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The Bravados

  • 1958
  • Approved
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
7K
YOUR RATING
The Bravados (1958)
Trailer for this western revenge tale
Play trailer2:18
1 Video
37 Photos
Classical WesternDramaWestern

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.

  • Director
    • Henry King
  • Writers
    • Philip Yordan
    • Frank O'Rourke
  • Stars
    • Gregory Peck
    • Joan Collins
    • Stephen Boyd
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Henry King
    • Writers
      • Philip Yordan
      • Frank O'Rourke
    • Stars
      • Gregory Peck
      • Joan Collins
      • Stephen Boyd
    • 106User reviews
    • 36Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    The Bravados
    Trailer 2:18
    The Bravados

    Photos37

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    Top Cast30

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    Gregory Peck
    Gregory Peck
    • Jim Douglass
    Joan Collins
    Joan Collins
    • Josefa Velarde
    Stephen Boyd
    Stephen Boyd
    • Bill Zachary
    Albert Salmi
    Albert Salmi
    • Ed Taylor
    Henry Silva
    Henry Silva
    • Leandro Lujan
    Kathleen Gallant
    • Emma Steinmetz
    Barry Coe
    Barry Coe
    • Tom
    George Voskovec
    George Voskovec
    • Gus Steinmetz
    Herbert Rudley
    Herbert Rudley
    • Sheriff Eloy Sanchez
    Lee Van Cleef
    Lee Van Cleef
    • Alfonso Parral
    Andrew Duggan
    Andrew Duggan
    • Padre
    Ken Scott
    Ken Scott
    • Primo - Deputy Sheriff
    Gene Evans
    Gene Evans
    • John Butler
    Ninos Cantores de Morelia Choral Group
    • Choir
    • (as The Niños Cantores De Morelia Choral Group)
    Robert Adler
    Robert Adler
    • Tony Mirabel
    • (uncredited)
    Beulah Archuletta
    • Mexican Waitress
    • (uncredited)
    Ada Carrasco
    Ada Carrasco
    • Sra. Parral
    • (uncredited)
    Alicia del Lago
    • Ángela Luján
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Henry King
    • Writers
      • Philip Yordan
      • Frank O'Rourke
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews106

    7.07K
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    Featured reviews

    ingemar-4

    One of the best westerns

    This is a smart western, it is not about the hero quick-drawing against four anonymous opponents at the same time, it is about moral.

    For quite some time, you are not sure exactly where the movie is heading. The beginning is slow, with the goal to present the hero (Peck). He is doing just about the same silent, dry western hero as in "The Gunfighter". But the tempo goes up and the plot reveals, step by step. We get very convinced that the four criminals are quite bad men, and the worst is clearly the ruthless Bill (Stephen Boyd), ready for rape and murder any time it suits him.

    Joan Collins, however, is mostly annoying, subject of an implied love story that the movie fortunately doesn't go deeper into. She has little importance to the story. It seems she is there only to tack on a touch of romance.

    The movie manages to make each and every one of the bad guys (six of them if you count right) sharp and live, we get to know them. We also get to know a few others. The most famous villain actor here is clearly Lee van Cleef, who makes a great job as Parral, but the best character actor is really Joe DeRita (one of the Three Stooges) as Tucker/Simms, who is, incredibly, uncredited despite his fairly big role, central to the story. This means that both casting and script are very good, the script gives room for acting and the actors are capable of delivering.

    From an action/western perspective, the movie fails on one thing: It could make more dramatic endings when people are killed, spend a little more time on their last seconds so we kind of follow them down. Now, a death is too much like flipping a switch. We don't have to use slow-motion every time, but a second or two extra would have helped in some places. In some cases, I feel that the movie really doesn't want to show too much violence and blood, but in at least two occasions it isn't that simple, it looks rather like if the director or producer was careless with some important scenes. These all to obvious mistakes lower the total a bit, but they don't ruin the movie, it just takes it below the absolute top.

    But what the movie doesn't fail in is to deliver a message, a message of right and wrong, life and death, who has the right to kill. This is where it shines. After all is said and done, you find that there is still a lot more to say, more to think about, and the movie stays with me a lot longer than the average western where the difference between right and wrong is obvious and crystal clear.
    8adrian-43767

    Peck at his best in good Western that raises moral questions

    This is an interesting Western which, as is often the case in this genre, is a tale of revenge. This time, however, there are a few ironical twists. Under the solid hand of director Henry King, this film takes further the point made in OXBOW INCIDENT in 1943, about lynching.

    In this case, you have the main character, Jim Douglas (Peck) seeking revenge for the rape and brutal murder of his wife. Peck, in one of his finest performances, portrays a generally balanced and good man driven somewhat over the edge by a desire for revenge. The four "baddies" are all played with considerable zest by Stephen Boyd, Henry Silva, Lee van Cleef and Salmi. The weakest part of the film is Joan Collins. Tough for me to understand why and how she got this role.

    Silva, portraying an Indian, correctly identifies Douglas as a hunter. It is Douglas' sad failing that he gets the wrong culprits, and even more so that he thought the real rapist and murderer a good man, who would not hurt anyone.

    Douglas ends the film with a tormented conscience for killing three men who were innocent of his charges, but he receives great applause from the local community, grateful to see the town rid of a gang of thieves. The irony of the situation is put across without any moralizing, which adds to the film's virtues.

    There are a few unnecessary touches along the way, such as Boyd raping an abductee, but by and large it is a tightly told story, helped by very good cinematography.
    7secondtake

    A personal loss, a huge mistake, a beautiful film

    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.
    jjj1952

    Questioning your own judgements....

    I think I saw this movie many years ago as a youngster ( I was born in 1952). I also, during the course of the movie on AMC, read a few reviews on IMBd and either due to one or two of the reviews or my previous viewing, I knew what was coming at the end. But it was still an emotional jolt. I agree with a couple of reviews, that the very end seemed sweetened up somewhat, but I went through a period in my 20's and 30's when I had grown overly cynical and didn't like 'unrealistic' endings. I have changed somewhat. I can enjoy both 'types' of movies and endings now, I believe. I am more discerningly cynical now, I hope. Where something really smells like manipulation for the wrong reasons or for greed, I trust my doubts and cynicism to kick in. 'The Bravados' deserves your trust simply because it shows a universal human weakness among terrible, heart-wrenching circumstances in a somewhat 'realistic' setting. Luck plays too big a part at times for the hero (Gregory Peck with great screen presence) during the chase. But if you disagree with his conclusions about his own actions at the end...think again.
    9bkoganbing

    Losing A Moral Compass

    John Wayne's Ethan Edwards, Jimmy Stewart's Howard Kemp, or any number of roles Kirk Douglas has played have nothing of the intensity of Gregory Peck's Jim Douglas in The Bravados.

    Peck is perfect casting for the part because he's playing against type. If Atticus Finch's wife had been a homicide victim, I think this is how we would see him. Totally lose a moral compass and become a relentless stalker. It's what makes The Bravados work, because we identify Gregory Peck with an innate decency.

    Peck's house was robbed and his wife raped and murdered by intruders. Peck has a line on them, they're four killers who've been caught and scheduled to hang for a bank robbery in a town several miles away where a bank teller has been killed.

    But they escape with the help of the hangman, Joe DeReda soon to become a stooge. These are a quartet of the nastiest villains ever, Stephen Boyd, Albert Salmi, Lee Van Cleef, and Henry Silva all of whom have played villains with relish on the big screen. One of them, Boyd, in fact is a rapist, they take young Kathleen Gallant the daughter of the town's dry goods merchant along as a hostage.

    Charles Bronson never executed bad guys with as much relish as Peck did. They are convicted murderers who've escaped, there's no law to answer to.

    Peck may be doing some public service homicides, but there's a higher law he must answer to for the preservation of his own soul. In fact the ending brings quite a twist to the tale.

    The Bravados is one of six films directed by long time 20th Century Fox director Henry King who is most known for doing nine films there with Tyrone Power. In fact the first couple that Peck did were probably properties that were meant for Power, but Darryl Zanuck switched them for his new up and coming leading man.

    This one however is all Gregory Peck's film, I'm not sure Power could have done a better job. Peck gets some able support from the villainous quartet and from Joan Collins as an old flame he finds that has settled in the town the four have savaged.

    Special mention should go to Andrew Duggan as the priest in the town where apparently everyone is Catholic. Duggan does a good job as the padre who gives just the right spiritual advice and counsel to a troubled soul.

    Themes like rape were not exactly subject matter for westerns before the Fifties. The Bravadoes succeeds both as Saturday matinée shooting and as serious adult drama. It shouldn't be missed when broadcast.

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    Related interests

    Gary Cooper in High Noon (1952)
    Classical Western
    Naomie Harris, Mahershala Ali, Janelle Monáe, André Holland, Herman Caheej McGloun, Edson Jean, Alex R. Hibbert, and Tanisha Cidel in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    John Wayne and Harry Carey Jr. in The Searchers (1956)
    Western

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      While filming, Gregory Peck decided to become a cowboy in real life, and he purchased a vast working ranch near Santa Barbara, California, already stocked with six hundred head of prize cattle.
    • Goofs
      Besides 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!

    • Connections
      Edited into Voskovec & Werich - paralelní osudy (2012)

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 1, 1958 (West Germany)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Bravados
    • Filming locations
      • Morelia, Michoacán, Mexico
    • Production company
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 38m(98 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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