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The War Wagon

The War Wagon is a 1967 American Western heist film directed by Burt Kennedy and starring John Wayne and Kirk Douglas. Released by Universal Pictures, it was produced by Marvin Schwartz and adapted by Clair Huffaker from his own novel. The supporting cast includes Howard Keel, Robert Walker Jr., Keenan Wynn, Bruce Cabot, Joanna Barnes, Valora Noland, Bruce Dern, and Gene Evans. The film received generally positive reviews.

The War Wagon
Directed byBurt Kennedy
Written byClair Huffaker (based on his novel Badman)
Produced byMarvin Schwartz
Starring
CinematographyWilliam H. Clothier
Edited by
Music byDimitri Tiomkin
Production
companies
Batjac Productions
Marvin Schwarz Productions
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release date
  • May 27, 1967 (1967-05-27)
Running time
101 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$9,528,000[1]

Filming took place in Sierra de Órganos National Park in the town of Sombrerete, Mexico.[2]

Plot

Former rancher Taw Jackson returns to his hometown to settle a score with corrupt businessman Frank Pierce; three years earlier, Pierce had Jackson wrongfully imprisoned and appropriated his land, including his house and some recently discovered gold deposits. Jackson plans to steal an upcoming $500,000[a] shipment of gold dust from Pierce's "war wagon", an armored stagecoach surrounded by mounted guards. Wes Fletcher, an elderly wagon driver employed by Pierce to transport dry goods, becomes Jackson's informant. The third member Jackson recruits for his team is Lomax, a gunslinger and safecracker, who earlier shot Jackson as part of Pierce's plot.

The fourth team member is Levi Walking Bear, a Kiowa translator, whom Jackson and Lomax rescue from a gang of Mexican bandits. Jackson then sends Lomax to pick up the final member, Billy Hyatt, a teenage drunkard and explosives expert. When the team first meets to discuss their plan, Fletcher brings his teenage "wife" Kate along, and flies into a jealous rage when Hyatt gives her some coffee.

Jackson and Levi negotiate with the Kiowas; because Pierce is deliberately starving the tribe off of their land, they agree to help. Meanwhile, Lomax rides into town and is approached in a saloon by Pierce, who offers him $12,000 to kill Jackson. An inebriated Hyatt enters, and comes dangerously close to revealing the plan. Lomax knocks him unconscious and hands him over to the Sheriff for the night, then accepts Pierce's offer, but asks for time to do the job.

In the morning, Jackson sends Hyatt to Fletcher's farm. Hyatt finds Kate alone, and she reveals that her impoverished parents had traded her to Fletcher. Fletcher returns and threatens Hyatt with a knife, but Jackson arrives in time to defuse the situation. Hyatt says he wants to use nitroglycerin for his part of the heist, so he, Jackson, and Lomax sneak onto Jackson's old ranch to steal some from Pierce. Jackson keeps Pierce distracted by pretending to collect some of his old things, while Lomax and Hyatt crack a safe and take the explosives.

The next day, Hyatt rigs a bridge with bottles of nitro, Levi blocks the war wagon's route with a felled tree, Lomax and Jackson set up a booby trap in a narrow gorge, and Pierce and his guards set out with the gold in the war wagon. Kiowa warriors create a distraction that briefly draws off the wagon's guards, causing them to be stranded on the other side of a canyon when the bridge explodes behind the wagon. Some more Kiowa warriors attack the wagon to get the gold for themselves, but a newly-installed Gatling gun forces them to retreat.

The fallen tree diverts the wagon into the gorge, and Jackson and Lomax spring their trap, killing the drivers. Pierce shoots the last two of his men when they try to desert him, but the second shoots back as he dies, killing Pierce. The wagon crashes into a gulch, and Jackson's team hides the gold dust in some barrels of flour on Fletcher's cart. The Kiowa warriors arrive to take the gold, and Fletcher is killed when he attempts to stop them. Hyatt manages to use the last bottle of nitro to kill the chief and scare the remaining warriors away. The explosion spooks the cart horses; as they flee, the flour barrels fall off the cart and break open next to a group of evacuating Kiowa women and children. Unaware that there is gold mixed in, they gather up the flour to feed themselves.

Jackson reaches the cart first. In a hidden compartment, he finds $100,000 worth of gold that Fletcher intended to steal from his partners. Thinking they have lost everything, Levi returns to the Kiowas, and Lomax angrily takes Jackson's horse as payment. When Hyatt arrives with Kate, Jackson gives them a small amount of the dust, hiding the rest. When a furious Lomax confronts him, Jackson smugly tells Lomax that he has to be kept alive until the group meets in six months, as planned, to divide up the loot.

Cast

Production

The film was based on the 1957 novel Badman by Clair Huffaker.[3] In September 1962, he announced he would adapt Badman into a script at Producers Studio for his own Lucifer Productions (they were also going to make Guns of Rio Conchos, The Day Before Tomorrow, and Ship on Highway 7),[4] but the project eventually went to Universal. Huffaker said that, while he had written the novel in ten days, he spent three months writing the screenplay.[5] Because Badman was the eleventh book that Huffaker had sold to a film studio, Trident Publishing put him under contract to write a book a year for five years.[6]

In June 1966, John Wayne announced he had signed a two-picture deal with Universal, the movies being The War Wagon and The Green Berets. This film would be a co-production between Wayne's company, Batjac, and producer Marvin Schwartz.[7]

The following month, it was announced that Kirk Douglas would play the co-starring role in the film and Burt Kennedy would direct.[8] The extensive second-unit stunt work for the film was supervised by Cliff Lyons.

Filming took place in Durango, Mexico, and at Churubusco Studios in Mexico City, starting on September 19, 1966, and lasting 12 weeks. About the shoot, Wayne said: "We're gaining a day every week. This combined Hollywood and Mexican crew is great. If we can come home a week under schedule, we'll all be home with our families for turkey dinner."[9] Huffaker was present on set for the first and last three weeks of production and, while there, made a number of changes to the script.[5] Kennedy said he let Wayne direct himself in the film.[10]

Reception

Box office

 
Movie poster by Howard Terpning

The film debuted in first place at the domestic box office. It grossed $9,563,000 in total, making it a success (one account called it a "smash success").[11]

Critical response

The War Wagon was met with generally positive reviews from critics and holds a 90% "Fresh" score on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 10 reviews.[12][13] Roger Ebert gave the film three out of four stars, calling it "that comparative rarity, a Western filmed with quiet good humor. It is also a point of departure for John Wayne, who plays a bad guy for just about the first time in his career."[14]

Comic book adaptation

  • Dell Movie Classic: The War Wagon (September 1967)

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Approximately $12-13 million today.

References

  1. ^ "Big Rental Films of 1967", Variety, 3 January 1968 p 25. Please note these figures refer to rentals accruing to the distributors.
  2. ^ "Filming Location Matching "Sierra%20de%20Organos,%20Sombrerete,%20Zacatecas,%20Mexico" (Sorted by Popularity Ascending)". IMDb.
  3. ^ HOFFMAN BIRNEY (August 4, 1957). "Western: Roundup". New York Times. p. BR11.
  4. ^ "Entertainment: Barbara Eden Forms Own Film Company". Los Angeles Times. September 4, 1962. p. C13.
  5. ^ a b Scheuer, Philip K. (August 13, 1967). "The One-Man Revolt in Hollywood". Los Angeles Times. p. c14.
  6. ^ Martin, Betty (July 7, 1966). "Film Shapes Up for Beatles". Los Angeles Times. p. c15.
  7. ^ Martin, Betty (June 24, 1966). "Kirk Douglas Will Produce and Star". Los Angeles Times. p. c13.
  8. ^ "Hope, Diller Team for 'Lam'". Los Angeles Times. July 18, 1966. p. c25.
  9. ^ "'The War Wagon' Rolls in Mexico". Los Angeles Times. October 9, 1966. p. B13.
  10. ^ Goldstein, Richard (February 5, 1967). "THE LAST COWBOY SAINT: "Marion Michael Morrison is an old man...but when he bellows you know he's still John Wayne" COWBOY SAINT". Los Angeles Times. p. a20.
  11. ^ Thomas, Kevin (August 29, 1967). "A Hard Ride to Top of Western Heap: BURT KENNEDY". Los Angeles Times. p. d1.
  12. ^ Dell Movie Classic: The War Wagon at the Grand Comics Database
  13. ^ at the Comic Book DB (archived from the original)
  14. ^ Ebert, Roger (June 1, 1967). "The War Wagon". Retrieved March 21, 2018.

External links

wagon, other, uses, wagon, 1967, american, western, heist, film, directed, burt, kennedy, starring, john, wayne, kirk, douglas, released, universal, pictures, produced, marvin, schwartz, adapted, clair, huffaker, from, novel, supporting, cast, includes, howard. For other uses see War Wagon The War Wagon is a 1967 American Western heist film directed by Burt Kennedy and starring John Wayne and Kirk Douglas Released by Universal Pictures it was produced by Marvin Schwartz and adapted by Clair Huffaker from his own novel The supporting cast includes Howard Keel Robert Walker Jr Keenan Wynn Bruce Cabot Joanna Barnes Valora Noland Bruce Dern and Gene Evans The film received generally positive reviews The War WagonDirected byBurt KennedyWritten byClair Huffaker based on his novel Badman Produced byMarvin SchwartzStarringJohn Wayne Kirk Douglas Howard Keel Robert Walker Jr Keenan Wynn Bruce Cabot Joanna BarnesCinematographyWilliam H ClothierEdited byHarry W Gerstad Jim Clark citation needed Music byDimitri TiomkinProductioncompaniesBatjac ProductionsMarvin Schwarz ProductionsDistributed byUniversal PicturesRelease dateMay 27 1967 1967 05 27 Running time101 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBox office 9 528 000 1 Filming took place in Sierra de organos National Park in the town of Sombrerete Mexico 2 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Reception 4 1 Box office 4 2 Critical response 5 Comic book adaptation 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksPlot EditFormer rancher Taw Jackson returns to his hometown to settle a score with corrupt businessman Frank Pierce three years earlier Pierce had Jackson wrongfully imprisoned and appropriated his land including his house and some recently discovered gold deposits Jackson plans to steal an upcoming 500 000 a shipment of gold dust from Pierce s war wagon an armored stagecoach surrounded by mounted guards Wes Fletcher an elderly wagon driver employed by Pierce to transport dry goods becomes Jackson s informant The third member Jackson recruits for his team is Lomax a gunslinger and safecracker who earlier shot Jackson as part of Pierce s plot The fourth team member is Levi Walking Bear a Kiowa translator whom Jackson and Lomax rescue from a gang of Mexican bandits Jackson then sends Lomax to pick up the final member Billy Hyatt a teenage drunkard and explosives expert When the team first meets to discuss their plan Fletcher brings his teenage wife Kate along and flies into a jealous rage when Hyatt gives her some coffee Jackson and Levi negotiate with the Kiowas because Pierce is deliberately starving the tribe off of their land they agree to help Meanwhile Lomax rides into town and is approached in a saloon by Pierce who offers him 12 000 to kill Jackson An inebriated Hyatt enters and comes dangerously close to revealing the plan Lomax knocks him unconscious and hands him over to the Sheriff for the night then accepts Pierce s offer but asks for time to do the job In the morning Jackson sends Hyatt to Fletcher s farm Hyatt finds Kate alone and she reveals that her impoverished parents had traded her to Fletcher Fletcher returns and threatens Hyatt with a knife but Jackson arrives in time to defuse the situation Hyatt says he wants to use nitroglycerin for his part of the heist so he Jackson and Lomax sneak onto Jackson s old ranch to steal some from Pierce Jackson keeps Pierce distracted by pretending to collect some of his old things while Lomax and Hyatt crack a safe and take the explosives The next day Hyatt rigs a bridge with bottles of nitro Levi blocks the war wagon s route with a felled tree Lomax and Jackson set up a booby trap in a narrow gorge and Pierce and his guards set out with the gold in the war wagon Kiowa warriors create a distraction that briefly draws off the wagon s guards causing them to be stranded on the other side of a canyon when the bridge explodes behind the wagon Some more Kiowa warriors attack the wagon to get the gold for themselves but a newly installed Gatling gun forces them to retreat The fallen tree diverts the wagon into the gorge and Jackson and Lomax spring their trap killing the drivers Pierce shoots the last two of his men when they try to desert him but the second shoots back as he dies killing Pierce The wagon crashes into a gulch and Jackson s team hides the gold dust in some barrels of flour on Fletcher s cart The Kiowa warriors arrive to take the gold and Fletcher is killed when he attempts to stop them Hyatt manages to use the last bottle of nitro to kill the chief and scare the remaining warriors away The explosion spooks the cart horses as they flee the flour barrels fall off the cart and break open next to a group of evacuating Kiowa women and children Unaware that there is gold mixed in they gather up the flour to feed themselves Jackson reaches the cart first In a hidden compartment he finds 100 000 worth of gold that Fletcher intended to steal from his partners Thinking they have lost everything Levi returns to the Kiowas and Lomax angrily takes Jackson s horse as payment When Hyatt arrives with Kate Jackson gives them a small amount of the dust hiding the rest When a furious Lomax confronts him Jackson smugly tells Lomax that he has to be kept alive until the group meets in six months as planned to divide up the loot Cast EditJohn Wayne as Taw Jackson Kirk Douglas as Lomax Howard Keel as Levi Walking Bear Robert Walker Jr as Billy Hyatt Keenan Wynn as Wes Fletcher Bruce Cabot as Frank Pierce Joanna Barnes as Lola Valora Noland as Kate Fletcher Bruce Dern as Hammond Gene Evans as Deputy Hoag Terry Wilson as Sheriff Strike Don Collier as Shack Sheb Wooley as Snyder Ann McCrea as Felicia Emilio Fernandez as Calita Frank McGrath as Bartender Chuck Roberson as Brown Red Morgan as Early Hal Needham as Hite Marco Antonio as Chief Wild Horse Perla Walter as RositaProduction EditThe film was based on the 1957 novel Badman by Clair Huffaker 3 In September 1962 he announced he would adapt Badman into a script at Producers Studio for his own Lucifer Productions they were also going to make Guns of Rio Conchos The Day Before Tomorrow and Ship on Highway 7 4 but the project eventually went to Universal Huffaker said that while he had written the novel in ten days he spent three months writing the screenplay 5 Because Badman was the eleventh book that Huffaker had sold to a film studio Trident Publishing put him under contract to write a book a year for five years 6 In June 1966 John Wayne announced he had signed a two picture deal with Universal the movies being The War Wagon and The Green Berets This film would be a co production between Wayne s company Batjac and producer Marvin Schwartz 7 The following month it was announced that Kirk Douglas would play the co starring role in the film and Burt Kennedy would direct 8 The extensive second unit stunt work for the film was supervised by Cliff Lyons Filming took place in Durango Mexico and at Churubusco Studios in Mexico City starting on September 19 1966 and lasting 12 weeks About the shoot Wayne said We re gaining a day every week This combined Hollywood and Mexican crew is great If we can come home a week under schedule we ll all be home with our families for turkey dinner 9 Huffaker was present on set for the first and last three weeks of production and while there made a number of changes to the script 5 Kennedy said he let Wayne direct himself in the film 10 Reception EditBox office Edit Movie poster by Howard Terpning The film debuted in first place at the domestic box office It grossed 9 563 000 in total making it a success one account called it a smash success 11 Critical response Edit The War Wagon was met with generally positive reviews from critics and holds a 90 Fresh score on Rotten Tomatoes based on 10 reviews 12 13 Roger Ebert gave the film three out of four stars calling it that comparative rarity a Western filmed with quiet good humor It is also a point of departure for John Wayne who plays a bad guy for just about the first time in his career 14 Comic book adaptation EditDell Movie Classic The War Wagon September 1967 See also EditList of American films of 1967 John Wayne filmographyNotes Edit Approximately 12 13 million today References Edit Big Rental Films of 1967 Variety 3 January 1968 p 25 Please note these figures refer to rentals accruing to the distributors Filming Location Matching Sierra 20de 20Organos 20Sombrerete 20Zacatecas 20Mexico Sorted by Popularity Ascending IMDb HOFFMAN BIRNEY August 4 1957 Western Roundup New York Times p BR11 Entertainment Barbara Eden Forms Own Film Company Los Angeles Times September 4 1962 p C13 a b Scheuer Philip K August 13 1967 The One Man Revolt in Hollywood Los Angeles Times p c14 Martin Betty July 7 1966 Film Shapes Up for Beatles Los Angeles Times p c15 Martin Betty June 24 1966 Kirk Douglas Will Produce and Star Los Angeles Times p c13 Hope Diller Team for Lam Los Angeles Times July 18 1966 p c25 The War Wagon Rolls in Mexico Los Angeles Times October 9 1966 p B13 Goldstein Richard February 5 1967 THE LAST COWBOY SAINT Marion Michael Morrison is an old man but when he bellows you know he s still John Wayne COWBOY SAINT Los Angeles Times p a20 Thomas Kevin August 29 1967 A Hard Ride to Top of Western Heap BURT KENNEDY Los Angeles Times p d1 Dell Movie Classic The War Wagon at the Grand Comics Database Dell Movie Classic The War Wagon at the Comic Book DB archived from the original Ebert Roger June 1 1967 The War Wagon Retrieved March 21 2018 External links EditThe War Wagon at IMDb The War Wagon at AllMovie The War Wagon at the TCM Movie Database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The War Wagon amp oldid 1135615726, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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