The classy, painted poster for Howard Hawks' El Dorado |
QUICK REVIEW:
A gunfighter for hire and a drunken sheriff, who are old friends, help each other through heartaches and drinking bouts while rescuing the town of El Dorado from a malicious rancher.
El Dorado is written by Leigh Brackett (Rio Lobo (1970)), loosely based on Harry Brown's novel The Stars in Their Courses (1960) and directed and produced by Indianian master filmmaker Howard Hawks (His Girl Friday (1940)).
John Wayne (Rio Bravo (1959)) and Robert Mitchum (The Last Tycoon (1976)) are both delightful, and they are accompanied by a young, fresh-faced James Caan (Silent Movie (1976)) in this marvelous, classic horse opera. It's very simple: El Dorado is a joy of a western.
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Watch a trailer for the film here
Box office: 12 mil. $ (North America only)
= Uncertainty (but at least a box office success)
[El Dorado was released December 17 (Japan) and runs 126 minutes. The film was shot in Arizona and Utah in October 1965 - January 1966. The release was delayed, so the film wouldn't clash with the Steve McQueen-staring western Nevada Smith (1966). The poem recited in the film, (mispronounced by Caan), is Edgar Allan Poe's Eldorado (1849). The film was cheered by audiences and critics, even though its plot is very similar to Hawks' also John Wayne-starring Rio Bravo. The plot is also very similar to the plot of the pair's Rio Lobo (1970), which is Hawks' last film. Roger Ebert has given the film a 3½ star rating, equal to Film Excess' 5 hearts. The international box office isn't known for the film, but it was popular in important markets like France and Spain, wherein more than 2 mil. paid admission in each country, so the film might rightfully rank as a big hit. El Dorado is fresh at 100 % with a 7.9 critical average on Rotten Tomatoes.]
What do you think of El Dorado?
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