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The Shooting ou La Mort Tragique de Leland Drum

Original title: The Shooting
  • 1966
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 22m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
7K
YOUR RATING
Jack Nicholson and Millie Perkins in The Shooting ou La Mort Tragique de Leland Drum (1966)
Theatrical Trailer from Continental Distributing
Play trailer2:49
1 Video
99+ Photos
TragedyDramaWestern

A mysterious woman persuades two cowboys to help her in a revenge scheme.A mysterious woman persuades two cowboys to help her in a revenge scheme.A mysterious woman persuades two cowboys to help her in a revenge scheme.

  • Director
    • Monte Hellman
  • Writer
    • Carole Eastman
  • Stars
    • Millie Perkins
    • Jack Nicholson
    • Will Hutchins
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Monte Hellman
    • Writer
      • Carole Eastman
    • Stars
      • Millie Perkins
      • Jack Nicholson
      • Will Hutchins
    • 83User reviews
    • 62Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    The Shooting
    Trailer 2:49
    The Shooting

    Photos157

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    Top cast11

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    Millie Perkins
    Millie Perkins
    • Woman
    Jack Nicholson
    Jack Nicholson
    • Billy Spear
    Will Hutchins
    Will Hutchins
    • Coley
    Warren Oates
    Warren Oates
    • Willett Gashade
    Charles Eastman
    • Bearded Man
    Guy El Tsosie
    • Indian
    Brandon Carroll
    • Sheriff
    B.J. Merholz
    • Leland Drum
    Wally K. Berns
    • Deputy
    • (as Wally Moon)
    William Mackleprang
    • Cross Tree Townsman
    James Campbell
    James Campbell
    • Cross Tree Townsman
    • Director
      • Monte Hellman
    • Writer
      • Carole Eastman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews83

    6.47K
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    Featured reviews

    cfisanick

    Difficult, complex existential western that is ultimately enthralling

    Most casual film viewers will find Monte Hellman's "The Shooting" to be slow, boring, and pretentious. But serious fans of cinema will be amazed at how terrific this existential morality play really is. Hellman's version of the old West is at once depressing and beautiful, and the rickety production values on display actually enhance the atmosphere. And of course, who can forget that inscrutable ending with echoes to the Zapruder film? This is fascinating stuff for the patient, thoughtful film student.
    8howard.schumann

    A subversive western

    "Did I tell you to do something?" - Billy "I don't give a curly-hair, yellow-bear, double dog damn if you did" - Coley

    Four people ride across the desert tracking a killer but it is not clear who they really are and who it is they are looking for. In Monte Hellman's subversive western The Shooting, just released for the first time on DVD, Warren Oates is Willett Gashade, a bounty hunter turned mine owner who returns to find his brother Coin missing, his partner dead, and a fellow worker in a state of panic. When a strange woman shows up, the three set out on a journey with an unknown destination that leads to a final bizarre confrontation. The Shooting has more questions than you can find on the SAT and it is often a frustrating challenge to fit the pieces together. Hellman shot the film on a limited budget in eighteen days in the desert country near Kanab, Utah with B-movie producer Roger Corman and a young actor named Jack Nicholson.

    It was released to television and did not play in the theater until years later after it developed a cult following in Europe. The quality of the transfer is impeccable but the dialogue borders on the incomprehensible. Slow-witted but good humored Coley (Will Hutchins) is fearful as he tells Gashade that he was asleep when he heard an argument between Willett's partner Leland Drum and Coin. He says that Colin fled, and Leland was shot dead by an unseen gunman and tells Gashade something about Coin having ridden down "a man and a little person, maybe a child," but Coley's not sure about that. Soon, a woman (Millie Perkins) who is not named arrives and offers to pay Gashade to guide her to Kingsley, a town that lies some hours away, beyond a dangerous desert. The woman is abrasive and complaining but Coley takes to her immediately while Willett is distanced and aloof.

    Mystery piles upon mystery. When the riding party sets out, the woman asks to be led in the wrong direction without offering any explanation. The woman shoots her horse claiming it was lame but it turns out have no broken bones. When asked why she shot the horse, after a long period of silence, she can only muster a feeble smile. Along the way, Coley, Willett and the woman meet up with Billy Spears (Nicholson), a nattily dressed gunman with a sadistic smirk, and it becomes apparent that the purpose of the journey may be to track down the person or persons responsible for shooting Leland. Beyond that it is anyone's guess as to what the film means and an unforgettable climax does not clear up the confusion.

    The director has said that The Shooting is a mirror of the Kennedy assassination where doubt remains about what actually happened on that day, but the connection is murky. Whatever its ultimate meaning, The Shooting is an involving ride full of twists and turns and Jack Nicholson's mighty performance as Billy is worth the price of admission. Actually the meaning may be revealed when Gashade says to Millie, "If I heard your name I wouldn't know it, would I?" She says, "No." Then he says, "then I don't see no point to it." She says, "there isn't any." Perhaps like life, The Shooting doesn't mean anything. It's just there to grab your attention.
    6gavin6942

    Corman Takes On the Western Genre

    Willet Gashade (Warren Oates), a former bounty hunter, returns to his small mining camp after a lengthy absence and finds his slow-witted friend Coley (Will Hutchins) in a state of fear. Coley explains to Gashade that their partner, Leland Drum (B. J. Merholz), had been shot to death two days before by an unseen assassin. Also starring a young Jack Nicholson.

    In 1964, Monte Hellman and Jack Nicholson had made two films together, "Back Door to Hell" and "Flight to Fury", which were produced by Roger Corman and filmed back-to-back in the Philippines. This film was very much in the same vein, this time shot back-to-back with "Ride in the Whirlwind". Nicholson's history with Corman is well-known, but Hellman's career also came from Corman. His first directing gig was "Beast from Haunted Cave" (1959), a Corman film, which was followed up with an uncredited stint on "The Terror" (with Nicholson). In fact, Hellman did not really blossom outside Corman's domain until "Two-Lane Blacktop" (1971).

    The film was written by first-time screenwriter Carole Eastman, who would soon write "Five Easy Pieces", another Jack Nicholson vehicle (and much later the Nicholson film "Man Trouble"). As with many involved, she was a Corman veteran, having been responsible for the music in Corman's "Creature from the Haunted Sea" (1961).

    It was not until 1968 that the U.S. distribution rights were purchased by the Walter Reade Organization, the same company that distributed "Night of the Living Dead" (1968). No other domestic distributor had expressed any interest in the films. Walter Reade decided to bypass a theatrical release, and the two titles were sold directly to television. In retrospect, it seems bizarre that this film fell into obscurity, but who could have predicted Nicholson's rise to stardom?
    cineman2

    Uncompromising Indie Western

    The Shooting is an indie western that reflects Americans' feelings of dread and uncertainty following the assasinations of JFK, Bobby, Malcolm, and Martin. Man overwhelmed by his environment. This West is a lonely,cruel world primarily populated by poor, uneducated men struggling to survive. The style is minimalist in that we are given information, through images and words, with great restraint and economy. An intense experience that calls for sustained attention. Comments below:"no idea what it's about", "dialogue incomprehensible",wish "storyline could be followed easily"-indicate some may benefit from a proper sinopsis, which I have not found. Others should view film before reading further. Willet returns to his camp and finds dimwit Coley quite agitated.Coley states that Willet's brother Coin and partner Leland arrived drunk from Winslow. Coin had run over a man and a child and needed to flee.Leland stays behind and gets shot by an unknown assailant. Willet and Coley are approached by a woman(we had seen her shoot her horse for no obvious reason) who offers $1000 to be escorted to Kingsley but refuses to reveal her name.They travel toward Crosstree where Leland learns Coin bought a horse 2 days ago. They proceed through the desert. The woman shoots at random, Willet believes she is sending signals to someone following. Gunslinger Billy emerges from hiding and joins them. His relation to the woman is unclear.They encounter day-old horse tracks as Billy and Coley threaten each other. The woman's horse pulls lame. Billy threatens to shoot Coley if he doesn't stay behind, demands Willet's gun and reveals he killed Leland. Willet:"I have my reason for staying.There ain't gonna be no killing". They encounter a bearded man with a broken leg and his horse.We see Coley following on foot. He takes the bearded man's horse. Billy spots Coley approaching and goes after him. Coley aims at Billy who shoots Coley in the face. Willet buries him. Woman to Willet:"I know that feeling.I've carried the burden of it longer than you". The elements continue to take its toll on people and animals.The woman rides while the men follow on foot.Willet charges at Billy, tosses his gun away,beats him and crushes his hand with a rock. Willet follows the woman, now on foot, into a canyon. She spots Coin, who looks identical to Coley, and shoots. Coin returns fire as Willet comes behind the woman. All three are hit.Billy wanders aimlessly waiting to die. The film leaves plenty of questions open to interpretation. Why wouldn't the woman attempt to kill Willet if Coin looks just like him? Did her son(and husband?) survive being run over? Why is Billy involved? An existentialist view of man and his predicament permeates this uncompromising western. 9/10
    6theognis-80821

    Artiness For Artiness's Sake

    Hollywood, in the 1960s was a locale rife with young visionaries, sometimes stoned, wandering about like starets in Tsarist Russia. But Roger Corman always had an eye out for serious, energetic, responsible young filmmakers, like Monte Hellman, who could put a movie together on the cheap. "The Shooting" has a great virtue: the unique talent of Warren Oates, who could project simultaneously, and with seeming ease, both strength and anxiety. The props, costumes and desert scenery of Kanab all serve this western well, even if its dramaturgy is weak. It seems more like an "idea," stretched out to 82 minutes, than an involving, logical plot.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      $10,000 of the $75,000 budget was spent on the salaries for the horse wranglers, who along with the cast, were the only union elements in the movie.
    • Goofs
      During the fight between Willett Gashade and Billy Spear Billy's hat on the ground behind them alternates between being upside down originally and then right side up later. The canteen between the fighters and the hat also disappears in the final shots when the fight ends.
    • Quotes

      Coley Boyard: I don't give a curly hair, yellow bear, double dog damn if ya did!

    • Connections
      Featured in Warren Oates: Across the Border (1993)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 12, 1968 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • La mort tragique de Leland Drum
    • Filming locations
      • Kanab, Utah, USA
    • Production companies
      • Santa Clara Productions
      • Proteus Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $75,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 22 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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