Chato's Land


1972

Brief Synopsis

An Apache half-breed on the run turns against his pursuers when they assault his wife.

Film Details

MPAA Rating
Genre
Western
Drama
Release Date
May 1972
Premiere Information
Los Angeles opening: 17 May 1972
Production Company
Scimitar Films Ltd.
Distribution Company
United Artists Corp.
Country
Spain and United States
Location
Almeria,Spain

Technical Specs

Sound
Mono
Color
Color (Technicolor)
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
2.35 : 1

Synopsis

While drinking at a bar, in 1870s New Mexico territory, bigoted sheriff Eli Saunders provokes Pardon Chato, a man of mixed white and Apache heritage. Resenting that the "redskin nigger" is being served, Eli pulls a gun on Chato, forcing the quiet man into a draw which results in Saunders' death. Saloon keeper and former soldier Quincey Whitmore, driven by misplaced anger over the Confederacy's defeat, gathers a thirteen-man posse to find and lynch Chato. While some, like racist Jubal Hooker and his sons Earl and Elias, are eager to join, Reverend Gavin Malechie only agrees to go to maintain his standing in the community. Also part of the group are stable owner Nye Buell, Harvey Lansing, George Dunn, Will Coop, Martin Hall, Scotsman Brady Logan, rancher Joshua Everette and Malechie's Yaqui scout, who begins tracking Chato. As they ride into the barren, butte-riddled desert, Quincey suspects that the "half breed" is not fleeing, but leading them into a desert wasteland. Meanwhile, the elusive Chato watches just a few miles ahead. Soon after, Will is injured when he falls from his horse, forcing George to escort his friend back to town. The next morning, the group discover their water bottles have been slashed during the night. Unnerved by Chato's fearless proximity and the sweltering heat, the group angrily bicker and then set fire to an abandoned Native American village to vent their frustration. Caught in a steep valley at midday, the posse is an easy target for Chato, who shoots two of the mounts and scares the remaining horses with a few shots, forcing the posse to round them up. That night, the men debate their conviction to pursue their quarry. Brady reminds them that he signed on for only one week, but Jubal, eager to kill, vows to continue till death. The next day, as vultures circle the horses' carcasses and water dwindles, Earl accuses the scout of stealing their supply and threatens to kill him, but Malechie vouches for the Yaqui. That night, Chato returns to his home, a stone house by a waterfall, where he is warmly greeted by his woman and child and a male comrade. The next day, while Chato and his comrade round up wild horses to break, the Hooker brothers convince serveral others to brutally rape Chato's woman and then tie her up. Chato's son, having secretly witnessed the scene, runs for his father, who returns to his house and sets fire to the corral, distracting the posse long enough for him to free his woman. When some of the men in the posse shoot Chato's comrade and then hang him upside down over a fire, Quincey, Brady and Malechie admit the rape and brutality is wrong but do nothing to stop the Indian from being killed. Although the men believe the murder will scare Chato away, the scout knows that the Apache will kill them for their treachery. Soon after, Earl, determined to take Chato's woman for himself, leaves the camp in search of her. While Quincey vows to continue hunting for Chato, he demands that the bloodthirsty Earl promise to leave the boy and his mother unharmed, to which Earl reluctantly agrees. Soon after, however, the men find Earl's lifeless body, his groin burnt black, and Jubal vows to kill them all. Hours later, when Quincey, wanting to avoid being targeted in the canyon, suggests taking the long way around, Jubal threatens to kill anyone who hampers the hunt, insisting they ride after Chato into the canyon. Martin is immediately shot by Chato and left behind in the scorching sun as the men flee out of Chato's range. Chato then takes Martin's water and gun. Soon after, the posse carefully retrace their steps to Martin and make camp. The next morning, after Jubal insists that they leave the dying man and the others refuse, Earl pulls his gun out to shoot Martin, who coincidently takes his last breath. As they dig the grave, Chato shoots at the group, killing the scout and injuring Josh, who warns that Chato will kill them all. Quincey then orders the group to return home, but Jubal holds Quincey at gunpoint until he agrees to continue the hunt. Soon after, when Harvey and Josh try to leave, Elias prepares to shoot them, but Quincey orders him to stand down. Filled with sadistic rage, Jubal shoots Quincey while Earl kills Josh and runs after Harvey. As Quincey draws his last breath, he claims that during the war Jubal's actions would have incited revenge, but Quincey is now resolved not to hold any grudge. Meanwhile, Chato shoots and scalps Harvey. When Elias discovers the body, Chato throws a poisonous snake at him. Bitten, Elias writhes in pain as Chato takes one final shot. Back at camp, Malechie and Brady, who are being held at gunpoint by Jubal, are covering Quincey's body with rocks, when Brady takes a stone and bludgeons Jubal to death. Although they have escaped Jubal's wrath, Brady and Malechie are far from prepared for the treacherous journey home. After one of their two remaining horses dies from thirst, Brady collapses from heat exhaustion. That evening, Chato shoots Malechie, who falls into the campfire. Weak and disoriented, Brady watches helplessly as Malechie's face burns. The next morning, the Scotsman tries to continue, but soon walks into Chato, who watches impassively as the exhausted man flees into the vast desert terrain and certain death.

Film Details

MPAA Rating
Genre
Western
Drama
Release Date
May 1972
Premiere Information
Los Angeles opening: 17 May 1972
Production Company
Scimitar Films Ltd.
Distribution Company
United Artists Corp.
Country
Spain and United States
Location
Almeria,Spain

Technical Specs

Sound
Mono
Color
Color (Technicolor)
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
2.35 : 1

Articles

TCM Remembers Charles Bronson - Sept. 13th - TCM Remembers Charles Bronson this Saturday, Sept. 13th 2003.


Turner Classic Movies will honor the passing of Hollywood action star Charles Bronson on Saturday, Sept. 13, with a four-film tribute.

After years of playing supporting roles in numerous Western, action and war films, including THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN (1960, 8 p.m.) and THE DIRTY DOZEN (1967, 1:15 a.m.), Bronson finally achieved worldwide stardom as a leading man during the late 1960s and early 1970s. TCM's tribute will also include THE GREAT ESCAPE (1963, 10:15 p.m.), Bronson's second teaming with Steve McQueen and James Coburn, and will conclude with FROM NOON TILL THREE (1976, 4 a.m.), co-starring Jill Ireland.

TCM will alter it's prime-time schedule this Saturday, Sept. 13th. The following changes will take place:

8:00 PM - The Magnificent Seven (1960)
10:15 PM - The Great Escape (1963)
1:15 AM - The Dirty Dozen (1967)
4:00 AM - From Noon Till Three (1976)

Charles Bronson, 1921-2003

Charles Bronson, the tough, stony-faced actor who was one of the most recognizable action heroes in cinema, died on August 30 in Los Angeles from complications from pneumonia. He was 81.

He was born Charles Buchinsky on November 3, 1921 in Ehrenfeld, Pennsylvania, one of fifteen children born to Lithuanian immigrant parents. Although he was the only child to have graduated high school, he worked in the coalmines to support his family until he joined the army to serve as a tail gunner during World War II. He used his money from the G.I. Bill to study art in Philadelphia, but while working as a set designer for a Philadelphia theater troupe, he landed a few small roles in some productions and immediately found acting to be the craft for him.

Bronson took his new career turn seriously, moved to California, and enrolled for acting classes at The Pasadena Playhouse. An instructor there recommended him to director Henry Hathaway for a movie role and the result was his debut in Hathaway's You're in the Navy Now (1951). He secured more bit parts in films like John Sturges' drama The People Against O'Hara (1951), and Joseph Newman's Bloodhounds of Broadway (1952). More substantial roles came in George Cukor's Pat and Mike (1952, where he is beaten up by Katharine Hepburn!); Andre de Toth's classic 3-D thriller House of Wax (1953, as Vincent Price's mute assistant, Igor); and De Toth's fine low-budget noir Crime Wave (1954).

Despite his formidable presence, his leads were confined to a string of B pictures like Gene Fowler's Gang War; and Roger Corman's tight Machine Gun Kelly (both 1958). Following his own television series, Man With a Camera (1958-60), Bronson had his first taste of film stardom when director Sturges casted him as Bernardo, one of the The Magnificent Seven (1960). Bronson displayed a powerful charisma, comfortably holding his own in a high-powered cast that included Yul Brynner and Steve McQueen. A few more solid roles followed in Sturges' The Great Escape (1963), and Robert Aldrich's classic war picture The Dirty Dozen (1967), before Bronson made the decision to follow the European trail of other American actors like Clint Eastwood and Lee Van Cleef. It was there that his hard, taciturn screen personae exploded in full force. In 1968 alone, he had four hit films: Henri Verneuil's Guns for San Sebastian, Buzz Kulik's Villa Rides, Jean Herman's Adieu l'ami which was a smash in France; and the classic Sergio Leone spaghetti Western Once Upon a Time in the West.

These films established Bronson as a huge box-office draw in Europe, and with some more stylish hits like Rene Clement's Rider on the Rain (1969), and Terence Young's Cold Sweat (1971) he soon became one of the most popular film stars in the world. It wasn't easy for Bronson to translate that success back in his homeland. In fact, his first few films on his return stateside: Michael Winners' Chato's Land, and The Mechanic (both 1972), and Richard Fleischer's Mr. Majestyk (1973), were surprisingly routine pictures. It wasn't until he collaborated with Winner again for the controversial Death Wish (1974), an urban revenge thriller about an architect who turns vigilante when his wife and daughter are raped, did he notch his first stateside hit. The next few years would be a fruitful period for Bronson as he rode on a wave of fine films and commercial success: a depression era streetfighter in Walter Hill's terrific, if underrated Hard Times (1975); Frank Gilroy's charming offbeat black comedy From Noon Till Three (1976, the best of many teamings with his second wife, Jill Ireland); Tom Gries tense Breakheart Pass; and Don Siegel's cold-war thriller Telefon (1977).

Sadly, Bronson could not keep up the momentum of good movies, and by the '80s he was starring in a string of forgettable films like Ten to Midnight (1983), The Evil That Men Do (1984), and Murphy's Law (1986, all directed by J. Lee Thompson). A notable exception to all that tripe was John Mackenzie's fine telefilm Act of Vengeance (1986), where he earned critical acclaim in the role of United Mine Workers official Jack Yablonski. Although he more or less fell into semi-retirement in the '90s, his performances in Sean Penn's The Indian Runner (1991); and the title role of Michael Anderson's The Sea Wolf (1993) proved to many that Bronson had the makings of a fine character actor. He was married to actress Jill Ireland from 1968 until her death from breast cancer in 1990. He is survived by his third wife Kim Weeks, six children, and two grandchildren.

by Michael T. Toole
Tcm Remembers Charles Bronson - Sept. 13Th - Tcm Remembers Charles Bronson This Saturday, Sept. 13Th 2003.

TCM Remembers Charles Bronson - Sept. 13th - TCM Remembers Charles Bronson this Saturday, Sept. 13th 2003.

Turner Classic Movies will honor the passing of Hollywood action star Charles Bronson on Saturday, Sept. 13, with a four-film tribute. After years of playing supporting roles in numerous Western, action and war films, including THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN (1960, 8 p.m.) and THE DIRTY DOZEN (1967, 1:15 a.m.), Bronson finally achieved worldwide stardom as a leading man during the late 1960s and early 1970s. TCM's tribute will also include THE GREAT ESCAPE (1963, 10:15 p.m.), Bronson's second teaming with Steve McQueen and James Coburn, and will conclude with FROM NOON TILL THREE (1976, 4 a.m.), co-starring Jill Ireland. TCM will alter it's prime-time schedule this Saturday, Sept. 13th. The following changes will take place: 8:00 PM - The Magnificent Seven (1960) 10:15 PM - The Great Escape (1963) 1:15 AM - The Dirty Dozen (1967) 4:00 AM - From Noon Till Three (1976) Charles Bronson, 1921-2003 Charles Bronson, the tough, stony-faced actor who was one of the most recognizable action heroes in cinema, died on August 30 in Los Angeles from complications from pneumonia. He was 81. He was born Charles Buchinsky on November 3, 1921 in Ehrenfeld, Pennsylvania, one of fifteen children born to Lithuanian immigrant parents. Although he was the only child to have graduated high school, he worked in the coalmines to support his family until he joined the army to serve as a tail gunner during World War II. He used his money from the G.I. Bill to study art in Philadelphia, but while working as a set designer for a Philadelphia theater troupe, he landed a few small roles in some productions and immediately found acting to be the craft for him. Bronson took his new career turn seriously, moved to California, and enrolled for acting classes at The Pasadena Playhouse. An instructor there recommended him to director Henry Hathaway for a movie role and the result was his debut in Hathaway's You're in the Navy Now (1951). He secured more bit parts in films like John Sturges' drama The People Against O'Hara (1951), and Joseph Newman's Bloodhounds of Broadway (1952). More substantial roles came in George Cukor's Pat and Mike (1952, where he is beaten up by Katharine Hepburn!); Andre de Toth's classic 3-D thriller House of Wax (1953, as Vincent Price's mute assistant, Igor); and De Toth's fine low-budget noir Crime Wave (1954). Despite his formidable presence, his leads were confined to a string of B pictures like Gene Fowler's Gang War; and Roger Corman's tight Machine Gun Kelly (both 1958). Following his own television series, Man With a Camera (1958-60), Bronson had his first taste of film stardom when director Sturges casted him as Bernardo, one of the The Magnificent Seven (1960). Bronson displayed a powerful charisma, comfortably holding his own in a high-powered cast that included Yul Brynner and Steve McQueen. A few more solid roles followed in Sturges' The Great Escape (1963), and Robert Aldrich's classic war picture The Dirty Dozen (1967), before Bronson made the decision to follow the European trail of other American actors like Clint Eastwood and Lee Van Cleef. It was there that his hard, taciturn screen personae exploded in full force. In 1968 alone, he had four hit films: Henri Verneuil's Guns for San Sebastian, Buzz Kulik's Villa Rides, Jean Herman's Adieu l'ami which was a smash in France; and the classic Sergio Leone spaghetti Western Once Upon a Time in the West. These films established Bronson as a huge box-office draw in Europe, and with some more stylish hits like Rene Clement's Rider on the Rain (1969), and Terence Young's Cold Sweat (1971) he soon became one of the most popular film stars in the world. It wasn't easy for Bronson to translate that success back in his homeland. In fact, his first few films on his return stateside: Michael Winners' Chato's Land, and The Mechanic (both 1972), and Richard Fleischer's Mr. Majestyk (1973), were surprisingly routine pictures. It wasn't until he collaborated with Winner again for the controversial Death Wish (1974), an urban revenge thriller about an architect who turns vigilante when his wife and daughter are raped, did he notch his first stateside hit. The next few years would be a fruitful period for Bronson as he rode on a wave of fine films and commercial success: a depression era streetfighter in Walter Hill's terrific, if underrated Hard Times (1975); Frank Gilroy's charming offbeat black comedy From Noon Till Three (1976, the best of many teamings with his second wife, Jill Ireland); Tom Gries tense Breakheart Pass; and Don Siegel's cold-war thriller Telefon (1977). Sadly, Bronson could not keep up the momentum of good movies, and by the '80s he was starring in a string of forgettable films like Ten to Midnight (1983), The Evil That Men Do (1984), and Murphy's Law (1986, all directed by J. Lee Thompson). A notable exception to all that tripe was John Mackenzie's fine telefilm Act of Vengeance (1986), where he earned critical acclaim in the role of United Mine Workers official Jack Yablonski. Although he more or less fell into semi-retirement in the '90s, his performances in Sean Penn's The Indian Runner (1991); and the title role of Michael Anderson's The Sea Wolf (1993) proved to many that Bronson had the makings of a fine character actor. He was married to actress Jill Ireland from 1968 until her death from breast cancer in 1990. He is survived by his third wife Kim Weeks, six children, and two grandchildren. by Michael T. Toole

Chato's Land


Born of Lithuanian immigrants named Bunchinsky, Charles Bronson's unique craggy looks (he once suggested he resembled "a rock quarry someone has dynamited") often led him, by the peculiar logic of Hollywood, to play a number of ethnic characters, notably Hispanics and Italians (including the notorious Mafia boss Joe Valachi). But whatever the role, he was most often a man of very few words who resolved most problems with his fists or a weapon. In Chato's Land (1972) he played an Indian (not for the first or last time) in one of a wave of revisionist Westerns that came out in the 1960s and '70s. Taking a much more cynical approach to Hollywood's once mythic view of the American West, movies like Soldier Blue (1970) and Cheyenne Autumn (1964, directed by the great Western mythmaker himself, John Ford) attempted to show the injustices visited upon Native Americans in the conquest of the continent.

Chato is an Apache - usually depicted as the most warlike of tribes - who kills a bigoted White sheriff and is pursued by a posse. But when members of the posse rape Chato's wife, he turns the table on them, and the pursued becomes a vengeful pursuer. Even in more traditional Westerns from Hollywood's golden age, posses are often depicted negatively as a vigilante force with the potential to become a bloodthirsty mob, however just or necessary their cause may be. In this story, the posse is irredeemably nasty, given to much squabbling and sniping at each other, and the mechanics of the plot call for the viewers to cheer as the Apache picks them off one by one.

Chato's Land was British producer/director Michael Winner's second Western. His first was a Burt Lancaster vehicle, Lawman (1971), also scripted by Gerald Wilson. The two teamed again, along with Bronson, for The Stone Killer (1973). Bronson and Winner worked together four more times, including The Mechanic (1972) and the first three Death Wish movies (1974, 1982, 1985), hugely successful pictures in which Bronson's laconic, vengeful violence was put into a bleak contemporary urban setting. The series made the actor, already middle-aged, a box office star for the first time in his career.

Chato's Land was shot in Spain, a location that became a frequent substitute for the American West following the success of the Italian-made "Spaghetti Westerns," which starred Bronson's rival for similar tight-lipped roles, Clint Eastwood. The undisputed master of that sub-genre, Sergio Leone, directed Bronson to great effect as the harmonica-playing seeker of vengeance in one of the most powerful and intelligent revisionist tales, Once Upon a Time in the West (1968). Bronson made several other Westerns, but few reached the classic status of the Leone film or Bronson's earlier foray into the genre, The Magnificent Seven (1960).

Aside from any other similarities to Spaghetti Westerns, Chato's Land - with a cast featuring Bronson, Jack Palance and Simon Oakland - certainly rivals such films as The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly (1966) for having one of the roughest looking casts on record.

Hollywood did manage to cast Bronson in roles a little closer to his true ethnicity, in such movies as You're in the Navy Now (1951), as a character named Wascylewski; Diplomatic Courier (1952), in an uncredited bit as a Russian; and most bizarrely as Igor in House of Wax (1953). In all those pictures, he was still billed as either Buchinski or Buchinsky. He changed his name, he claimed, to avoid any taint during the Red Scare of the 1950s. But it did little to change his image. He once said he wished he could do a role that required nothing more of him than holding a cocktail and leaning against a mantelpiece. But when he died in August 2003, it was the man of action that audiences remembered and loved.

Producer/Director: Michael Winner
Screenplay: Gerald Wilson
Cinematography: Robert Paynter
Editing: Frederick Wilson
Art Direction: Manolo Mampaso
Original Music: Jerry Fielding
Cast: Charles Bronson (Pardon Chato), Jack Palance (Quincey Whitmore), Richard Basehart (Nye Buell), James Whitmore (Joshua Everette), Simon Oakland (Jubal Hooker), Ralph Waite (Elias Hooker).
C-100m.

by Rob Nixon

Chato's Land

Born of Lithuanian immigrants named Bunchinsky, Charles Bronson's unique craggy looks (he once suggested he resembled "a rock quarry someone has dynamited") often led him, by the peculiar logic of Hollywood, to play a number of ethnic characters, notably Hispanics and Italians (including the notorious Mafia boss Joe Valachi). But whatever the role, he was most often a man of very few words who resolved most problems with his fists or a weapon. In Chato's Land (1972) he played an Indian (not for the first or last time) in one of a wave of revisionist Westerns that came out in the 1960s and '70s. Taking a much more cynical approach to Hollywood's once mythic view of the American West, movies like Soldier Blue (1970) and Cheyenne Autumn (1964, directed by the great Western mythmaker himself, John Ford) attempted to show the injustices visited upon Native Americans in the conquest of the continent. Chato is an Apache - usually depicted as the most warlike of tribes - who kills a bigoted White sheriff and is pursued by a posse. But when members of the posse rape Chato's wife, he turns the table on them, and the pursued becomes a vengeful pursuer. Even in more traditional Westerns from Hollywood's golden age, posses are often depicted negatively as a vigilante force with the potential to become a bloodthirsty mob, however just or necessary their cause may be. In this story, the posse is irredeemably nasty, given to much squabbling and sniping at each other, and the mechanics of the plot call for the viewers to cheer as the Apache picks them off one by one. Chato's Land was British producer/director Michael Winner's second Western. His first was a Burt Lancaster vehicle, Lawman (1971), also scripted by Gerald Wilson. The two teamed again, along with Bronson, for The Stone Killer (1973). Bronson and Winner worked together four more times, including The Mechanic (1972) and the first three Death Wish movies (1974, 1982, 1985), hugely successful pictures in which Bronson's laconic, vengeful violence was put into a bleak contemporary urban setting. The series made the actor, already middle-aged, a box office star for the first time in his career. Chato's Land was shot in Spain, a location that became a frequent substitute for the American West following the success of the Italian-made "Spaghetti Westerns," which starred Bronson's rival for similar tight-lipped roles, Clint Eastwood. The undisputed master of that sub-genre, Sergio Leone, directed Bronson to great effect as the harmonica-playing seeker of vengeance in one of the most powerful and intelligent revisionist tales, Once Upon a Time in the West (1968). Bronson made several other Westerns, but few reached the classic status of the Leone film or Bronson's earlier foray into the genre, The Magnificent Seven (1960). Aside from any other similarities to Spaghetti Westerns, Chato's Land - with a cast featuring Bronson, Jack Palance and Simon Oakland - certainly rivals such films as The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly (1966) for having one of the roughest looking casts on record. Hollywood did manage to cast Bronson in roles a little closer to his true ethnicity, in such movies as You're in the Navy Now (1951), as a character named Wascylewski; Diplomatic Courier (1952), in an uncredited bit as a Russian; and most bizarrely as Igor in House of Wax (1953). In all those pictures, he was still billed as either Buchinski or Buchinsky. He changed his name, he claimed, to avoid any taint during the Red Scare of the 1950s. But it did little to change his image. He once said he wished he could do a role that required nothing more of him than holding a cocktail and leaning against a mantelpiece. But when he died in August 2003, it was the man of action that audiences remembered and loved. Producer/Director: Michael Winner Screenplay: Gerald Wilson Cinematography: Robert Paynter Editing: Frederick Wilson Art Direction: Manolo Mampaso Original Music: Jerry Fielding Cast: Charles Bronson (Pardon Chato), Jack Palance (Quincey Whitmore), Richard Basehart (Nye Buell), James Whitmore (Joshua Everette), Simon Oakland (Jubal Hooker), Ralph Waite (Elias Hooker). C-100m. by Rob Nixon

Quotes

I don't want to bury him here. It's an empty place...empty...nothing to remember.
- Jubal Hooker

Trivia

Notes

According to an November 18, 1970 Variety article, Marlon Brando was originally considered for a lead role. Although set in New Mexico, Chato's Land was shot on location in Almeria, Spain by British filmmaker Michael Winner.
       According to the Box Office review, Winner, who insisted on authenticity, made the cast grow their own beards and mustaches, instead of using false ones. When, in a June 4, 1972 The Sunday Times article, a critic raised the issue of whether the numerous horses portrayed as injured and killed in the film were actually harmed during the film's shooting in Spain, Winner assured the readers of The Sunday Times in a follow-up letter that the "falling" horses were unharmed and any dead horses were animals already dying, which he purchased from the local slaughterhouse. The Box Office review mistakenly listed the running time as 110 minutes.
       Chato's Land was the first Charles Bronson film directed by Winner. Shortly after completing the picture, Winner directed Bronson in The Mechanic (1972, see below), which was shot primarily in Los Angeles. They collaborated on four additional films, including The Stone Killer (1973) and the enormously popular Death Wish (1974), Death Wish II (1982) and Death Wish III (1985).

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States Winter January 1, 1971

Released in United States Winter January 1, 1971