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Rio Bravo
Rio Bravo
A small-town sheriff in the American West enlists the help of a disabled man, a drunk, and a young gunfighter in his efforts to hold in jail the brother of the local bad guy.
rating
7.8
runtime
141 min

Release

1959-03-08

Cast

John Wayne
John Wayne
as Sheriff John T. Chance
Dean Martin
Dean Martin
as Dude
Ricky Nelson
Ricky Nelson
as Colorado Ryan
Angie Dickinson
Angie Dickinson
as Feathers
Walter Brennan
Walter Brennan
as Stumpy
Ward Bond
Ward Bond
as Pat Wheeler
John Russell
John Russell
as Nathan Burdette
Pedro Gonzalez Gonzalez
Pedro Gonzalez Gonzalez
as Carlos Robante
Estelita Rodriguez
Estelita Rodriguez
as Consuela Robante
Claude Akins
Claude Akins
as Joe Burdette
Malcolm Atterbury
Malcolm Atterbury
as Jake
Harry Carey, Jr.
Harry Carey, Jr.
as Harold
Walter Barnes
Walter Barnes
as Charlie (uncredited)
George Bell
George Bell
as Barfly (uncredited)
Noble 'Kid' Chissell
Noble 'Kid' Chissell
as Barfly (uncredited)
Cecil Combs
Cecil Combs
as Barfly (uncredited)
Myron Healey
Myron Healey
as Barfly (uncredited)
Cactus Mack
Cactus Mack
as Barfly (uncredited)
Mathew McCue
Mathew McCue
as Barfly (uncredited)
Frank Mills
Frank Mills
as Barfly (uncredited)
Kansas Moehring
Kansas Moehring
as Barfly (uncredited)
Jack Perry
Jack Perry
as Barfly (uncredited)
Danny Sands
Danny Sands
as Barfly (uncredited)
Sailor Vincent
Sailor Vincent
as Barfly (uncredited)
Bob Whitney
Bob Whitney
as Barfly (uncredited)
Nesdon Booth
Nesdon Booth
as Clark (uncredited)
Robert Donner
Robert Donner
as (uncredited)
Ted White
Ted White
as Bart (uncredited)
George Bruggeman
George Bruggeman
as Clem (uncredited)
Buck Bucko
Buck Bucko
as Barber (uncredited)
Yakima Canutt
Yakima Canutt
as Gunman on Horse (uncredited)
Chuck Roberson
Chuck Roberson
as Gunman (uncredited)
Albert Cavens
Albert Cavens
as Henchman (uncredited)
Tom Monroe
Tom Monroe
as Henchman (uncredited)
Fred Graham
Fred Graham
as 2nd Burdette Man in Shootout (uncredited)
Eugene Iglesias
Eugene Iglesias
as 1st Burdette Man in Shootout (uncredited)
Joe Gray
Joe Gray
as Card Player (uncredited)
Dean Smith
Dean Smith
as Card-Playing Burdette Henchman (uncredited)
Riley Hill
Riley Hill
as Messenger (uncredited)
Richard LaMarr
Richard LaMarr
as Minor Role (uncredited)
Gordon Mitchell
Gordon Mitchell
as Bar Cowboy Watching Fistfight (uncredited)
Bob Reeves
Bob Reeves
as Bartender (uncredited)
Bing Russell
Bing Russell
as Cowboy Murdered in Saloon (uncredited)
Bob Steele
Bob Steele
as Matt Harris (uncredited)
Bud Cokes
Bud Cokes
as Barfly (uncredited)
David O. McCall
David O. McCall
as Bartender (uncredited)
Fred Aldrich
Fred Aldrich
as Barfly (uncredited)
Frank Balderrama
Frank Balderrama
as Barfly (uncredited)
Audrey Betz
Audrey Betz
as Bartender (uncredited)
Nick Borgani
Nick Borgani
as Barfly (uncredited)
Duke Green
Duke Green
as Barfly (uncredited)
Arthur Kendall
Arthur Kendall
as Henchman (uncredited)
Mike Lally
Mike Lally
as Barfly (uncredited)
Tex Lambert
Tex Lambert
as Barfly (uncredited)
James B. Leong
James B. Leong
as Burt (uncredited)
William McCarter
William McCarter
as Barfly (uncredited)
Tessie Murray
Tessie Murray
as Worker (uncredited)
Daniel Nunez
Daniel Nunez
as Barfly (uncredited)
Joe Phillips
Joe Phillips
as Barfly (uncredited)
Anthony Redondo
Anthony Redondo
as Barfly (uncredited)
Jim Reeves
Jim Reeves
as Barfly (uncredited)
Waclaw Rekwart
Waclaw Rekwart
as Barfly (uncredited)
Tony Roux
Tony Roux
as Bartender (uncredited)
Milan Smith
Milan Smith
as Barfly (uncredited)
Bob Terhune
Bob Terhune
as Burdette Henchman (uncredited)
Dave White
Dave White
as Barfly (uncredited)
Chalky Williams
Chalky Williams
as Barfly (uncredited)
Jack N. Young
Jack N. Young
as Gunman Shot by Dude in Saloon (uncredited)

Director

REVIEWS
NA

John Chard

The good outweighs the bad in Hawks macho movie. Filmed by Howard Hawks as a response to what he saw as none macho cinema in Gary Cooper's acclaimed High Noon, Rio Bravo has moments of brilliance that are sadly coupled with failings that are not Hawksian peccadilloes. The macho plot is simple but wholly effective as our heavily out numbered heroes (John Wayne, Dean Martin, Walter Brennan & Ricky Nelson) defend a jail house against a marauding mob trying to release an incarcerated friend. This alone sounds grand but the truth is, is that it takes the film nigh on close to 100 minutes to get to the adrenalin rush of the siege and even allowing for fine character development, the film is ponderous and even at times dangerously close to being self indulgent. The casting of Ricky Nelson was (as is widely regarded now) one of the worst of its kind in the history of cinema, he was there purely as a marketing ploy to garner the teen audience who were bopping to his pop tunes way back then. In fairness to Hawks, though, he saw straight away that this was out of Nelson's league and promptly (and cutely) gave him few lines of note to speak of. Also a big negative in the film is Angie Dickinson as the Female interest, she is raw and fresh out of water, and it shows, just like sushi on your plate. The bonuses with the film however keep the film talked about for ever more, Wayne is magnetic and believable, whilst Martin comes into his own as the drunk trying to do right, a superlative performance from him and one would think that is really down to Hawks' direction. The action sequences are of a high standard, while the tight intimate feel of the town is precious - and who can resist an ending that makes you want to go fire yer guns in the air? A very good film, but not a Western masterpiece by a long shot. 7/10

NA

Geronimo1967

Sherriff "John T." (John Wayne) is saddled with a drunken deputy "Dude" (Dean Martin) just at a time when local landowner "Burdette" (John Russell) is besieging the jail to extricate his murderous brother. Luckily, his friend "Pat" (Ward Bond) drives his wagon train through the town and he's got the gunslinging "Colorado" (Ricky Nelson) on board. Initially reluctant to get involved in someone else's fight, the turn of events change his mind providing Duke with a new ally. Then, when he thinks things can't get any worse, the stagecoach comes in with a dodgy wheel and wanted card-sharp "Feathers" (Angie Dickinson) - a woman who knows exactly which buttons to press to turn the sheriff into a gibbering wreck. With tensions mounting, we retreat to the safety of their prison for a sing-song with Martin and some acerbic antics from the real star of the film - Walter Brennan. He's the cantankerous old "Stumpy" who is tasked with keeping an eye on their prisoner whilst fixing their beans... Wayne and Martin work well together and though Nelson is a bit wooden, his eye candy value just about works - that and his lively rendition of "Cindy" that gets even Wayne's toes a-tapping. It all builds well to a lively and explosive denouement with some diney-mite and a perfectly aimed sawn-off shotgun topping this off nicely. It's a solid story with engaging characters and well worth a watch - even if westerns aren't necessarily your thing.