • Gary Grimes
    • Billy Green Bush
    • Luke Askew
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Dick Richards
    • Writers
      • Dick Richards
      • Eric Bercovici
      • Gregory Prentiss
    • Stars
      • Gary Grimes
      • Billy Green Bush
      • Luke Askew
    • 55User reviews
    • 23Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:55
    Trailer

    Photos23

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    Top cast29

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    Gary Grimes
    Gary Grimes
    • Ben Mockridge
    Billy Green Bush
    Billy Green Bush
    • Frank Culpepper
    • (as Billy 'Green' Bush)
    Luke Askew
    Luke Askew
    • Luke
    Bo Hopkins
    Bo Hopkins
    • Dixie Brick
    Geoffrey Lewis
    Geoffrey Lewis
    • Russ
    Wayne Sutherlin
    • Missoula
    John McLiam
    John McLiam
    • Thorton Pierce
    Matt Clark
    Matt Clark
    • Pete
    Raymond Guth
    • Cook
    Anthony James
    Anthony James
    • Nathaniel
    Charles Martin Smith
    Charles Martin Smith
    • Tim Slater
    • (as Charlie Martin Smith)
    Larry Finley
    Larry Finley
    • Mr. Slater
    Bob Morgan
    Bob Morgan
    • Old John
    Jan Burrell
    Jan Burrell
    • Mrs. Mockridge
    Hal Needham
    Hal Needham
    • Burgess
    Jerry Gatlin
    Jerry Gatlin
    • Wallop
    Bob Orrison
    • Rutter
    Walter Scott
    Walter Scott
    • Print
    • Director
      • Dick Richards
    • Writers
      • Dick Richards
      • Eric Bercovici
      • Gregory Prentiss
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews55

    6.91.9K
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    Featured reviews

    10TonyMan

    True look at the Old West

    I feel this is possibly the best Western I have ever seen. It portrays gritty people with simple outlooks to life. I believe this must truly show what the west was like - simple, rough, dirty, bad fitting clothes, etc. I was raised on Disney movies and when you compare this to them you get a real feel for what happens when a kid decides to chase a dream in the world of adults. My favorite line is when the kid tells one of the cowboys that being a cowboy is the greatest job in the world. The guy responds, " Kid, being a cowboy is what you do when you can't do anything else".

    I suggest this as required viewing for anyone with an interest in the Old West.
    8Bob-45

    Wish I'd Seen This as a Young Man

    Had I seen "The Culpepper Cattle Company" when it was released (I was 23), my life would have been a lot different; at least, if I'd understood and accepted the message. For, "The Culpepper Cattle Company" is about as bleak and realistic as any movie ever made. Gary Grimes plays a teenager with romantic, adventuresome ideas about cowboys. He learns, tragically, something completely different, after working for a short time on a cattle drive. Grimes doesn't just learn the usual lessons; that is, the work is exhausting, dirty, always dangerous and frequently unrewarding. He learns that most causes and people are treacherous, deceitful, selfish and certainly not worth dieing or killing for. Grimes also learns a lot about himself; some of which he probably didn't want to know.

    There are a lot of fine performances in "The Culpepper Cattle Company," but Geoffrey Lewis makes the strongest impression. Lewis has such crazy blue eyes, it's no surprising producer Sergio Leone tapped him for head villain in "My name is Nobody" and Eastwood did the same for "High Plains Drifter." Here, Lewis plays a man who, under different circumstances, was probably quite decent. Now, he's just mean spirited and dangerous.

    "The Culpepper Cattle Company" also boasts excellent production design, gritty photography and classic, memorable score by the beloved Jerry Goldsmith. Just don't expect to leave this movie feeling upbeat, inspired or even sad. You're more likely to feel slightly depressed. That being said, I give "The Culpepper Cattle Company" an "8".
    raylb50

    The most authentic western ever made, a great American history lesson!

    Surely one of the best westerns of all-time, & has to be THE most authentic western ever made, I cannot think of another to match it. Carefully crafted screenplay, told it how it really was, the characters brilliantly played by everyone involved. But it's authenticity is what makes it so fascinating a film to watch, it literally transports you back in time, a real history lesson. Some great iconic one liners, 'Don't stand behind me, boy!' & 'Why put a name to something you might have to eat!?' Geoffrey Lewis, Billy Green Bush & Gary Grimes were riveting in their portrayals. Lewis's hard-man character, so sinister, you really did think, 'This guy is a psycho!!' Bush played the trail weary boss with such attitude it made you acutely aware the hardships & dangers these men faced for so little reward. Grime's naive young character was played to perfection. A great piece of American history, & I have to say, the violence is not overdone, nor is there too much of it, compared to many other western films. If this film is not stored somewhere in a State Library, well, it should be!
    jeffhill1

    It's probably the most underrated western of all time

    I've only seen "Culpepper Cattle Company" once. That was in a cheap theater in Tokyo in 1973 that showed three different films for the one admission price of 350 yen, which at that time was the dollar equivalent of about $1.50. For the past 30 years I have been waiting for it to come around again, come out on video, or appear on television. One of the co-features in the theater that day was "Bad Company" with Jeff Bridges and John Savage. That is another underrated film which has never returned. What fascinated me about "Culpepper Cattle Company" was its escalation in gritty cussedness. We start out with two wild boys recklessly racing wagons. One of them joins these seemingly foul mouthed, onery lot of cowboys. On the trail a couple of even morally worse characters steal the boys horse. But the cowboys are more intimidating than they are, so they give the horse back. Then, the cowboys encounter a farmer with his hands as back up who are even more threatening than the cowboys, especially since the farmers have the drop on them. These foul mouthed, gritty, onery cowboys are, by comparison, looking better all the time. They even give up their lives so that some pilgrims can settle down in peace. And finally, we see who is absolutely the WORST in depravity. It's the pilgrims who, to add insult to injury, won't lift a hand to bury the cowboys who have given their lives for them since they have this sanctimonious thing against having anything to do with people who engage in violence.
    dougdoepke

    Revealing Anti-Western

    This is an unduly neglected work that sank quickly into audience oblivion - the Vietnam seventies were not a good time for Westerns. True to the iconoclasm of the period, the producers set out to debunk the mystique of the cattle drive, and in the process take a big swipe at that arch-romancer of the Old West, John Ford. They only half-succeed. Put simply, their stab at realism is undone by too much gunplay, too much blood, and way too much conventional violence. Staples of the ordinary Western, their presence here only serves to reinforce the usual clichés. Much better when the story-telling cowboy refuses Geoffrey Lewis's challenge by quitting the drive, saying a gunfight over trifling matters makes no sense. That's certainly no cliché. The role reversal at movie's end is stunning, given what Hollywood has led us to expect. Nevertheless, it works by bringing out a latent code of honor that at times can guide even the most brutal among us. Here Ford is trumped by Kurosawa. There are many fine touches in the movie. Billy "Green" Bush is totally convincing as the ruthless trail boss; Gary Grimes, appropriately callow; and the four gunsels, alternately abusive and sullen, while Geoffrey Lewis's cold-eyed stare bespeaks a lifetime of casual cruelty. Not the best of anti-Westerns, but deserves consideration.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The pistol Ben (Gary Grimes) shows off to Tim (Charles Martin Smith) at the beginning of the movie and later kills his first man with during the saloon shootout, is a model 1858 Remington Army.
    • Goofs
      Immediately after starting the drive, the cook needs to spit, and does so across Ben, who is sitting beside him. The cook then tells Ben that he better "Sit down wind." This is wrong, because Ben should sit Up Wind. You never spit Into-The-Wind, you always spit With-The-Wind or Down Wind. The line should have been, "You better NOT sit down wind."
    • Quotes

      Cook, Culpepper Outfit: You really got the itch, ain't ya?

      Ben Mockridge: Well, yeah, I do. I guess all I want to do is punch cows and ride and, well, just cowboying. There's nothing better than that. That's all I want.

      Cook, Culpepper Outfit: Kid, cowboying is something you do when you can't do nothing else.

    • Connections
      Referenced in Lovelace (2013)
    • Soundtracks
      Amazing Grace
      (uncredited)

      Traditional

      Lyrics by John Newton

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    FAQ15

    • How long is The Culpepper Cattle Co.?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 26, 1972 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Donde se forjan los hombres
    • Filming locations
      • Sonoita, Arizona, USA
    • Production company
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 32m(92 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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