IMDb RATING
7.0/10
6.7K
YOUR RATING
A man is chasing four outlaws who killed his wife and finds them in a small town's jail, but they escape to Mexico.A man is chasing four outlaws who killed his wife and finds them in a small town's jail, but they escape to Mexico.A man is chasing four outlaws who killed his wife and finds them in a small town's jail, but they escape to Mexico.
- Awards
- 1 win & 1 nomination
Ninos Cantores de Morelia Choral Group
- Choir
- (as The Niños Cantores De Morelia Choral Group)
Robert Adler
- Tony Mirabel
- (uncredited)
Beulah Archuletta
- Mexican Waitress
- (uncredited)
Ada Carrasco
- Sra. Parral
- (uncredited)
Alicia del Lago
- Ángela Luján
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaWhile filming, Gregory Peck decided to become a cowboy in real-life, so he purchased a vast working ranch near Santa Barbara, California, already stocked with six hundred head of prize cattle.
- GoofsBesides the vast size of the little town's church, they have a prepubescent boys choir of 50, in matching white robes, who themselves could amount to almost half the town's population.
- Quotes
Jim Douglass: You're wasting a lot of good lumber. A tree does just as well.
Sheriff Sanchez: They were sentenced to be hanged - not lynched!
- ConnectionsEdited into Voskovec & Werich - paralelní osudy (2012)
Featured review
The Bravados (1958)
Unlike John Wayne Westerns (especially the John Ford ones), a lot of Westerns from the 1950 like the Anthony Mann films are a little edgy and psychological. This one, starring a laconic Gregory Peck, is big and beautiful and classic, and it has some of that darkness to it that makes it more contemporary.
To be sure, it's still a product of the clichés of the genre. A loner is on the trail of some bad guys, and for much of the movie he hunts them down across some astonishing landscape. A woman from his past gets in the middle of it, at times, and the townspeople aren't sure what to make of him.
Peck is a great lead, and he's got a strong, if predictable, supporting cast. The woman in question is a young Joan Collins, more famous for her "Dynasty" years. Also of note is the sets and lighting--if sets is the right word. There are so many gorgeous scenes, both in town and in the wilderness, and they are filmed with such great light, it's actually worth watching just to watch. And many of the night scenes are filmed with a bold darkness, the color stripped down and everything hard to discern. This isn't actually Technicolor, but a new competitor, DeLuxe, and the restoration (at least on the Netflix streaming version) is superb.
If you like Westerns, this is one not to miss. If you don't, I think it's still really enjoyable, and might just get you looking for more. The director here, Henry King, is a Hollywood stalwart who took his hand at almost everything (from 1915 into the 1960s). And so you see a pro at work here, working within the genre, but intelligently.
Unlike John Wayne Westerns (especially the John Ford ones), a lot of Westerns from the 1950 like the Anthony Mann films are a little edgy and psychological. This one, starring a laconic Gregory Peck, is big and beautiful and classic, and it has some of that darkness to it that makes it more contemporary.
To be sure, it's still a product of the clichés of the genre. A loner is on the trail of some bad guys, and for much of the movie he hunts them down across some astonishing landscape. A woman from his past gets in the middle of it, at times, and the townspeople aren't sure what to make of him.
Peck is a great lead, and he's got a strong, if predictable, supporting cast. The woman in question is a young Joan Collins, more famous for her "Dynasty" years. Also of note is the sets and lighting--if sets is the right word. There are so many gorgeous scenes, both in town and in the wilderness, and they are filmed with such great light, it's actually worth watching just to watch. And many of the night scenes are filmed with a bold darkness, the color stripped down and everything hard to discern. This isn't actually Technicolor, but a new competitor, DeLuxe, and the restoration (at least on the Netflix streaming version) is superb.
If you like Westerns, this is one not to miss. If you don't, I think it's still really enjoyable, and might just get you looking for more. The director here, Henry King, is a Hollywood stalwart who took his hand at almost everything (from 1915 into the 1960s). And so you see a pro at work here, working within the genre, but intelligently.
- secondtake
- Oct 14, 2010
- Permalink
- How long is The Bravados?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 38 minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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