Movie Background

Tell Them Willie Boy Is Here

During a confrontation with Lola's disapproving father, Willie Boy, a Native American man, kills him in self-defense, triggering a sweeping manhunt led by Deputy Sheriff Christopher Cooper.

Director(s)

George Tyne

Joseph E. Kenney

Ted Swanson

Abraham Polonsky

Cast & Crew

Katharine Ross

Katharine Ross

Lola

Charles Aidman

Charles Aidman

Benby

Erik Holland

Erik Holland

Digger (as Eric Holland)

Robert Redford

Robert Redford

Cooper

John Vernon

John Vernon

Hacker

Robert Lipton

Robert Lipton

Newcombe

Lee de Broux

Lee de Broux

Meathead

Lou Frizzell

Lou Frizzell

Station Agent

Robert Blake

Robert Blake

Willie

Charles McGraw

Charles McGraw

Wilson

George Tyne

George Tyne

-

Joseph E. Kenney

Joseph E. Kenney

-

Susan Clark

Susan Clark

Liz

Shelly Novack

Shelly Novack

Finney

Abraham Polonsky

Abraham Polonsky

-

Lloyd Gough

Lloyd Gough

Dexter

Barry Sullivan

Barry Sullivan

Calvet

Garry Walberg

Garry Walberg

Dr. Mills

Ned Romero

Ned Romero

Tom

John Wheeler

John Wheeler

Newman

Ted Swanson

Ted Swanson

-

Jerry Velasco

Jerry Velasco

Chino

Wayne Sutherlin

Wayne Sutherlin

Harry

Jerome Raphael

Jerome Raphael

Salesman

Details

GenresWestern, Drama
Runtime1h 38 mins
Released on31 Oct 1969
Languageen
Produced InUnited States of America
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Reviews

Wuchak

5/10

Great desert scenery, modern filmmaking and great cast, but it absurdly rewrites history Loosely based on the true story of the West’s last famous manhunt in 1909, a Chemehuevi-Paiute Indian named Willie Boy (Robert Blake) kills a man in self-defense and escapes into the desert wilderness with an Indian woman (Katharine Ross). They are pursued by a posse led by Sheriff Cooper (Robert Redford). Meanwhile, residents of the region are preparing for a visit from President Taft. Redford was in his prime after his breakthrough success with “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid” (1969) and the outstanding “Downhill Racer” (1969). “Tell Them Willie Boy Is Here” came out next and was critically acclaimed. While a modest hit, it failed to achieve the success of the other two films, especially “Butch Cassidy.” It has since fallen into nigh obscurity and is almost never mentioned in ‘Best Western’ lists. Along with “Hombre” (1967) and “Butch Cassidy,” and soon-to-come Westerns like “The Missouri Breaks” (1976), “Willie Boy” ranks with the breakthrough ‘modern’ Westerns of the 60s-70s. The movie is polished and hardly seems to have dated after all these decades. The director was an admitted communist who was blacklisted by the McCarthy squad in the late 40s and “Willie Boy” was his big return to filmmaking. The cast is great, also including the stunning Susan Clark as a patronizingly liberal white missionary, and the desert scenery is spectacular. But the first half is dull and the story doesn’t perk up until the 50-minute mark. Still, this is a worthwhile late 60’s Western if you like the style of the others noted. What lowers my grade is the LIEberal rewriting of the historical facts in order to gel with the Indian-as-tragic-victim theme that was fashionable at the time. The real Willie Boy was in his mid-20s and kidnapped the 15 year-old Isoleta, his second time, after murdering her father in his sleep. Willie Boy used Isoleta as a pack animal and, when she couldn't walk any more, shot her in the back. Her clothes were shreds while her skin had swellings & bruises and there were cactus needles in her body. Her shoes were worn out and her feet bloodied. Willie Boy ultimately committed suicide with his last bullet and his corpse was found after the part-Native posse chased him for eleven days and over 500 miles in the picturesque wasteland. In short, Willie Boy was a piece of sheet who executed two of his own; and yet this movie has the audacity to make him out to be tragic figure oppressed by righteous authorities. Why Sure! The film runs 1 hour, 37 minutes and was shot in the deserts of S. Cal (Banning, Pioneertown, Joshua Tree, Riverside, Palm Springs, Whitewater and Lake Sherwood). GRADE: C

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