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Fureur apache

Original title: Ulzana's Raid
  • 1972
  • 12
  • 1h 43m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
6.9K
YOUR RATING
Fureur apache (1972)
After fierce war chief Ulzana and a small war party jump the reservation bent on murder and terror, an inexperienced young lieutenant is assigned to track him down.
Play trailer1:41
1 Video
42 Photos
Desert AdventureQuestAdventureDramaWestern

After fierce war chief Ulzana and a small war party jump the reservation bent on murder and terror, an inexperienced young lieutenant is assigned to track him down.After fierce war chief Ulzana and a small war party jump the reservation bent on murder and terror, an inexperienced young lieutenant is assigned to track him down.After fierce war chief Ulzana and a small war party jump the reservation bent on murder and terror, an inexperienced young lieutenant is assigned to track him down.

  • Director
    • Robert Aldrich
  • Writer
    • Alan Sharp
  • Stars
    • Burt Lancaster
    • Bruce Davison
    • Jorge Luke
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    6.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Robert Aldrich
    • Writer
      • Alan Sharp
    • Stars
      • Burt Lancaster
      • Bruce Davison
      • Jorge Luke
    • 83User reviews
    • 51Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

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    Trailer 1:41
    Official Trailer

    Photos42

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    Top cast43

    Edit
    Burt Lancaster
    Burt Lancaster
    • McIntosh
    Bruce Davison
    Bruce Davison
    • Lt. Garnett DeBuin
    Jorge Luke
    Jorge Luke
    • Ke-Ni-Tay
    Richard Jaeckel
    Richard Jaeckel
    • Sergeant
    Joaquín Martínez
    Joaquín Martínez
    • Ulzana
    • (as Joaquin Martinez)
    Lloyd Bochner
    Lloyd Bochner
    • Captain Gates
    Karl Swenson
    Karl Swenson
    • Rukeyser
    Douglass Watson
    Douglass Watson
    • Maj. Cartwright
    Dran Hamilton
    Dran Hamilton
    • Mrs. Riordan
    John Pearce
    John Pearce
    • Corporal
    Gladys Holland
    • Mrs. Rukeyser
    Margaret Fairchild
    • Mrs.Ginsford
    Aimee Eccles
    Aimee Eccles
    • McIntosh's Indian Woman
    • (as Aimee Ecclés)
    Richard Bull
    Richard Bull
    • Ginsford
    Otto Reichow
    Otto Reichow
    • Steegmeyer
    Dean Smith
    Dean Smith
    • Horowitz
    Larry Randles
    • Mulkearn
    Hal Maguire
    • Trooper
    • Director
      • Robert Aldrich
    • Writer
      • Alan Sharp
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews83

    7.06.9K
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    Featured reviews

    DFC-2

    Grim, realistic, and non-judgmental guerilla war

    Stark and brutal, but completely lacking the melodramatic sturm und drang of most war movies, Ulzana's Raid plays out like it was another deadly day at the office for the participants. Produced as an allegory on the Vietnam War, Robert Aldrich and Burt Lancaster created a focused drama about the senselessness of hating your opponents and the absence of victory in ethnic conflicts. The participants and victimized settlers aren't so much dehumanized as they are inconsequential except to themselves.

    Filmed in Nogales, Arizona and Nevada, the conflict is played out realistically with both sides shepherding their supplies of time, endurance, ammunition, and manpower. The location shots are beautifully laid out with an emphasis on depicting the strategic planning of the apache raiders and opposing troopers. Several scenes stand out in sharp contrast to most war movies. In one group of scenes, Aldrich follows a German family and their fate as the wife rides off with her child and a trooper escort, and the well-armed husband stays behind to defend their home. In another, the troop commander sends two soldiers after a wounded apache raider. In both cases, he turns conventional logic and sentiment on its head in honor of a grimmer reality. To my mind, this is one of the best war stories ever made and the DVD lays it out in full screen Technicolor.
    8roegrocks

    A nearly perfect western you shouldn't miss

    A small group of Apaches has just stolen some horses and left the reservation. Their number and immediate intentions are unclear to the commander of the nearest US Calvary outpost, but his youngest Lieutenant wishes to give them the benefit of the doubt according to his Christian philosophy.

    The Calvary's scout is a grizzled, weather-beaten man played to perfection by Burt Lancaster. He knows exactly what the Apaches intentions are, and seems flabbergasted by the commander of the base for whom he serves. Nevertheless, he follows his orders all the while never missing a chance to foretell what will be the result of the Commander's delays.

    The premise of this movie does follow the most cynical views that one people may hold for another, and there's no point in arguing their accuracy here. Different from many other films about Indian uprisings, at least this one attempts to explain the motives of the Apaches. To appreciate any film the premise must be "swallowed", but there are many who will not be able to keep it down long enough to enjoy the excellent writing, wonderful performances, and "not a frame viewed without purpose" editing and directing. I recommend this film completely and consider it an 8 out of 10, which I give to very few films.

    Upon the first viewing this has become one of my favorite, if not my very favorite, western of all time. Not for the squeamish due to extreme violence to both people and animals.
    9scttwortman

    Taking a Man's Power

    The only reason I have not given this movie a "10" is that I might find something wrong with it on subsequent viewings. If anybody knows of this film being available widescreen, unedited, and not bootlegged, let me know where. My high definition TV does not forgive picture flaws. Otherwise I will be patient for a remaster. As someone who is an amateur historian of the Indian wars, I can tell you this is the most accurate dramatization of the campaign against the Apaches ever filmed. Accurate history is presented in the fact that the Apaches were the dominant tribe of the southwest {the Comanches in Texas might have been their rival}. Ask the Puebloes, who actually welcomed the white man, as a buffer against the Apache. The Apache dominated the southwest long before the Spanish ever showed up. Their spiritual philosophy of "taking a man's power" was shared by other warlike Indian tribes all the way to the east coast {see "Last of the Mohicans", Mann's version}. The film manages to also be great western drama as well as a history lesson.There is no moral judgment, only the way it was. The cast is superb.Lancaster, Davidson, The Hispanic Indian actors. Richard Jaeckel, and Karl Swenson {two workhorse character actors, who turned in performances of a lifetime}. All these guys plus director Aldrich and the writers knew they were working on something special. Even the PC edited version is worth seeing. A great Cavalry/Indian western, maybe the best!
    7ma-cortes

    Violent and exciting Western about a relentless hot pursuit against bloody Apaches

    Offbeat Western concerning about an aging scout named McIntosh (Burt Lancaster)and an idealist Cavalry Lt. (Bruce Davison)commanding a group of soldiers , booth of them join forces on their way to track down an Apache Chiricaua leader named Ulzana(Joaquin Martinez) escaped from reservation of San Carlos. The veteran along with an Apache scout (Jorge Luke) agree to help them to chase vicious Indians but learn that the rebel Apache chieftain is hunting them down.

    This outlandish Western is based on mixture of modern violence and brooding dialog, is of real note. Lancaster plays perfectly a ready to retire veteran explorer trying to lead cavalry against marauding and cruel Indians. The last images when Lancaster-McIntosh stays below a cart being surrounded by brave Indians bear remarkable resemblance to frames regarding Gregory Peck from ¨Billy two hats¨ also by the same screenwriter Alan Sharp. Prestigious supporting cast as Lloyd Bochner as captain, Karl Swenson as tortured farmer and Richard Jaeckel as upright sergeant. Among some cavalry troopers appear secondaries as Jerry Gatlin, Richard Farnsworth and 'Nick Cravat' , Lancaster's usual partner. This gritty Western is ravishingly photographed in color by Joseph Biroc . Splendidly filmed on location in Nogales, Arizona and lands of : Coronado National Forest, Bureau of land of Management, State of Nevada, Department of Conservation and Resources, Division of the State Parks. It contains stirring musical score with Indian and military sounds by Frank DeVol , Aldrich's ordinary's musician. The talent for this vigorous Western that Aldrich shows is based on his powerful film-making that sustains interest and compels by careful concentration on the acting of Burt Lancaster. Robert Aldrich is a specialist on dramatic Western as ¨Veracruz¨, ¨Apache¨, ¨The last sunset¨ but also on Western with humor as ¨Four for Texas¨and ¨The Frisco kid¨. Rating : Very good, better than average and well worth seeing. This unusual Western enjoys recently elevated critical re-evaluation, though previously was considered as anti-Indian because they're brutally portrayed and being originally directed by Aldrich, a great expert in violent drama.
    8bcreed1

    One of Aldrich's most thoughtful, a great movie for its time

    Seeing Ulzana's Raid now, almost thirty years later, makes one realize how much things have changed. More than a western, the film was commenting on much of what was happening at the time. I refer of course to the Vietnam war. The innocence of the lieutenant, the sympathy for the Apaches and their different culture, the conflicts among the whites and among the Apaches, all reverberated more at the time. Few movies today seem to deal with any content, much less political. American movies exist for thrills and business. The late sixties and early seventies were a great time for American movies: they allowed us to look at ourselves and engage in a larger debate. One can talk about Ulzana's Raid in ways that Exit Wounds or even Hannibal can't even approach. American films today are self-reverential. They are about movies, not about the world around them. I say this because I am afraid many people who see this film now won't appreciate the richness Aldrich and screenwriter Sharp bring to the film.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In an interview, Bruce Davison recalled how he got the part of Lt. DeBuin: "I went in to see [director] Robert Aldrich (I) and said, 'Mr. Aldrich, you have no idea how much The Sand Pebbles (1965) meant to me'. He said, 'Thanks, kid, but Robert Wise (I) made that film. But you're just dumb enough, you have the part".
    • Goofs
      At the end of the movie just before Mcintosh and his party enter the canyon for the ambush he tells the Sergent that they have to wait for Ke-Ni-Tay to take out Ulzana's sentry. However, the decision for Ke-Ni-Tay to take out the sentry was made by Lt. DeBuin after Mcintosh had led the other party into the ambush so there was no way for Mcintosh to know what Ke-Ni-Tay was doing. However an experienced scout would know exactly what was required of his fellow scout in such a situation. McIntosh and Ke-Ni-Tay had been on the same wavelength throughout the film.
    • Quotes

      Lt. Harry Garnett DeBuin: Do you hate Apaches, Mr. McIntosh?

      McIntosh: No.

      Lt. Harry Garnett DeBuin: Well, I do.

      McIntosh: Well, it might not make you happy, Lieutenant, but it sure won't make you lonesome. Most white folks hereabout feel the same way you do.

      Lt. Harry Garnett DeBuin: Why don't you feel that way?

      McIntosh: It would be like hating the desert because there ain't no water in it. For now, I can get by being plenty scared of 'em.

    • Alternate versions
      There are two versions of this film, Robert Aldrich's print (RA) and Burt Lancaster's (BL) print. There are many subtle differences between the two although the overall running times are similar and most of the changes involve alterations of shots or lines of dialog within scenes. In the UK the Lancaster version was released on VHS and the Aldrich version on DVD (same as the US version) The major differences versions are: (a) The Aldrich version has an opening scene (before the credits) showing Ulzana leaving the reservation. This is missing from the Lancaster print. (b) The BL version deletes almost all shots of Burt Lancaster's Indian woman - played by Aimee Eccles (c) The BL version has a scene showing the two troopers pursuing the wounded Indian, The off-screen Indian kills one of them with rifle fire and the survivor rides away. This is missing from the RA print therefore creating more ambiguity as to what actually happened when the survivor returns. (d) The scene in which the rape victim plunges herself in the river is longer in the RA version and she refers to herself trying to "wash it off". In the BL version, the scene is abridged to suggest only suicide.
    • Connections
      Featured in Moviedrome: Uizana's Raid (1990)

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    FAQ15

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 2, 1973 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Apache languages
    • Also known as
      • La venganza de Ulzana
    • Filming locations
      • Coronado National Forest, Arizona, USA
    • Production companies
      • Universal Pictures
      • De Haven Productions
      • The Associates & Aldrich Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $1,200,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 43m(103 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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