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Cannon for Cordoba Poster

Cannon for Cordoba

They aimed him at Cordoba's fortress, and pulled the trigger!
1970 | 97m | English

(860 votes)

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Popularity: 1 (history)

Director: Paul Wendkos
Writer: Stephen Kandel
Staring:
Details

In 1912, during the Mexican Revolution, the border between Texas and Mexico is on flames due to savage raids by Mexican bandits who call themselves freedom fighters, so the US government entrusts to General Pershing the capture of General Héctor Córdoba, the most notorious among them.
Release Date: Oct 01, 1970
Director: Paul Wendkos
Writer: Stephen Kandel
Genres: Adventure, Action, Western
Keywords mexican revolution, warlord, suicide mission, train robbery, mexican border, 1910s
Production Companies The Mirisch Company
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Aug 03, 2024
Entered: Apr 20, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
George Peppard Rod
Giovanna Ralli Leonora
Raf Vallone Córdoba
Pete Duel Andy
Don Gordon Jackson
Nico Minardos Peter
Gabriele Tinti Antonio
John Larch Warner
Francine York Sophia
John Russell General Pershing
Lionel Murton Colonel Hammond
Hans Meyer Svedborg
Richard Pendrey Adam
Takis Emmanuel Campo
Janis Hansen Girl
Name Job
Lynn Stalmaster Casting
Paul Wendkos Director
Elmer Bernstein Original Music Composer
Stephen Kandel Screenplay
Antonio Macasoli Director of Photography
Walter Hannemann Editor
José María Tapiador Art Direction
Edward Morey Jr. Production Supervisor
Ricardo Navarrete Camera Operator
Frank E. Warner Sound Editor
Roy Charman Sound
George Rice Sound
Don Minkler Sound Re-Recording Mixer
O. Nicholas Brown Assistant Editor
Robert Goodstein Production Manager
José María Ochoa First Assistant Director
Rafael Salazar Set Decoration
Alex Weldon Special Effects
Eva del Castillo Ortiz Script Supervisor
Richard Carruth Music Editor
Art Cole Property Master
Ricardo Vásquez Sese Makeup Designer
Eric Seelig Wardrobe Supervisor
Alejandro de la Fuente Gaffer
Mariano Denia Grip
Name Title
Stephen Kandel Associate Producer
Vincent M. Fennelly Producer
Organization Category Person
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Reviews

John Chard
8.0

The trouble being a hero is the morning after. Cannon for Cordoba is directed by Paul Wendkos and written by Stephen Kandel. It stars George Peppard, Giovanna Ralli, Raf Vallone, Pete Duel, Don Gordon, Nico Minardos, John Larch, John Russell and Francine York. A Panavision/De Luxe Color productio ... n, music is by Elmer Bernstein and cinematography by Antonio Macasoli. "In 1912 the border between Texas and Mexico was aflame with the raids of Mexican bandit hordes who called themselves revolutionaries. To combat them the American government dispatched General John J. (Blackjack) Pershing to deal with the bandit raiders, one of the most dangerous of whom was General Hector Cordoba!" A Paella Western crammed to the brim with machismo and action, Cannon for Cordoba is in desperate need of re-evaluation by the Pasta Western loving crowd. The big problem the film has is that it is so indebted to a number of other "men on a mission" movies, it has struggled to gain credit for actually doing the format well. Undeniably the viewing experience is greatly helped if you are like me, a fan of such films like The Guns of Navarone, The Dirty Dozen, Where Eagles Dare, The Professionals and The Wild Bunch etc, because this is basically the Paella version of those films. Shot on location in Spain, with what now would be called a modest budget, it's pacey, explosive, pleasing in visuals and very well performed in the traditional Pasta Western sense. While the grim textures come courtesy of torture, sexual hostility and terrorism. Plot basically entails U.S. Army Captain Rod Douglas (Peppard) taking a very small gathering of miscreants over the border into Mexico, their mission is to infiltrate Cordoba's (Vallone) mountain stronghold and destroy the cannons claimed by Cordoba's bandits earlier in the play. The threads that run through the plot see one of the group holding a grudge against his leader, another that has the lady of the mission operating on justifiable revenge driven ends, and with so many people wanting Cordoba dead, Douglas is up against it since he's under orders to bring the General back alive to face public trial and inevitable execution. There's an unsubtle whiff of cynicism throughout the picture, the sly asides to the Vietnam War issue carrying a glint in the eye as cheeky as Peppard's performance. Oh it's no message movie, Wendkos and his team are firmly intent on tapping into the zeitgeist of those formula movies previously, there for sure is no overt attempts at political lecturing, but the scent is there and keeps the pic smelling wholesome. Cast are the expected mixed bag for such a production. Peppard is every inch a Spaghetti Western anti-hero, perky blue eyes, stubbled face fuzz and constantly chomping on a cigar, he's the fulcrum of the viewing experience and he's great company to be in. Vallone is on wonderfully oily villain duties, yet charming into the bargain as well, Duel is nicely edgy and Ralli (I find it hard to write her name without swooning) is a sexual ball of deviousness. Wendkos favours tilted pan shots for his action scenes, which work to a point but then feel like, well, what's the point? While Bernstein provides a robust score that stirs the blood to boiling point. Under seen and under valued? You betcha. 7.5/10

May 16, 2024