Costretto a scambiare le sue preziose pellicce per uno schiavo fuggito ben istruito, un robusto cacciatore di pelli giura di recuperare le pelli dagli indiani e in seguito dai rinnegati che ... Leggi tuttoCostretto a scambiare le sue preziose pellicce per uno schiavo fuggito ben istruito, un robusto cacciatore di pelli giura di recuperare le pelli dagli indiani e in seguito dai rinnegati che li hanno uccisi.Costretto a scambiare le sue preziose pellicce per uno schiavo fuggito ben istruito, un robusto cacciatore di pelli giura di recuperare le pelli dagli indiani e in seguito dai rinnegati che li hanno uccisi.
- Premi
- 3 candidature
- Scalphunter
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Kiowa
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Scalphunter
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Scalphunter's woman
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Kiowa
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizBurt Lancaster had met Ossie Davis on the historic Martin Luther King "Civil Rights March on Washington" on Aug. 28, 1963. This chance meeting led to the talented Davis being cast as "Joseph Winfield Lee", the runaway slave who uses his clever, resourceful ways to manipulate fur trapper "Joe Bass" (Lancaster) in the film. Lancaster also stated that first time screenwriter William W. Norton submitted such a unique, clever script, that he just had to do the film.
- BlooperSet in 1860, Joseph mentions the planet Pluto, discovered in 1930.
- Citazioni
Joseph Lee: [walking behind Joe Bass and his horse] What about me, sir?
Joe Bass: I'll just sell you to the highest bidder.
Joseph Lee: Could you mske that to a Comanche, sir?
Joe Bass: You seem to have an uncommon prejudice against service to the white-skinned race!
Joseph Lee: I don't mean to be narrow in my attitude. Could I ask you what's your name, sir?
Joe Bass: Joe Bass.
Joseph Lee: Well, Mr. Bass, couldn't you kind of consider me a captured Comanche?
Joe Bass: [both Joe Bass and his horse turn around and do a 'take']
Joseph Lee: I came on my own two feet as far as those Comanches. It was my intent to circle south as far as Mexico. The Mexicans have a law against the slavery trade, and since those Indians captured me from other Indians. I have now got full Indian citizenship.
Joe Bass: Joseph Lee, you ever study the law?
Joseph Lee: No, sir.
Joe Bass: Well, neither did I, but you ain't got a chance in hell of calling yerself an Indian! You're an African slave by employment, black by color!
- ConnessioniFeatured in Film Review: Burt Lancaster (1968)
- Colonne sonoreIn Our Lovely Deseret
(uncredited)
Lyrics by Eliza R. Snow
Music by George Frederick Root
Performed by Shelley Winters
It's a rollicking good mixture of comedy with some very serious themes involved. It's also the last time Lancaster did any really athletic roles as he was 55 when making The Scalphunters. We all bow to old age at some point.
Sydney Pollack actually started his association with Burt Lancaster on the set of The Young Savages where he was an acting coach to some of the street kids who were playing gang members. It was his first introduction into motion pictures, he had previously directed and acted in a number of television productions.
Burt is fur trapper Joe Bass who gets an offer from the Kiowa Indians he can't refuse. They'll relieve him of his year's trappings in beaver pelts and he'll get an educated house slave in Ossie Davis. Davis seems born to be a slave, he escapes it from the south, then he's captured by the Comanches who then trade him to the Kiowas and then he's forced on Lancaster.
Lancaster is planning to get his pelts back, but a murderous gang of Scalphunters beat him to it and massacre almost the whole band and take Lancaster's furs along with horses and scalps that bring a good bounty. Burt's Joe Bass is not exactly a boy scout, but this crowd truly nauseates him.
The Scalphunters are headed by Telly Savalas and his cigar smoking refugee from a bordello of a woman, Shelley Winters. Winters has the best performance in the film, this is her third film with Lancaster with whom she had a self documented fling back in the day. Later on Davis gets captured by The Scalphunters and he has to use his wits to survive among them. But they're going to Mexico where slavery has been abolished.
The laughs are mixed in with some serious racial issues all around. Lancaster can't quite accept Davis as an equal, Davis is perfectly willing to go along with The Scalphunters and their genocidal war on the Indians if he'll obtain his freedom through them. And Savalas and his crowd are as mean a bunch as you'll ever see in a film, yet some of the funniest bits in the film involve Winters and Savalas.
The Scalphunters is a really funny western that if you think about it teaches some good lessons we could all use.
- bkoganbing
- 18 ago 2008
- Permalink
I più visti
- How long is The Scalphunters?Powered by Alexa
Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 42 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 2.35 : 1