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Wild Rovers

Ross Bodine and Frank Post are cowhands on Walt Buckman's R-Bar-R ranch. The older Bodine is given to brooding about the day when he will be too old to ride the range, while the younger, ardent Post longs for a better life beyond wrangling cattle. After a fellow cowhand dies in a corral accident, Post proposes a path to that better life: robbing a bank. Bodine, though hesitant, joins the scheme, and the pair hatch a plan to rob the local bank. Their initial getaway seems to succeed, but Walt Buckman and his two sons, John and Paul, are furious at this betrayal by trusted employees. John and Paul chase Bodine and Post, determined to bring them to justice.

Director(s)

Blake Edwards

Cast & Crew

Tom Skerritt

Tom Skerritt

John Buckman

Joe Don Baker

Joe Don Baker

Paul Buckman

Dick Crockett

Dick Crockett

Sheriff's Deputy

Ed Bakey

Ed Bakey

Gambler

Boyd 'Red' Morgan

Boyd 'Red' Morgan

Sheepman

James Olson

James Olson

Joe Billings

Bennie E. Dobbins

Bennie E. Dobbins

Sheepman

Leora Dana

Leora Dana

Nell Buckman

Blake Edwards

Blake Edwards

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William Lucking

William Lucking

Ruff

Lee de Broux

Lee de Broux

Leaky

William Holden

William Holden

Ross Bodine

William Bryant

William Bryant

Hereford

Karl Malden

Karl Malden

Walter Buckman

Herb Tanney

Herb Tanney

Piano Player

Beatriz Monteil

Beatriz Monteil

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Rachel Roberts

Rachel Roberts

Maybell

Ted Gehring

Ted Gehring

Tucson Sheriff

Alan Carney

Alan Carney

Palace Bartender

Ryan O'Neal

Ryan O'Neal

Frank Post

Mary Jackson

Mary Jackson

Sada's Mother

Victor French

Victor French

Sheriff

Barbara Baldavin

Barbara Baldavin

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Jack Garner

Jack Garner

Cap Swilling

Moses Gunn

Moses Gunn

Ben

Geoffrey Edwards

Geoffrey Edwards

-

Sam Gilman

Sam Gilman

Hansen

Lynn Carlin

Lynn Carlin

Sada Billings

Jay W. MacIntosh

Jay W. MacIntosh

-

Hal Lynch

Hal Lynch

Mack

Bruno VeSota

Bruno VeSota

Cantina Bartender

Charles H. Gray

Charles H. Gray

Savage

Caitlin Wyles

Caitlin Wyles

Bodine's Girl

Ed Long

Ed Long

Cassidy

Patrick Sullivan Burke

Patrick Sullivan Burke

Palace Tenor

Bob Beck

Bob Beck

Bathhouse Attendant

Phyllis Douglas

Phyllis Douglas

-

Gloria Hill

Gloria Hill

-

Details

GenresAction, Western
Runtime2h 16 mins
Released on23 Jun 1971
Languageen
Produced InUnited States of America
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Reviews

John Chard

9/10

A reflective gem of an Oater. Wild Rovers is written and directed by Blake Edwards. It stars William Holden, Ryan O'Neal, Karl Malden, Joe Don Baker, Tom Skeritt and James Olsen. Music is scored by Jerry Goldsmith and the Panavision/Metrocolor cinematography is by Philip Lathrop. It's a Western that not only was butchered by cretinous execs at MGM, but has also proved to be divisive among the Western faithful - those that have seen the now thankfully available un-butchered version that is. Wild Rovers is one of those Oaters that is very much concerned with the changing of the West, where cowboys start to find themselves out of place with their era. Think Monte Walsh/Will Penny/Ride The High Country, with a bit of Wild Bunch/Butch & Sundance thrown in for good measure, and you get where Wild Rovers is at. Some critics were quick to accuse Edwards of merely copying Western films of past, but that is unfair. For this is a loving homage to those movies, also managing to be its own beast in the process. The tale is simply of two cowpokes, one aged and world weary, the other a young excitable buck, best friends who want more from life, so decide to rob the local bank and flee to Mexico to start afresh. Of course two men and destiny are quite often not the best of bed fellows... There's an elegiac beauty to Edwards' screenplay, with some of the scripted dialogue lyrical and poetic. And yet even though the harshness of the West, of the life of a cowboy, and the violence that is abound, is deftly pulsing within the story, there's plenty of dashes of humour as well. This is not a perpetually downbeat movie, slow moving? Absolutely, short on ripper action? Also correct. But as the themes of heroism and honour, of friendship and folly, are born out, and the many tender sequences draw you in, a pratfall is never far away. Technically it's high grade stuff. Holden is superb and he drags O'Neal along with him to avert what could have been a casting disaster. They make a fine and beguiling partnership and both men are turning in some of their best ever work here. The photography of the Arizona locations is outstanding, with Lathrop (Lonely Are the Brave) managing to add some ethereal beauty to the story. Goldsmith knocks out a triffic score, part blunderbuss Western excitement, part intimate pal to all and sundry. Skip any version that is under two hours, for that is an MGM crime. The MOD DVD comes complete with overture, intermission, entr'acte and exit music, while TCM shows the uncut version but minus the aforementioned roadshow segments. This is not a Western for those looking for a Magnificent Seven style actioner, for as fun as that great movie is, this is an altogether different and mature beast, and it deserves to be better known. 9/10

All Trailers

Wild Rovers (1971) Original Trailer [FHD]
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