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Rio Lobo

Rio Lobo

  • Status: Released
  • 01-04-1970
  • Runtime: 116 min
  • Score: 6.4
  • Vote count: 268

After the Civil War, a former Union colonel searches for the two traitors whose perfidy led to the loss of a close friend.

John Wayne

Col. Cord McNally

Jorge Rivero

Capt. Pierre Cordona

Jennifer O'Neill

Shasta Delaney

Jack Elam

Phillips

Christopher Mitchum

Sgt. Tuscarora Phillips

Victor French

Ketcham

Susana Dosamantes

Maria Carmen

Sherry Lansing

Amelita

David Huddleston

Dr. Ivor Jones

Mike Henry

Rio Lobo Sheriff 'Blue Tom' Hendricks

Bill Williams

Blackthorne Sheriff Pat Cronin

Jim Davis

Riley

Dean Smith

Bide

Robert Donner

Whitey Carter

George Plimpton

George, Whitey's 4th Henchman

Edward Faulkner

Lt. Harris

Peter Jason

Lt. Ned Forsythe

Chuck Courtney

Chuck, Whitey's 2nd Henchman

Robert Rothwell

Whitey's 3rd Henchman

Don 'Red' Barry

Feeny - Bartender (uncredited)

Sondra Currie

Blackthorne Prostitute (uncredited)

Chuck Hayward

(uncredited)

Conrad Hool

Bart (uncredited)

Lance Hool

Picket (uncredited)

John Hudkins

Rio Lobo Deputy (uncredited)

Michael Jeffers

Barfly in Blackthorne (uncredited)

Frank Kennedy

Minor Role (uncredited)

Richard LaMarr

Man in Army Post Saloon (uncredited)

John McKee

Rio Lobo Deputy (uncredited)

Boyd 'Red' Morgan

Train Engineer (uncredited)

William H. O'Brien

Man in Army Post Saloon (uncredited)

Gregg Palmer

Pete - Henchman (uncredited)

Jim Prejean

Union Soldier (uncredited)

Rudy Robbins

Man (uncredited)

Chuck Roberson

Corporal in Baggage Car (uncredited)

Danny Sands

Man Delivering Message to Jail (uncredited)

Cap Somers

Card Player (uncredited)

Bob Steele

Rio Lobo Deputy (uncredited)

Tommy Tedesco

Guitar Player in Opening Credits (uncredited)

Ethan Wayne

Boy (uncredited)

Hank Worden

Hank - Hotel Clerk (uncredited)

John Chard

Don't say comfortable eh? Out of Paramount Pictures, Rio Lobo is directed and produced by Howard Hawks (the last film he would direct) and stars John Wayne, Jorge Rivero, Jeniffer O'Neill, Jack Elam & Christopher Mitchum. It's written by Leigh Brackett & Burton Wohl, musically scored by Jerry Goldsmith and photographed by William H. Clothier on location at Cuernavaca, Mexico & Tuscon, Arizona. It's the third film in a loose trilogy by Hawks & Wayne that follows Rio Bravo (1959) & El Dorado (1966). Plot follows Wayne as Union officer Cord McNally who loses gold shipments (via the railway) to Confederate guerrillas led by Pierre Cordona (Rivero) & Tuscarora Phillips (Mitchum). It's the start of a relationship that will see all parties end up in Rio Lobo, Texas, where a traitor and a despotic sheriff are in their midst. Rio Lobo is easily the weakest Western that Hawks made with Duke Wayne. He himself would say that he didn't like the film, felt it wasn't any good, while Wayne himself was quoted as saying that he had already made the film twice before. Almost everything about Rio Lobo is tired, from the formula of the story to Wayne sleepwalking thru a role that held no challenge, it's a poor send off for one of America's finest directors. The script is solid enough, with many Hawksian themes evident; and it's nice to see the three lady characters be important to the story, but the cast put around Wayne are poor and out of their depth and this rubs off on the normally professional Wayne who finds he has nothing to act off of. It's not a total stinker, tho, certainly Clothier's photography and Goldsmith's score are worthy of investing time with, and the lead off sequence involving the train robbery is well put together and stirs the adrenalin. Sadly the film is never able to reach those heights again, with the ending being a rather tame affair that doesn't do justice to the bitter revenge tone that Hawks has steered the film towards. Of the sub-standard support cast there's only Jack Elam who is worth watching, be it for comedy value or for just giving it some gusto. All told the film just about comes out as watchable Sunday afternoon fodder. A running theme in the film sees fun poked at the ageing Wayne's expense, one of which involves the word comfortable. That is an apt word to use for Rio Lobo, because director and star are in the comfort zone, comfortably making an unchallenging and old hat movie. 5/10

CinemaSerf

There are really only two things to speak of with this: Tommy Tedesco's lovely guitar solo of Jerry Goldsmith's theme and Jack Elam is perfectly cast as the cantankerous whisky-swilling "Mr Phillips". Otherwise, it's just a routine outing for John Wayne (and Howard Hawks) who pretty much bears the weight of the film. Jorge Rivero; Jennifer O'Neill and Christopher Mitchum make up the numbers. The story is fun - a Yankee colonel meets up after the Civil war with two former Confederate officers to track down a man who had been selling secrets during the war and we have a few, predictable, adventures en route to an explosive climax.