Post by Derrick on Mar 16, 2010 19:59:49 GMT -5
VALDEZ IS COMING
1971
MGM/United Artists
Produced by Ira Steiner
Directed by Edwin Sherin
Screenplay by Roland Kibbee and David Rayfiel
Based on the novel by Elmore Leonard
When you hear the name Elmore Leonard you’ll probably think of “Get Shorty” and “Be Cool” as he wrote the novels those highly popular movies were based on. In fact, Elmore Leonard really bounced into popularity during the 70’s and 80’s with a bunch of very successful crime novels. His novel “Rum Punch” was filmed as one of my favorite movies of all time: “Jackie Brown” which starred the only woman I would leave my wife for: Pam Grier and was directed by Quentin Tarantino. But Elmore Leonard got his start writing western novels. One of them was “Hombre” which was a huge film hit for Paul Newman. But one the best ones was filmed as a spaghetti western starring one of my all time favorite actors: Burt Lancaster in VALDEZ IS COMING.
Bob Valdez (Burt Lancaster) is a Mexican-American sheriff who works the Mexican half of a small town on the border between Texas and Mexico. The Anglo sheriff is away on other business and so Valdez is called in to resolve a dangerous situation. A black man living with a Mexican woman has been accused of murder by the powerful gunrunner/rancher Frank Tanner (Jon Cypher) and Valdez hopes to negotiate a peaceful settlement to the standoff. The shack the suspect is holed up in is surrounded by the bigoted white posse who are using the shack for target practice and due to a series of shockingly idiotic misunderstandings; Valdez is forced to kill the black man, who turns out to be innocent of the crime.
Wracked by guilt, Valdez seeks to do right by the dead man’s Mexican woman and thinks that it isn’t too much that she be given $100 so that she can move back to the Indian reservation and start a new life. Valdez first goes to the town’s leading citizens who are of the opinion that since the whole thing was Tanner’s fault, he should put up the money. But they’re willing to make a deal: if Valdez can get $100 from Tanner, they’ll match it with another $100. Valdez’s attempts to get the money from Tanner results in him being laughed at, beaten and humiliated in a truly brutal fashion: he’s tied to a rude wooden cross which he has to carry on his back through the desert. Valdez gets free and once he gets back home pulls out the dusty footlocker under his bed which holds his most precious possessions: the uniform he proudly wore as a member of the United States Army when he was renowned as the most dangerous hunter/killer of Apache warriors. His Sharps buffalo rifle with which he can shoot a man in the eye at a 1000 yards. And his fearsomely large Buntline revolvers. His old battle skills reawakened, Valdez begins a guerilla war with Tanner in which he starts killing off Tanner’s hired guns one by one, leaving them alive long enough for them to return to their boss and deliver a chilling message: “Valdez Is Coming”
What makes VALDEZ IS COMING such an interesting western is the racial bigotry theme behind the story. Blacks and Mexicans are the victims here and Valdez is motivated not so much by personal revenge. Although being tied to a cross and being forced to walk through the desert would be more than enough to piss me off, lemme tell you. But Valdez’s motivations are deeper than revenge. His personal code of justice is outraged. And he has an overwhelming desire to see that to see men act like men, own up to their mistake, do the right thing and acknowledge the innocent black man and the Mexican woman as human beings. Or at least as much as can be expected in the Old West where life was cheap and the life of minorities was even cheaper. What makes it even more interesting is that the posse Tanner puts together to hunt Valdez is primarily made up of Mexicans and Tanner’s own right hand man, El Segundo (Barton Heyman) is a Mexican who is a pretty damn dangerous man in his own right who increasingly comes around to understand what Valdez is trying to do and tries to make his boss understand to no avail.
The performances in this are really good. Burt Lancaster plays Valdez with a dangerous understatement that fits the character well. He goes through the first half of the movie as a shambling, quietly spoken man who has put his wild life and lethal skills behind him and is just trying to do a difficult job the best way he can. But when they rouse this sleeping giant, oh baby, does he get payback in a big way. Richard Jordan has a good role as a hired gun who oddly enough is conflicted about the way he feels about Valdez and has to put his feelings about Valdez as a Mexican and as a man in a whole new perspective as the hunt for Valdez becomes increasingly more deadly. Susan Clark is really good in this movie. Most of you reading this will probably remember her from the TV show “Webster” and I was surprised at how effective she is as Tanner’s woman. There’s an interesting subplot with her character as it’s taken as a given by the townspeople that Tanner killed her husband so that he could shack up with her. Valdez takes her hostage to try and bargain with her life for the $100 and through their time together the truth about that situation is resolved in a surprising way I really didn’t see coming. Frank Silvera plays Valdez’s best friend and they have a really good scene that says everything that needs to be said about how whites view Mexicans that resonated for me given the current climate in the Unites States about Mexican immigrants and makes you think that maybe this country really hasn’t come so far in our racial views as we like to think.
So should you see VALDEZ IS COMING? I think you’d enjoy it a whole lot if you’re a western fan like I am. While it’s not as action packed or as purely entertaining as some of the other westerns Burt Lancaster has made such as “The Scalphunters” or “The Professionals” it is a satisfying horse opera in terms of performances and story. There’s a whole lot more to VALDEZ IS COMING than the good guy simply blowing away the bad guys which is underlined by the ending which is one of the most unusual of any western I know but it so absolutely right that I can’t imagine any other way the movie can have ended. If your cable/satellite provider carries Turner Classic Movies I suggest you wait for VALDEZ IS COMING to show up there as it seems to be a favorite there and they usually run it on a Saturday afternoon and if you’re lucky you’ll find it paired with “The War Wagon” or “The Magnificent Seven” but I’d go so far as to recommend you put it on your Netflix queue and are looking for a solid western with good performances and a story that contains a little bit more thought to social issues than you might expect from the genre.
Rated: PG-13
90 minutes
1971
MGM/United Artists
Produced by Ira Steiner
Directed by Edwin Sherin
Screenplay by Roland Kibbee and David Rayfiel
Based on the novel by Elmore Leonard
When you hear the name Elmore Leonard you’ll probably think of “Get Shorty” and “Be Cool” as he wrote the novels those highly popular movies were based on. In fact, Elmore Leonard really bounced into popularity during the 70’s and 80’s with a bunch of very successful crime novels. His novel “Rum Punch” was filmed as one of my favorite movies of all time: “Jackie Brown” which starred the only woman I would leave my wife for: Pam Grier and was directed by Quentin Tarantino. But Elmore Leonard got his start writing western novels. One of them was “Hombre” which was a huge film hit for Paul Newman. But one the best ones was filmed as a spaghetti western starring one of my all time favorite actors: Burt Lancaster in VALDEZ IS COMING.
Bob Valdez (Burt Lancaster) is a Mexican-American sheriff who works the Mexican half of a small town on the border between Texas and Mexico. The Anglo sheriff is away on other business and so Valdez is called in to resolve a dangerous situation. A black man living with a Mexican woman has been accused of murder by the powerful gunrunner/rancher Frank Tanner (Jon Cypher) and Valdez hopes to negotiate a peaceful settlement to the standoff. The shack the suspect is holed up in is surrounded by the bigoted white posse who are using the shack for target practice and due to a series of shockingly idiotic misunderstandings; Valdez is forced to kill the black man, who turns out to be innocent of the crime.
Wracked by guilt, Valdez seeks to do right by the dead man’s Mexican woman and thinks that it isn’t too much that she be given $100 so that she can move back to the Indian reservation and start a new life. Valdez first goes to the town’s leading citizens who are of the opinion that since the whole thing was Tanner’s fault, he should put up the money. But they’re willing to make a deal: if Valdez can get $100 from Tanner, they’ll match it with another $100. Valdez’s attempts to get the money from Tanner results in him being laughed at, beaten and humiliated in a truly brutal fashion: he’s tied to a rude wooden cross which he has to carry on his back through the desert. Valdez gets free and once he gets back home pulls out the dusty footlocker under his bed which holds his most precious possessions: the uniform he proudly wore as a member of the United States Army when he was renowned as the most dangerous hunter/killer of Apache warriors. His Sharps buffalo rifle with which he can shoot a man in the eye at a 1000 yards. And his fearsomely large Buntline revolvers. His old battle skills reawakened, Valdez begins a guerilla war with Tanner in which he starts killing off Tanner’s hired guns one by one, leaving them alive long enough for them to return to their boss and deliver a chilling message: “Valdez Is Coming”
What makes VALDEZ IS COMING such an interesting western is the racial bigotry theme behind the story. Blacks and Mexicans are the victims here and Valdez is motivated not so much by personal revenge. Although being tied to a cross and being forced to walk through the desert would be more than enough to piss me off, lemme tell you. But Valdez’s motivations are deeper than revenge. His personal code of justice is outraged. And he has an overwhelming desire to see that to see men act like men, own up to their mistake, do the right thing and acknowledge the innocent black man and the Mexican woman as human beings. Or at least as much as can be expected in the Old West where life was cheap and the life of minorities was even cheaper. What makes it even more interesting is that the posse Tanner puts together to hunt Valdez is primarily made up of Mexicans and Tanner’s own right hand man, El Segundo (Barton Heyman) is a Mexican who is a pretty damn dangerous man in his own right who increasingly comes around to understand what Valdez is trying to do and tries to make his boss understand to no avail.
The performances in this are really good. Burt Lancaster plays Valdez with a dangerous understatement that fits the character well. He goes through the first half of the movie as a shambling, quietly spoken man who has put his wild life and lethal skills behind him and is just trying to do a difficult job the best way he can. But when they rouse this sleeping giant, oh baby, does he get payback in a big way. Richard Jordan has a good role as a hired gun who oddly enough is conflicted about the way he feels about Valdez and has to put his feelings about Valdez as a Mexican and as a man in a whole new perspective as the hunt for Valdez becomes increasingly more deadly. Susan Clark is really good in this movie. Most of you reading this will probably remember her from the TV show “Webster” and I was surprised at how effective she is as Tanner’s woman. There’s an interesting subplot with her character as it’s taken as a given by the townspeople that Tanner killed her husband so that he could shack up with her. Valdez takes her hostage to try and bargain with her life for the $100 and through their time together the truth about that situation is resolved in a surprising way I really didn’t see coming. Frank Silvera plays Valdez’s best friend and they have a really good scene that says everything that needs to be said about how whites view Mexicans that resonated for me given the current climate in the Unites States about Mexican immigrants and makes you think that maybe this country really hasn’t come so far in our racial views as we like to think.
So should you see VALDEZ IS COMING? I think you’d enjoy it a whole lot if you’re a western fan like I am. While it’s not as action packed or as purely entertaining as some of the other westerns Burt Lancaster has made such as “The Scalphunters” or “The Professionals” it is a satisfying horse opera in terms of performances and story. There’s a whole lot more to VALDEZ IS COMING than the good guy simply blowing away the bad guys which is underlined by the ending which is one of the most unusual of any western I know but it so absolutely right that I can’t imagine any other way the movie can have ended. If your cable/satellite provider carries Turner Classic Movies I suggest you wait for VALDEZ IS COMING to show up there as it seems to be a favorite there and they usually run it on a Saturday afternoon and if you’re lucky you’ll find it paired with “The War Wagon” or “The Magnificent Seven” but I’d go so far as to recommend you put it on your Netflix queue and are looking for a solid western with good performances and a story that contains a little bit more thought to social issues than you might expect from the genre.
Rated: PG-13
90 minutes