IMDb RATING
4.6/10
402
YOUR RATING
US Border Patrol agent Frank Cooper is keeping a fine balance between doing his duty and empathizing with illegal Mexican border jumpers in 1970s California.US Border Patrol agent Frank Cooper is keeping a fine balance between doing his duty and empathizing with illegal Mexican border jumpers in 1970s California.US Border Patrol agent Frank Cooper is keeping a fine balance between doing his duty and empathizing with illegal Mexican border jumpers in 1970s California.
Noé Murayama
- Mosca
- (as Noe Murayama)
Josefina Echánove
- Whore
- (as Josefina Echanove)
Luz María Peña
- Whore
- (as Lus Maria Péna)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
A movie that must necessarily to be seen by Donald Trump, as long as he's still in office! The film is not great, but the message is simple: the cause of Mexican poverty and the vital need to cross the border to the North. Telly Savalas, as usual, is very good in the role. Unfortunately, the script is not very consistent. The other actors, Danny De La Paz, Eddie Albert, Michael V. Gazzo, Cecilia Camacho, also give their strength as much as they can.
Chesty gringo Telly Savalas (as Frank Cooper) is a US-Mexico "Border Cop". He serves as a father figure to young immigrant Danny De La Paz (as Benny Romero), who wants Mr. Savalas to be best man at his impending wedding. Savalas is tough, but boss Eddie Albert (as Commander Moffat) may be tougher. Tough is what you need to stop smuggler Michael V. Gazzo (as Chico Suarez). Alliances may be in flux.
If you find the possibility of hearing "Kojak" and "Oliver Douglas" uttering expletives to be repulsive, you ought to steer clear of "The Border". If not, you may not have the stomach for the "realistic" cow slaughtering scene. Although it doesn't end up being worth much, Mr. De La Paz and Cecilia Camacho (as Leina) steal the show.
** The Border (1979) Tony Richardson ~ Telly Savalas, Danny De La Paz, Eddie Albert
If you find the possibility of hearing "Kojak" and "Oliver Douglas" uttering expletives to be repulsive, you ought to steer clear of "The Border". If not, you may not have the stomach for the "realistic" cow slaughtering scene. Although it doesn't end up being worth much, Mr. De La Paz and Cecilia Camacho (as Leina) steal the show.
** The Border (1979) Tony Richardson ~ Telly Savalas, Danny De La Paz, Eddie Albert
Telly Savalas showed in his career that he could play heroic roles as well as bad guys. He plays a good guy role here, and he does his best, but most of the rest of the movie erodes his efforts. After a passable action beginning (which boasts some impressive stunt work), the next half hour or so is a real bore, with practically NOTHING in this half hour advancing the plot. Eventually, things start moving again, though pretty slowly for the most part. But despite that, the movie remains pretty boring, with Savalas' character curiously offscreen for several sections of significant length. The movie ends on an odd note, as if the filmmakers ran out of money and weren't able to film an ending that would have been really satisfying. Apart from the opening sequence, the only other part of the movie that will have viewers alert is a scene in a slaughterhouse, which shows the (real) slaughter of cattle that will disgust most viewers.
This movie is pretty dull. You get the idea it is a tough guy film pretty quick. Telly Savalas is not a bad actor, and if you are a fan of his you will enjoy his performance. The movie around him is pretty lacking however. The ending is terrible - I guess they ran out of money or something.
A film sensitive to the plight of Mexican immigrants coming to the US for a better life.
Savalas plays a border agent with a compassionate heart. Savalas is really great in this role, and the production/writing nearly rises to his level. When he's not on-screen, the film is two dimensional. The other agents are hateful Americans, the immigrants are sentimentalized heroes. I like the heartfelt understanding, but I wish it wasn't so "good guy/bad guy".
Savalas somehow makes it all credible, but he's not always the focus. When he is, good flick.
Savalas plays a border agent with a compassionate heart. Savalas is really great in this role, and the production/writing nearly rises to his level. When he's not on-screen, the film is two dimensional. The other agents are hateful Americans, the immigrants are sentimentalized heroes. I like the heartfelt understanding, but I wish it wasn't so "good guy/bad guy".
Savalas somehow makes it all credible, but he's not always the focus. When he is, good flick.
Did you know
- TriviaOne of a handful of films released during the 1980s that had the word "Border" forming part of the title and examining immigration across the Mexico-US border, many dealing with issues relating to corruption, profiteering, border protection and illegal immigration. The movies included Police frontière (1982), Chicanos, chasseur de têtes (1980), Border Heat (aka Deadly Stranger (1988)), Border Radio (1987) and Un flic de choc (1980) (aka aka "The Blood Barrier", aka "The Border", aka T"he Border, USA").
- GoofsAfter Benny Romero is beaten up, knifed in the back and had his face razor bladed in the saloon fight with the Suarez henchman, the next scene shows him coming off the truck at Suarez' place, and his face is unmarked and clean, showing no sign of the fight.
- Quotes
Frank Cooper: Compassion? If I had compassion I'd stick a .357 up your ass and blow your brains out!
- ConnectionsFeatured in Edición Especial Coleccionista: Policía de frontera (2010)
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 27m(87 min)
- Sound mix
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