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Valdez Is Coming

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Wikipedia article




'Valdez Is Coming' is a 1971 American Western film directed by Edwin Sherin and starring Burt Lancaster, Susan Clark, Richard Jordan and Jon Cypher. The film is based on the 1970 Elmore Leonard novel of the same name.

Plot



Aging town constable Bob Valdez (Burt Lancaster) is tricked into killing an innocent African-American man by powerful rancher Frank Tanner (Jon Cypher), whose hired gun R.L. Davis (Richard Jordan) shot up the hovel where the wrongly accused man and his Indian wife were trapped. Valdez believes it would be a fair gesture to raise $200 for the widow, $100 from Tanner and the rest from others in town.

Tanner is livid at the old man's suggestion. He orders ranch hand El Segundo (Barton Heyman) and his men to tie Valdez to a heavy wooden cross and drive him into the desert. The central pole is so long that Valdez must walk bent over. He finds an oasis blocked by two trees that he repeatedly tries to ram with the ends of the cross. When it finally breaks, the jagged ends are driven into Valdez's back.

Davis finds him and cuts the ropes, freeing the unconscious man. The badly injured Valdez is able to crawl to the ranch of his friend Diego (Frank Silvera), where he is nursed back to health. Unfortunately for Tanner, he has picked on the wrong man: Valdez is a wily, experienced Indian fighter and a marksman with a rifle. He dons his old cavalry uniform and sends Tanner a message via one of the rancher's wounded men (Hctor Elizondo): "Valdez is coming."

Valdez sneaks into the compound and, during the ensuing gun battle and his escape, kidnaps Tanner's woman, Gay Erin (Susan Clark), for whose favors it is rumored that Tanner had her husband killed. With her in restraints, Valdez proceeds to systematically do away with the men Tanner sends after him with his long-range Sharps rifle. The only one he shows mercy to is Davis, after the gunman screams, "I cut you loose! I cut you loose!" and reveals that the cut on the left wrist of Valdez concealed under his glove came when his knife slipped as he cut the ropes off.

Now he has two hostages. While hiding from Tanner's posse, Valdez realizes that Gay Erin knows who killed her husband. Valdez confronts her and she admits that it was she who killed her own husband in order to be with Tanner, not the other way around. He sets her free, but by now Tanner's woman is sympathetic to his cause, feeling guilty because she was the cause of all the deaths so far.

Despite Gay Erin's help, Valdez is finally surrounded and captured. Tanner and his men ride up. The men are ordered to shoot, but R.L. Davis backs off, showing he has no gun, and El Segundo calls his men aside, refusing to obey orders. That leaves Tanner to do his own dirty workif he can.

Tanner turns out to be a coward one-on-one. Gay makes it clear she will not return to Tanner. Tanner helplessly snarls at Valdez, "I should have had you killed three days ago." He calmly replies, "Or paid the $100."

Cast



* Burt Lancaster as Valdez

* Susan Clark as Gay Erin

* Jon Cypher as Frank Tanner

* Frank Silvera as Diego

* Hctor Elizondo as Mexican Rider

* Phil Brown as Malson

* Richard Jordan as R.L. Davis

* Barton Heyman as El Segundo

* Ralph Brown as Beaudry

* Werner Hasselmann as Sheriff

* Lex Monson as Rincon

* Sylvia Poggioli as Segundo's Girl

* Jos Garca Garca as Carlos

* Mara Montez as Anita

* Juanita Penaloza as Indian Woman

Production



The film was filmed in southern Spain in locales used by Italian filmmaker Sergio Leone in his European "spaghetti" Westerns. The desert-like terrain of this isolated region of Spain resembles the U.S. southwest and parts of Sonora, Mexico, though the vegetation is not the same.[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0067921/locations 'Valdez Is Coming'], IMDb, locations.

When director Sydney Pollack was attached to the property, Lancaster was originally slated to play Frank Tanner with Marlon Brando as Valdez. These plans failed to materialize when Lancaster got involved in the 1970 movie 'Airport'.

Reception



The film received primarily mediocre to negative reviews. Vincent Canby of 'The New York Times' praised Lancaster's on-screen presence but wrote that, "A lot of fancy flourishes, which I associate with Mr. Sherin's stage work, are apparent in the film, as in its picturesque groupings of picturesque characters, and in a musical score that's much given to comment on the action."[http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/review?res=9C06E7D81530E73BBC4852DFB266838A669EDE Canby, Vinent]. 'The New York Times', film review, "'Valdez Is Coming': Burt Lancaster Stars in Vengeful Western," April 10, 1971. Last accessed: February 17, 2011. Canby's description of the plot is illuminating as to the impact the movie probably made when it came out. "Within the first half-hour of the movie, Bob Valdez (Lancaster) is humiliated, called a greaser, shot at and mock-crucified, all because he wants to raise $200 from the white men responsible (along with himself) for the killing of a black freed-man, a murder-suspect later known to have been innocent. The money is to go to the black man's pregnant Apache woman. This bare description of the plot will give you some idea of the film's very contemporary racial sensibilities, which though honorable, are simply the dcor of a harmless Western. On second thought, perhaps, it's not quite that harmless. The humiliations suffered by Valdez early on, as well as the ruthlessness of the villains, are of such unequivocal nastiness that the film's ultimate satisfactions come not from the triumph of honor, but from the scope of the revenge."

When the film was released to video, Ty Burr of 'Entertainment Weekly' wrote that, "Slow and choppy, 'Valdez' manages an astounding feat: It drains Lancaster of personality."[http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,282469,00.html Burr, Ty]. 'Entertainment Weekly', film review, May 31, 1996. Last accessed: February 17, 2011.

References




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