Rating: NR
Genre:
Western
Release Date: 03/21/2000
SubTitles: English
Dubbed: English/French
Sound: DD1
Run Time: 126 Minutes
Flags: Mild Violence, Suitable for Children
Distributor/Studio: Paramount
Having struck pay dirt with his 1958 western
Rio Bravo,
Howard Hawks more or less remade the picture twice in the 1960s. The first of these rehashes was
El Dorado, with
Rio Bravo star
John Wayne back for more.
Wayne plays a gunfighter who rides into El Dorado to link up with his old pal, sheriff
Robert Mitchum ("It's the big one with the big two!" declared the film's advertisements).
Wayne has turned down a job with evil land baron
Ed Asner, who'd hoped to drive a family off the land that he needed for its water. That family, headed by
R.G. Armstrong, is convinced that
Wayne is working with
Asner; when
Armstrong's son
Johnny Crawford dies,
Wayne is held responsible, earning him a bullet in the spine from
Crawford's sister
Michele Carey. A year passes:
Wayne returns to El Dorado, in the company of his new saddle pal
James Caan. They find that
Asner is still up to his old tricks, and that
Mitchum has descended into alcoholism. Several plot twists and power shifts ensue, leading to the slam-bang climax, with the partially paralyzed
Wayne, the newly crippled
Mitchum (on crutches), and the concussion-suffering
Caan battling together to stave off
Asner's minions. The final long-shot, of
Wayne and
Mitchum limping off together arm-in-arm, is one of the most enduring images in the entire
Hawks canon. If they loved it twice they'll love it thrice: in 1969,
John Wayne and
Howard Hawks teamed up for a third
Rio Bravo derivation,
Rio Lobo--which, like the first two films, was scripted by
Leigh Brackett. Incidentally, that's famed artist
Olaf Weighorst (whose paintings appear in the title sequence) in a cameo as the gunsmith.
~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide