Triumphs of a Man Called Horse
Triumphs of a Man Called Horse | |
---|---|
File:Triumphs of a Man Called Horse.jpg | |
Directed by | John Hough |
Screenplay by | Ken Blackwell Carlos Aured |
Story by | Jack DeWitt |
Based on | Characters by Dorothy M. Johnson Jack DeWitt |
Produced by | Derek Gibson |
Starring | Richard Harris Michael Beck |
Cinematography | John Alcott John Cabrera |
Edited by | Roy Watts |
Music by | Georges Garvarentz |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | Jensen Farley Pictures (US) Estudios Churubusco (Mexico) Astral Films (Canada) |
Release date |
|
Running time | 86 min. |
Countries | United States Mexico Canada Spain |
Language | English |
Triumphs of a Man Called Horse is a 1983 Western film directed by John Hough and written by Ken Blackwell and Carlos Aured. It is the second and final sequel to A Man Called Horse (1970), following The Return of a Man Called Horse (1976). Richard Harris reprises his role as the titular character, starring with Michael Beck, Ana De Sade, Vaughn Armstrong, Anne Seymour, and Buck Taylor.
Released theatrically by Jensen Farley Pictures, it received generally negative reviews, with critics negatively comparing it to its predecessors.
Plot summary
Now in his 60s, Morgan is the chief of the Sioux and is much hated by white men because "many's a white man's died from the tricks he taught the Sioux." However, the government calls Horse to peace talks. But someone with a rifle assassinates him and his men after the meeting.
His son, who was raised among the Sioux, but was sent away to attend school in the East, returns to deal both with white settlers encroaching on the Sioux lands and with his own people, who want to go to war. He also meets an attractive young woman who happens to be a Crow, the traditional enemy of the Sioux. In the end, it is revealed that Horse was murdered by a phony preacher who wanted to start a war so he could get the Sioux's land. Horse's son and his Crow girlfriend have a traditional showdown with the preacher and his head honcho. At the end, Horse's son sees the triumphant spirit of his father in full chief regalia.
Cast
- Richard Harris as John Morgan / Shunkakawan
- Michael Beck as Koda
- Ana De Sade as Redwing
- Vaughn Armstrong as Captain Cummings
- Anne Seymour as Elk Woman
- Buck Taylor as Sgt. Bridges
- Lautaro Murúa as Perkins
- Simón Andreu as Grance
- Roger Cudney as Durand
- Jerry Gatlin as Winslow
- John Davis Chandler as Mason
- Miguel Ángel Fuentes as Big Bear
- Sebastian Ligarde as Mullins
- Erika Carlsson as Essie
- Anaís de Melo as Dorothy
Production
Richard Harris’ first choice to direct was Sam Peckinpah, with whom he had previously worked with on Major Dundee (1965). Due to Peckinpah’s infamously erratic behavior, he was replaced by John Hough. This was the veteran director’s first and only Western.
Like its two predecessor, Triumphs was shot primarily in Sonora and Chihuahua, Mexico, with additional photography taking place in Spain and second unit photography in Red Lodge, Montana.
Reception
TV Guide gave the film one star: "This rip-off sequel to A Man Called Horse (1970) and The Return of a Man Called Horse (1976) cashes in on the popularity of its predecessors. Richard Harris appears briefly as the "Man Called Horse", an aging Englishman who has headed a Sioux tribe for 30 years...The film is anything but a triumph."[1]
References
- ^ TV Guide Review "Triumph of a Man Called Horse" http://movies.tvguide.com/triumphs-of-a-man-called-horse/review/121263
External links
- 1983 films
- American films
- Mexican films
- Canadian films
- 1982 films
- English-language films
- Films about Native Americans
- Films based on works by Dorothy M. Johnson
- 1980s Western (genre) films
- American sequel films
- American Western (genre) films
- Mexican Western (genre) films
- Mexican sequel films
- 1980s Western (genre) film stubs
- 1980s film stubs