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Pancho Villa

Original title: Villa Rides
  • 1968
  • 13
  • 2h 5m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
2.5K
YOUR RATING
Robert Mitchum, Charles Bronson, and Yul Brynner in Pancho Villa (1968)
Villa Rides: What Should We Do With The Officers?
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Watch Villa Rides: What Should We Do With The Officers?
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99+ Photos
DramaWarWestern

Mexican rebel Pancho Villa leads a revolution helped by an American aviator imprisoned in Mexico.Mexican rebel Pancho Villa leads a revolution helped by an American aviator imprisoned in Mexico.Mexican rebel Pancho Villa leads a revolution helped by an American aviator imprisoned in Mexico.

  • Director
    • Buzz Kulik
  • Writers
    • Robert Towne
    • Sam Peckinpah
    • William Douglas Lansford
  • Stars
    • Yul Brynner
    • Robert Mitchum
    • Maria Grazia Buccella
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    2.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Buzz Kulik
    • Writers
      • Robert Towne
      • Sam Peckinpah
      • William Douglas Lansford
    • Stars
      • Yul Brynner
      • Robert Mitchum
      • Maria Grazia Buccella
    • 28User reviews
    • 22Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Villa Rides: What Should We Do With The Officers?
    Clip 1:29
    Villa Rides: What Should We Do With The Officers?

    Photos113

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    Top cast38

    Edit
    Yul Brynner
    Yul Brynner
    • Pancho Villa
    Robert Mitchum
    Robert Mitchum
    • Lee Arnold
    Maria Grazia Buccella
    Maria Grazia Buccella
    • Fina
    • (as Grazia Buccella)
    Herbert Lom
    Herbert Lom
    • Gen. Huerta
    Robert Viharo
    Robert Viharo
    • Urbina
    Frank Wolff
    Frank Wolff
    • Ramirez
    Diana Lorys
    Diana Lorys
    • Emilita
    Alexander Knox
    Alexander Knox
    • President Madero
    Robert Carricart
    Robert Carricart
    • Don Luis
    • (as Bob Carricart)
    Andrés Monreal
    • Capt. Herrera
    • (as Andres Monreal)
    Fernando Rey
    Fernando Rey
    • Fuentes
    Julio Peña
    Julio Peña
    • General
    José María Prada
    José María Prada
    • Major
    • (as Jose Maria Prada)
    Regina de Julián
    • Lupita
    • (as Regina de Julian)
    Antoñito Ruiz
    • Juan
    • (as Antonio Ruiz)
    Jill Ireland
    Jill Ireland
    • Girl in Restaurant
    Charles Bronson
    Charles Bronson
    • Fierro
    Francisco Arduras
    • Villista
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Buzz Kulik
    • Writers
      • Robert Towne
      • Sam Peckinpah
      • William Douglas Lansford
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews28

    6.32.4K
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    Featured reviews

    7bkoganbing

    Pancho Villa's Air Force

    So far I haven't seen one film about Pancho Villa that got it right and Villa Rides is definitely one of them. Perhaps the proposed biographical film that Johnny Depp will star in might do Villa some justice.

    Yul Brynner and Robert Mitchum co-star in Villa Rides with Brynner in the title role. Mitchum plays your typical soldier of fortune although in his case he's a pilot of fortune. He's a pilot of one of those new fangled airplanes and it is through his eyes we see the story of the film unfold.

    A damaged aircraft delays Mitchum in Mexico after making a delivery and before he knows it, he's hip deep in the revolution that is going on in Mexico. At this point in his career Villa is one of several guerrilla chiefs supporting the new republic and the presidency of the idealistic Francisco Madero played here by Alexander Knox. Madero himself was a strange and fascinating character, one day he might get a biographical film study of his tragic life.

    The Mexican Revolution of the teen years saw the country give way to anarchy with Villa eventually becoming one of several generalissimos controlling a piece of Mexican turf. As Villa operated in the extreme north of the country it was his bad fortune to later on raid into the USA and get Woodrow Wilson to send our army after him.

    Here at the beginning Villa though after Mitchum talks his way into not being shot by his forces, Brynner sees the value of Mitchum's airplane as a weapon of war. He puts one of his aides Charles Bronson to ride herd on Mitchum and the two of them don't get along at all.

    According to Lee Server's book on Mitchum they didn't get along all that well during the filming. Another Mitchum, brother John Mitchum wrote in his memoirs that Bronson was a very reserved sort who guarded his privacy strictly. They apparently had no problem on the set of Bronson's film Breakheart Pass which John Mitchum had a small part.

    Mitchum and Brynner got along however which was not always the case with Brynner. Yul Brynner was a man of some mystery who liked it that way, he was and could be standoffish with fellow players, but apparently he and Mitchum worked well together in their only joint film.

    The film was shot in Spain and I have to say the battle sequences were very well staged. They are the best part of Villa Rides.

    A good, but not a great film. I do have to wonder that when Black Jack Pershing came into Mexico later on after the action of this film concluded, might not Mitchum be in a real jackpot fighting against the American army at that point.
    6natamin

    not great but fun to watch

    I saw this movie long ago and still remember it well enough to place a comment, so its not to bad. Westerns are my favorite movies but that's doesn't mean i like them all, i like the shootist with John Wayne but think that most Wayne movies are not that good....this one with Brynner, Bronson and Mitchum is just plain and simple a Hollywood fabrication and fun to watch,especially Bronson as Fierro. He portrays the very hard merciless right-hand of villa,(and comes up with some very nice inventions). All and all i think its time they should release it on DVD so i could add it to my collection and watch it again after so many years
    7hitchcockthelegend

    Liberty is the respect for the rights of others.

    Villa Rides is directed by Buzz Kulik and adapted to screenplay by Robert Towne and Sam Peckinpah from the biography of Pancho Villa written by William Douglas Lansford. It stars Yul Brynner, Robert Mitchum, Charles Bronson, Herbert Lom, Maria Grazia Buccella, Robert Viharo and Frank Wolff. Music is scored by Maurice Jarre and cinematography by Jack Hildyard.

    Film is a fictionalised telling of a period in Pancho Villa's (Brynner) life, primarily his famous involvement in the Mexican Revolution at the start of the 20th Century.

    The film that should have been a Peckinpah classic!? Maybe? There is no doubting that had Peckinpah been allowed to direct his own screenplay we would have got a far better, more brutal, Pancho Villa film. In fact if we just had Peckinpah's original screenplay intact and someone like Robert Aldrich to direct, then that surely would have given us a mean and moody biography of one José Doroteo Arango Arámbula (AKA: Francisco Villa or Pancho Villa)? Film history tells us that star Yul Brynner was most displeased with the portrayal of Villa as written on Bloody Sam's page. Brynner wanted, and got eventually, his Villa to be an heroic Robin Hood type man of the people, a romanticised revolutionary as it were. Not the driven bastardo prone to acts of horror and sneak tactics that Peckinpah envisaged for the film.

    La Cucaracha.

    Brynner laughably cited Peckinpah's lack of Mexican knowledge as reason for getting him off the film, laughable because Peckinpah was married to a Mexican and visited the country regularly! So Peckinpah was off, sold his screenplay to the producers, which was remodelled considerably by Robert Towne & Brynner, and he took much of the ideas from the writing for Villa Rides to craft his masterpiece a year later, The Wild Bunch. In to the director's chair came Buzz Kulik and Brynner got to don a toupee and portray Villa the way he wanted. Although, thankfully, Peckinpah's edginess does manage to flit in and out of the finished product.

    Viva Villa! You can't fight for the revolution if you are dead.

    What remains for viewing is far better than some would have you believe. True, it's no Western/War classic, some of the politico posturings fail to make a mark because they are not expanded on, and one yearns at times for some Peckinpah grit, grue and grim machinations. There's also casting issues, for although I actually don't mind Brynner as Villa because he attacks the role with fanciful relish, he is generally miscast, while Mitchum manages to get by on laconic charm rather than have a character worthy of putting effort into. But if you can forgive the obvious missteps then it's a good two hours of rip-snorting entertainment.

    It's always a question of money with you Gringo.

    Kulik (Sergeant Ryker) keeps things lively and proves adept at action directing. The battles scenes are high on quality, particularly for the engagement at Conejos, where stunt men and horses are flung around the place, explosions puncture the air, the artillery on show resplendent as it deals out damage. Hundreds of costumed extras cut a swathe through each other, a plane and a train impact greatly on proceedings, while potent scenes involving the bad things that men do add fuel to the loud expressive fire. Jarre's score is fabulous, Latino flavours mix with high energy thunder to bounce off the burning sun with aural pleasure, while Hildyard keeps the Spanish locales vibrant in colours. Then there's Bronson stealing the movie with his portrayal of Rodolfo Fierro, a man who enjoys killing and tormenting the enemy, with dark humour also etched into his make-up.

    Fanciful, fun and fiery, with flaws enough for sure, but still a good time to be had for the genre faithful. 7/10
    MovieMan-112

    A classic western that's under appreciated and hard to find

    "Villa Rides" is the most accurate film depicting the life of the infamous mexican bandit, Pancho Villa. It's also filled with an all-star cast. Yul Brenner plays Villa to perfection (many other actors including Telly Savalas have played the role, but not as good as Brenner). Charles Bronson is equally good as Villa's sidekick who spends his free time humiliating and shooting mexicans. Robert Mitchum plays a pilot who gets involved in Villa's revolution. There is a constant pace of action and good dialogue ("Go outside and die. Where are your manners?" is what Bronson says to a mexican after the mexican tries to force himself on a young girl. Bronson shoots him and kicks him out the door). The buzzing noise Mitchum's airplane makes becomes annoying throughout the film (the director's name is Buzz) and the actor who plays the mexican villain seems to be more of a Woody Allen-type character than a vicious, sadistic tyrant. He makes up for that in his final scene. Classic stuff! The film is very rare and hard to find. If you get it, you're lucky.
    7frankfob

    Good action, but Brynner is woefully miscast

    Mexican bandit and revolutionary Pancho Villa has been portrayed in films before, most notably by Wallace Beery in 1934's "Viva Villa!". Beery bore an uncanny resemblance to the real Pancho Villa, and by all accounts his portrayal is historically quite accurate, although the movie itself isn't. While overall this film is better than Beery's, the miscasting of Yul Brynner as Villa is difficult to overcome, and Robert Mitchum's sleepwalking through his role as an American soldier of fortune caught up in the Mexican revolution doesn't help, either. The two best performances in the film are Charles Bronson as Villa's right-hand man and chief executioner Rodolfo Fierro (Bronson accurately plays him as a man who can murder dozens of people with almost no thought about it; the real Fierro was even more of a butcher than he's shown to be here, and is known to have personally murdered hundreds of people) and Herbert Lom as the murderous Gen. Victoriano Huerta, and although Lom plays him as a sophisticated James Bond-ish Eurotrash villain than the semi-literate Indian and psychopathic killer that Huerta really was, it's still an effective job. The action set pieces are extremely well done and exciting, especially a rebel charge through a marsh against a heavily fortified federale position and, as has been previously mentioned, the film's soundtrack is truly outstanding. So even though Brynner may not be anyone's idea of Pancho Villa, the movie overall is worth a watch.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      According to producer Norbert Saada's interview in the documentary "Once Upon A Time Sergio Leone", Italian director Sergio Leone was offered to direct, but turned it down because he did not like the casting of Yul Brynner in the title role.
    • Goofs
      Near the end of the movie they show a street scene that is supposed to be El Paso Texas but on the side of a building it advertises the Oklahoma Wigwam the newspaper from the book and movie Cimarron.
    • Quotes

      [repeated lines]

      Rodolfo Fierro: Who cooked this?

      Ramirez: Me, Jefe.

      Rodolfo Fierro: No, you didn't!

      Ramirez: No, I didn't.

      Rodolfo Fierro: COOK IT!

    • Connections
      Featured in Kain's Quest: The Stone Killer (2015)

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    FAQ15

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • August 23, 1968 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Villa Rides
    • Filming locations
      • El Casar de Talamanca, Guadalajara, Castilla-La Mancha, Spain
    • Production company
      • Paramount Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $2,640,000
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 2h 5m(125 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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