The Brave Bulls

Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Robert Rossen
Mel Ferrer
Miroslava
Anthony Quinn
Eugene Iglesias
José Torvay
Film Details
Technical Specs

Synopsis
In the small village of Cuenca, Mexico, bull ring owner Eladio Gómez, desperate over his faltering business, lies to the townspeople that he has secured a contract with renowned matador LuÃs Bello. While Eladio wonders how to raise the money necessary to bring LuÃs to the village, the matador undergoes a crisis in confidence when he is gored while in the ring, as his manager and best friend, Raul Fuentes, watches. Although not seriously injured, LuÃs demands the rest of his national tour be canceled and retires to his country home. There, LuÃs recovers quickly, although he is plagued by nightmares and frustration at being the sole support for his family and a multitude of servants. LuÃs' younger brother Pepe, a rising toreador, asks LuÃs to have Raul get him a bullfighting contract and LuÃs promises to try. Growing restless with his self-enforced sabbatical, LuÃs decides to resume his tour in Mexico City. After LuÃs and Raul leave in their expensive car, Pepe and his friends start off on foot to the city to watch LuÃs' fight and to push Raul for a contract. In Mexico City, Raul notices LuÃs' tension, which heightens when they learn of the fatal goring of a star matador. LuÃs' "cuadrilla," who assist and protect him in the ring, also notice his anxiety, but overlook it and make encouraging remarks. That evening, LuÃs picks a fight with Raul, criticizing his acquaintance with the wealthy and demanding to know how his winnings are spent. Later at a local bar, LuÃs drinks heavily and is surprised when Raul and several socialites, including the beautiful Linda de Calderon, arrive. The next day outside the bull ring Eladio pleads with Raul to talk LuÃs into fighting at Cuenca. Raul suggests that if Pepe be allowed on the bill he might consider it. Raul later casually mentions to LuÃs fighting at Cuenca, but the matador dismisses the possibility, recalling the rough conditions and poor class of bulls used in village rings. When Eladio stops by, however, LuÃs relents, but insists that he will only agree if the very best Santa Marca bulls are used and Pepe be allowed to fill the lower half of the bill. Despite the enormous personal cost to him, Eladio agrees. LuÃs asks Raul about Linda and she invited to accompany them as LuÃs goes through the pre-fight ceremonies. That evening, Eladio goes to Santin, where the finest ranch of Santa Marca bulls is found, but can only afford three animals. The owner offers to throw in Brujo, a powerful bull he cannot sell because he has whiskers and no tail. The following day, the national radio broadcasts LuÃs' return to the ring, which is filled to capacity. The crowd is stunned and then angered when the great Bello responds with fear and trepidation in the ring, sacrificing his trademark style to remain out of range of the bull's horns. LuÃs is then booed heartily when the picadors tire the bull excessively before the kill, which he botches. The next matador rouses the crowd, but is gored to death, which disturbs LuÃs further. When the crowd jeers him upon leaving the building, LuÃs attacks several in the crowd until Raul subdues him. That evening meeting with reporters, Raul tries to downplay the fight and its aftermath, but LuÃs bitterly remarks on the hardness of the public. Later, LuÃs seeks solace with Linda and recounts his poor childhood and the effect bullfighting had upon him as a young boy. When LuÃs declares he owes everything to Raul, however, Linda is skeptical. The next morning Raul finds Linda still at LuÃs' hotel and reminds her of their date. When she informs him that she is growing serious about LuÃs, Raul cautions her to leave the bullfighter alone and Linda accuses the manager of being a manipulator. Raul firmly tells Linda that she will always belong to him. A couple of days later in Guadalajara, Pepe approaches a moody LuÃs before the next fight with the news that Raul was killed in an auto accident on the way to meet them. When Pepe admits that Linda was with Raul and also killed, LuÃs flees, ending up in a small cantina where he goes on a wild, drunken binge. Pepe fields inquiries from reporters curious about why LuÃs missed his fight, and assures Eladio over the phone that LuÃs will make the Cuenca contest scheduled for the coming weekend. After a couple of days, Pepe and the "cuadrilla" finally locate LuÃs and prepare him for the fight in Cuenca. LuÃs, Pepe and the men arrive in the village to great acclaim and celebration, but the boisterous night-long activities make it difficult for LuÃs to relax. The next day, during the first round of the one-on-one contest with Pepe, LuÃs is nervous and fearful, and when knocked down by the bull, retreats in panic behind the wooden barrier as the crowd hoots their derision. LuÃs eventually kills the bull through constant jeers. Pepe then takes the ring and stirs the fans with his flair, but when he is gored in the thigh before the kill, the crowd boos when Lúis returns to make Pepe's kill. Learning that Pepe is only mildly injured, LuÃs then faces Brujo and abruptly realizes that if he allows himself to continue to be dominated by his fears, he is throwing away his life. He salutes Brujo and gradually displays the style and bravado that made his reputation. Although grazed and tossed by Brujo, LuÃs makes a clean kill, and he and Pepe hobble from the ring to the crowd's roaring approval

Director

Robert Rossen
Cast

Mel Ferrer
Miroslava

Anthony Quinn
Eugene Iglesias

José Torvay
Charlita
José LuÃs Vásquez "mexicano"
Alfonso Alvirez
Alfredo Aguilar
Francisco Balderas
Felipe Mota
Pepe López
José Meza
Vicente Cárdenas "maera"
Manuel Orozco
Esteve Dominguez
Silviano Sanchez
Francisco Reiguera
E. Arozamena
LuÃs Corona
Esther LaquÃn
M. Du P. Castillo
Juan Assael
Delfino Morales
Rita Conde
Ramón Diaz Meza
Fanny Schiller
Fernando Del Valle
Zacatecas Ll
Ignacio Carmona
Julian Rivero
Margarita Martin
George Nardelli
Cosmo Sardo
Crew
Henry Batista
John Bright
Henry Brill
José B. Carles
Jaime Contreras
Floyd Crosby
Lodge Cunningham
James Fields
Dr. Alfonso Gaona
Antonio Guerrero Tello
James Wong Howe
John Livadary
Jean Louis
Shirley Miller
Sam Nelson
Cary Odell
Robert Parrish
Nicolás De La Rosa
Robert Rossen
Luis Sánchez Tello
Donald Starling
Frank [a.] Tuttle

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Film Details
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Articles
The Brave Bulls

The Brave Bulls
Quotes
Trivia
Filmed in the spring of 1950, but not released until the following year because producer-director Robert Rossen was under investigation by the House Un-American Activities Committee.
Robert Rossen selected documentary cinematographer Floyd Crosby because he wanted a "realistic" look for this film. This would become Crosby's first mainstream project.
Notes
An April 1950 Hollywood Reporter news item and Hollywood Reporter production charts indicate that Robert Parrish was in Mexico during production of The Brave Bulls, assisting in early editing, although Henry Batista and Donald Starling receive onscreen credit as the film's editors. Columbia borrowed Mel Ferrer from Howard Hughes's company for the production. Eight members of the cast were actual banderilleros and picadores and were credited onscreen as Members of the Association de Banderilleros y Picadores, Mexico D.F. As noted in the onscreen credits, the film was shot on location in and around Mexico City, including the famous bullfighting ring, The Plaza, and San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. The Brave Bulls marked the American film debut of Czech-born actress Miroslava Stern, who was billed as Miroslava throughout her successful film career in Mexico.

Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States 1951
Released in United States 1951