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The Deadly Companions Poster

The Deadly Companions

ALONE... IN AN UNTAMED LAND -- WITH THREE MEN WHO FORCED THEIR WAY INTO HER LIFE!
1961 | 93m | English

(3074 votes)

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Popularity: 5 (history)

Details

Ex-army officer accidentally kills a woman's son, tries to make up for it by escorting the funeral procession through dangerous Indian territory.
Release Date: Jun 06, 1961
Director: Sam Peckinpah
Writer: Albert Sidney Fleischman
Genres: Western
Keywords funeral, native american, escort
Production Companies Pathé-America Distributing Company, Carousel Productions
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Maureen O'Hara Kit Tilden
Brian Keith Yellowleg
Steve Cochran Billy Keplinger
Chill Wills Turk
Strother Martin Parson
Will Wright Doctor Acton
James O'Hara Cal, General Store
Peter O'Crotty Mayor of Hila City
Billy Vaughan Mead Tildon Jr.
Chuck Hayward Card Sharp (uncredited)
Hank Gobble Bartender (uncredited)
Big John Hamilton Gambler (uncredited)
Riley Hill Gambler (uncredited)
Robert Sheldon Gambler (uncredited)
Buck Sharpe Apache Indian (uncredited)
Name Job
Sam Peckinpah Director
William H. Clothier Director of Photography
Marlin Skiles Original Music Composer
Stanley Rabjohn Editor
James R. Barker Makeup Artist
Fae M. Smith Hairstylist
Albert Sidney Fleischman Novel, Screenplay
Dixie McCoy Script Supervisor
Lee Lukather Assistant Director, Production Manager
Tom Coleman Property Master
Robert J. Callen Sound Recordist
Kurt Hernfeld Sound Effects Editor
Gordon Sawyer Sound
Dave Koehler Special Effects
Bert Lynch Still Photographer
Frank Beetson Jr. Costume Supervisor
Sheila O'Brien Costume Supervisor
Name Title
Charles B. Fitzsimons Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 9 15 5
2024 5 13 27 5
2024 6 7 11 5
2024 7 9 14 5
2024 8 11 25 4
2024 9 8 15 3
2024 10 11 24 5
2024 11 6 10 4
2024 12 8 18 3
2025 1 7 11 4
2025 2 7 13 2
2025 3 3 8 0
2025 4 2 2 1
2025 5 1 3 1
2025 6 1 3 1
2025 7 1 2 0
2025 8 1 2 0
2025 9 3 6 1
2025 10 5 6 5

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 3 882 882

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Reviews

Wuchak
5.0

***Melancholic, harsh Peckinpah Western with Keith and O’Hara*** A former Union soldier, Yellowleg (Brian Keith), vengefully searches for a Confederate who tried to scalp him alive 5 years earlier. After something bad happens in an Arizona town he offers to escort a dance hall woman (Maureen O’ ... Hara) to a ghost town where her former beau was buried. There are a couple problems though: They have to go through Apache territory and two lowlifes accompany them most of the way. Released in 1961, “The Deadly Companions” has a lot going for it: It stars Keith and the beautiful O'Hara, who had such great chemistry in "The Parent Trap,” released the very same month. This is Sam Peckinpah's directorial debut in cinema. Most people reading this know that Peckinpah went on to become a highly acclaimed director with notable efforts like "Ride the High Country" (1962). In addition, "The Deadly Companions" was filmed on location in Arizona (including Old Tucson); you can't beat Arizona for fine, authentic Western locations. Lastly, the picture only runs 90 minutes, so it won't likely wear out its welcome. The first act is promising, highlighted by a church service in a saloon with O'Hara playing a social outcast amongst the church folk (for legitimate reasons). After a tragedy happens, the tone turns melancholic as the characters take a hard journey through the desert where they fight with each other and the Injuns. The movie’s realistic and harsh, reminiscent of unmemorable Westerns like “The Appaloosa” (1966) and “The Stalking Moon” (1968). “Molly and Lawless John” (1972) was the only one that took this basic approach and made a compelling Western. But at least Peckinpah & team tried to do something different, like Brando did with the contemporaneous “One-Eyed Jacks.” The odd classical-meets-Country-and-Western score by Marlin Skiles is notable. At the end of the day “The Deadly Companions” shoots for dark art with a message of maybe redemption but, after the quality first act, never rises above mediocre. And verges on “The Deadly Dull.” I kind of liked it, though, but you have to be in a meditative, brooding mood. GRADE: C

Jun 23, 2021