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A Time for Killing

  • 1967
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 28m
IMDb RATING
5.4/10
1.2K
YOUR RATING
A Time for Killing (1967)
Confederate POWs escape a Union camp and make for the Mexico border chased by Union troops with both parties oblivious to the fact that peace was declared.
Play trailer0:46
2 Videos
26 Photos
DramaWestern

Confederate POWs escape a Union camp and make for the Mexico border chased by Union troops with both parties oblivious to the fact that peace was declared.Confederate POWs escape a Union camp and make for the Mexico border chased by Union troops with both parties oblivious to the fact that peace was declared.Confederate POWs escape a Union camp and make for the Mexico border chased by Union troops with both parties oblivious to the fact that peace was declared.

  • Directors
    • Phil Karlson
    • Roger Corman
  • Writers
    • Nelson Wolford
    • Shirley Wolford
    • Halsted Welles
  • Stars
    • Inger Stevens
    • Glenn Ford
    • Paul Petersen
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.4/10
    1.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Phil Karlson
      • Roger Corman
    • Writers
      • Nelson Wolford
      • Shirley Wolford
      • Halsted Welles
    • Stars
      • Inger Stevens
      • Glenn Ford
      • Paul Petersen
    • 30User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos2

    Trailer
    Trailer 0:46
    Trailer
    A Time For Killing: Change Those Orders
    Clip 1:14
    A Time For Killing: Change Those Orders
    A Time For Killing: Change Those Orders
    Clip 1:14
    A Time For Killing: Change Those Orders

    Photos26

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    Top cast25

    Edit
    Inger Stevens
    Inger Stevens
    • Emily Biddle
    Glenn Ford
    Glenn Ford
    • Maj. Wolcott
    Paul Petersen
    Paul Petersen
    • Blue Lake
    Timothy Carey
    Timothy Carey
    • Billy Cat
    Kenneth Tobey
    Kenneth Tobey
    • Sgt. Cleehan
    Richard X. Slattery
    Richard X. Slattery
    • Cpl. Paddy Darling
    Harrison Ford
    Harrison Ford
    • Lt. Shaffer
    • (as Harrison J. Ford)
    Kay E. Kuter
    Kay E. Kuter
    • Owelson
    Dick Miller
    Dick Miller
    • Zollicoffer
    Emile Meyer
    Emile Meyer
    • Col. Harries
    Marshall Reed
    Marshall Reed
    • Stedner
    George Hamilton
    George Hamilton
    • Capt. Dorrit Bentley
    Max Baer Jr.
    Max Baer Jr.
    • Sgt. Luther Liskell
    • (as Max Baer)
    Todd Armstrong
    Todd Armstrong
    • Lt. Prudessing
    Duke Hobbie
    Duke Hobbie
    • Lt. Frist
    Harry Dean Stanton
    Harry Dean Stanton
    • Sgt. Dan Way
    • (as Dean Stanton)
    James Davidson
    James Davidson
    • Little Mo
    Charlie Briggs
    • Sgt. Kettlinger
    • Directors
      • Phil Karlson
      • Roger Corman
    • Writers
      • Nelson Wolford
      • Shirley Wolford
      • Halsted Welles
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews30

    5.41.1K
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    Featured reviews

    4bkoganbing

    A Private War

    A Time For Killing takes place in the southwestern territory of Arizona just days before the Civil War is to end. Several southern prisoners are held captive in an army stockade commanded by Emile Meyer. The prisoners could probably just sit things out and go home. But George Hamilton the commanding officer among the prisoners has an agenda all his own. The time and setting are similar to the 1953 William Holden film Escape from Fort Bravo and the Sam Peckinpaugh flawed classic Major Dundee which had come out a couple years earlier.

    Hamilton's from the Deep South, the part that General Sherman has just ravaged. So Hamilton figures he's got some payback coming and after escaping he kidnaps Indian missionary Inger Stevens who is the betrothed of second in command Glenn Ford and does a little ravaging of his own. To give Ford a little personal incentive to come after him so he can kill some more Yankees. This mind you is after the escaping Confederates kill a dispatch rider bringing news of Lee's surrender at Appomattox.

    With the Civil War so close to an end it would have taken one charismatic leader to have kept those Confederates in line for this crazy mission. And George Hamilton is too nice to really be convincing in the part of a revenge seeking southerner. It's the main flaw of A Time For Killing.

    These are not John Ford type cavalrymen. You've got some real lowlife specimens on both sides Timothy Carey on the Union side and Max Baer, Jr. on the Confederate. Both are really into combat and killing, Baer who one remembers as the amiable dunce Jethro Bodine in The Beverly Hillbillies really surprises you with his role. In a small part as a Union lieutenant is Harrison Ford years ahead of his first big break in American Graffiti.

    Dick Miller and Kay E. Kuter play a pair of Union soldiers who aren't exactly the greatest of patriots. Their characters are for comic relief, but in the grim proceedings of A Time For Killing, their comedy while not bad is definitely out of place.

    A Time For Killing had some potential, but in the end I think the plot situation is really ridiculous and wastes a lot of talented people.
    6ma-cortes

    Confederate soldiers led by George Hamilton escape from prison and are pursued by a party commanded by Glenn Ford

    During late Civil War some Confederate soldiers getaway from an Union prison and head toward Mexico. Then a battle of wits pits a tough Union captain (Glenn Ford) against sadist Confederate Major (George Hamilton) when the latter abducts his love interest (Inger Stevens) . After that, the infuriated woman seeks revenge on the man who raped her . Meanwhile , a confederate soldier kills an Union courier who holds a message saying that Civil war is over .

    The picture contains action Western , continuous horse riding , shootouts and some violence . This violent cavalry-Western and hard on themes is full of noisy action , thrills , chills and results to be quite entertaining , though mediocre . The gratuitous violence brought quite criticism in the newspapers, though the director declared that it was utterly necessary . Harry Joe Brown wrote a personal check to Columbia Pictures for $1,000,000 to cover the costs of going over budget . Good duo protagonist as Glenn Ford and George Hamilton , though make exaggerated acting . It appears credited prestigious secondaries as Timothy Carey , a young Harry Dean Stanton and a youngest Harrison Ford , being his first credited film role . Furthermore , the veteran Kenneth Tobey and Dick Miller , Roger Corman's usual , who appears uncredited as director . Rare and thrilling musical score for an Old West movie . Colorful and atmospheric cinematography by Peach . The motion picture was regularly directed by Phil Karlson . There were no half measures in this filmmaker . He would make adventure movies or violent and noir films . As he directed Western as ¨Gunman's walk¨ , ¨They rode west¨, ¨Texas rangers, ¨Iroquois trail¨ and Gansters genre or Noir films as ¨Phoenix city story¨ and ¨Scarface mob¨ . Failure alternated with hits through his career, though Karlson's direction was more than successful in ¨ Walking tall¨ with invaluable help of Joe Don Baker . Rating : Acceptable Western ; George Hamilton and Glenn Ford fans will enjoy their idols .
    7jjnxn-1

    Inger imperiled

    Somewhat scattered drama set in the last days of the Civil War. Glenn Ford is the top billed star but he disappears for almost the entire middle of the film and it's really George Hamilton and Inger's show.

    Partly a chase story and partly a drama of how once fastidious men can be corrupted and destroyed by war. George does fine as the Confederate soldier who can't face the war's imminent end since it has given him purpose and he has nothing to go back to. This was made towards the end of his short serious actor phase before he slipped into the overly tanned caricature he became and he gives it his best effort.

    Inger Stevens, breathtakingly beautiful in the first of several westerns she made in the period between the end of her series "The Farmer's Daughter" and her too early death, registers strongly as the missionary who is in love with Glenn Ford but must contend with her captive status against George and his increasingly unruly band of refugees.

    It also affords a chance to see several notable actors starting out. Max Baer of Beverly Hillbillies Jethro fame plays a total whack job with brio and Harry Dean Stanton shows up in a small part. Most surprisingly right at the top of the film is a baby faced Harrison Ford who vanishes after a few minutes.

    Not really a western nor a great film by any means but a decent effort if you like dramas set in the West.
    5wes-connors

    Two Violent Men… and a Violated Woman!

    The Civil War may be ending, but not for Captain George Hamilton (as Dorrit Bentley), a handsome Confederate prisoner. "This war will never be over," Hamilton states, "Whether we like it or not, we'll fight this war for the next hundred years!" After a Union officer maliciously orders a Southern soldier killed, Mr. Hamilton leads his Rebels on an escape to Mexico, although everyone knows the captured men will soon be granted amnesty. For good measure, Hamilton kidnaps beautiful blonde Inger Stevens (as Emily Biddle), the fiancée of steadfast Major Glenn Ford (as Charles Wolcott), who leads the pursuit for Hamilton and his men.

    This film starts out surprisingly well, with some nice action from director Phil Karlson and the crew. Unfortunately, it unravels into mediocrity. Though Mr. Ford is top-billed, and has one good scene, the film stars Hamilton. His "anti-hero" characterization is weakly scripted - the main thrust seems to be: let's see long it takes until Ms. Stevens gets raped.

    The violated Stevens (from "The Farmer's Daughter"), bugle boy Paul Peterson (from "The Donna Reed Show"), and wacky Max Baer Jr. (from "The Beverly Hillbillies") are recognizable from their TV roles. The latter two actors perform embarrassingly bad last scenes. Also interesting in the cast are handsome young Harrison Ford and Harry Dean Stanton, in early roles. Hamilton's group is hunk-heavy, with Todd Armstrong (as Pru), Duke Hobbie (as Lonnie), James Davidson (as Mo), Charlie Briggs (as Kettlinger), and Craig Curtis (as Bagnef) really beefing up the Confederacy. Its eclectic cast is the main reason to take "A Time for Killing".

    ***** A Time for Killing (8/15/67) Phil Karlson ~ George Hamilton, Glenn Ford, Inger Stevens, Paul Peterson
    Poseidon-3

    Time is what gets killed when watching this film!

    If only for it's unusual cast, this Civil War western revenge saga merits watching one time. Unfortunately, there isn't a great deal more about it to recommend as it is uneven and unsatisfying for the most part. Stevens plays a missionary (complete with bleached-out blonde hair and '60's eyeliner) who's visiting her beau Ford at a cavalry outpost where he's holding Confederate Captain Hamilton and others prisoner. Soon after she leaves, Hamilton and a cache of his men revolt and escape. They capture Stevens and kick off a chase across the desert to Mexico with Ford in pursuit. Of main interest is the oddball cast which includes Ford (who, at 51, sure was dragging his feet in marrying Stevens!), Hamilton (his tan completely in place and with his helmet hair and come 'n go accent, a very unlikely Confederate prisoner of war!), Baer, jr (giving quite possibly the worst performance ever captured on film as a lunatic soldier who giggles when killing and fights incessantly with everyone), Armstrong (trading in his sword and sandals), Stanton (long-time character actor who appeared in many cult favorites), Peterson (fourth-billed former child star who has little to do but represent innocence) and Harrison J. Ford (hardly onscreen as a heavily side-burned Union soldier.) The film starts out with an incongruent theme song which is abruptly cut short by the action of the plot. This sets up a consistent pattern of odd music cuts and choppy editing (the music in this film is FAR too over-emphatic and insistent, not to mention repetitive.) There are some okay action sequences and some decent scenery and occasional periods of dramatic interest. They are often undone, however, by some really bad supporting cast members and awkward writing and direction. There's a Union officer with a thick New York accent, a pair of nitwit, supposedly amusing, but actually deadly unfunny soldiers who keep interrupting the drama with their awful shtick and then a passel of chatty cantina whores. The all time worst acting honor, though, goes to Baer, jr who is so relentlessly bad that it actually hurts to watch him. He's a lunkheaded, unbalanced giant whose penchant for violence is not as shocking as it is annoying. The actor claims that playing on "The Beverly Hillbillies" type-cast him, but he seems here to be unable to play anything better. The "comic" relief in the film (which couldn't be any less amusing) is at great odds with the rather visceral violence and cruelty of the rest of the film. It's all put together so amateurishly and with so little regard for nuance or real feelings that it hardly matters. Thus the opportunity to see some name/cult actors in a tough little western remains the primary attraction.

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    Related interests

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    Drama
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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      First credited film role of Harrison Ford.
    • Goofs
      Early on, the Union and Confederate troopers are armed with single shot breech loading carbines, but in the final battle scene, all of a sudden, everyone is armed with Winchester repeating rifles that do not exist in 1865.
    • Quotes

      [as the cavalry detail approaches the cantina, several Mexican prostitutes meet them on the porch excitedly trying in Spanish to tell them of the trouble the Confederates have caused - one of them approaches Major Wolcott directly]

      Maj. Tom Wolcott: What does she want?

      Sgt. Cleehan: Sir, they're women... more or less. I don't think they know.

    • Alternate versions
      There are two versions of this film. The longer version runs 89m and the shorter version, released on UK VHS under the title The Long Ride Home, runs 83m (or 80m in Pal).
    • Connections
      Featured in That Guy Dick Miller (2014)
    • Soundtracks
      The Long Ride Home
      by Ned Washington, Van Alexander

      Sung by Eddy Arnold

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 1, 1967 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • La cabalgada de los malditos
    • Filming locations
      • Zion National Park, Utah, USA
    • Production companies
      • Columbia Pictures
      • Sage Western Pictures Inc.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $2,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 28m(88 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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