Kind of Like a Bond Film


The movie has all the elements of a good Bond film. This movie could be remade into a modern movie and it would work well. It would work very well as a Bond movie (villian forms a group that sells arms to terrorists). You have a villian, a bond girl that has a connection to the villian, a secret lair, the villian dining with good guys and so on. I think it would make a really great movie nowadays.

I also thought that this movie had a very fast pace for a movie of its era. I've seen newer movies that were slower paced than this one. It really is great.

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I agree, this film is kind of a cool precurser to the modern action films.

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This movie could be remade into a modern movie and it would work well.


Except that without The Duke, it would be just another dumb, mindless remake! Sorry, but NO ONE in the last 40 years can hold a candle to John Wayne!

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Except that without The Duke, it would be just another dumb, mindless remake! Sorry, but NO ONE in the last 40 years can hold a candle to John Wayne!


^^^ Pilgrim, I couldn't agree with you more.

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"Without The Duke, it would be just another dumb, mindless remake".

This is nonsense - Jaan-Väino did inarguably have a great screen presence, but what he brought to this particular role, certainly wasn't anything that couldn't be replicated by someone else. It's a solid western, but it didn't by all means require Wayne to make it work... or make it smart as opposed to dumb lol.

"NO ONE in the last 40 years can hold a candle to Wayne".

Hold a candle? Anyway, I don't agree that Wayne was a completely talentless sh-t shaking his hips and feeding off the far-right reactionary admiration, but even so the fact remains he was a rather limited performer. Not amongst the best actors of his time by a long shot.



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John Wayne was one of the greatest, most naturalistic film actors of all time.

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Coming from the guy who takes the Reagan quote in his signature completely out of context, you have zero credibility on anything.

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This film was contemporary with the first Bond films. It's co-writer, with James Edward Grant ('Wayne's word wizard'), Clair Huffaker (a fellow) also wrote the novel and screenplay of 'Rio Conchos', 1964, Dir. Gordon Douglas.
This is a much darker reworking in a very, very similar story, also starring Stuart Whitman, plus Richard Boone and Edmond O'Brien (as the baddie). It's seeming lack of Hollywood polish adds to it's texture.

It is tempting to think it was influenced by 'spaghetti westerns' but the switch from Italian 'sword and sandal' movies was just taking place and, although 'A Fistfull of Dollars' was made the same year, they had not yet gained popular release in cinemas.

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"A Fistful of Dollars" was made almost 3 years after "The Comancheros", making its debut in Italy in 1964. In 1961 Clint Eastwood was still playing a supporting role as ramrod Rowdy Yates on "Rawhide". He took over the lead role after Eric Fleming (who played trail boss Gil Favor") left the show a few years later.

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The movie actually reminds me of THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN.

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Now that you mention it, "The Comancheros" IS a lot like a Bond film with horses. Undercover agent. Colorful villians. Action climax. Good observation.

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I agree, and thinking of it in that way makes me enjoy it even more now.

Too bad it didn't have a cool main titles sequence with a theme song by Shirley Bassey or Tom Jones.

"This gang always takes what it wants
Be it guns, or women, or croussants
They'll kill you with bullets or arrows
And they're known as The Comancheros.

"One Texas Ranger, and his friend
This reign of terror they must end
Though fear permeates their very marrows
They'll fight against The Comancheros."


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While watching this tonight on DVD in the back of my mind I was thinking a Old West Version of James Bond. Right down to the Duke with his brand of Humor and the Great Elmer Burnstein Score. Which would of worked in a James Bond film as well.

I like the Connection to James Bond in the film. Bruce Cabot was in one of my Favorite James Bond Films "Diamonds are Forever" Supprised nobody Picked up on that.

A great film just the same of all the John Wayne and James Bond films that I watched my Dad this was the first time I watched this movie.

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Agreed.

Except I cannot place the Duke in the role of Bond (although Roger Moore, in his later Bond flicks, was probably considerably older than Wayne was in this film). Put him in as M, with the Stuart Whitman character in the 007 role. The bad guy in the wheelchair makes a great Blofeld, and the big henchman is like Oddjob in "Goldfinger".

Ina Balin was certainly as luscious as any Bond girl that I can think of. She was kind of evil at first, being part of the criminal organization. But she was turned to good by the Whitman character, aka 007, and helped the forces of good defeat the forces of evil. So I would compare her in that sense to Pussy Galore from "Goldfinger", although she LOOKED more like Domino in "Thunderball".

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Funny, I just watched it and thought the basic premise reminded me of a Lethal Weapon movie. Substitute LA street gangs for Indian tribes, and you've got the third film. Substitute drugs for guns, and you've got the first one. Always about "the threat behind the threat," the suppliers enabling the enemy rather than the enemy per se.

Now that I've read this, you're right that it does have more of the trappings of a Bond film, especially the connection through the woman and the wining and dining scene (plus the affably evil villain). Except they split Bond into two persons for this film - Regret being the ladies' man and gambler, Jake being the shooter and the loner who puts the job before the woman.


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