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The Comancheros
After his partner is killed, aging Texas Ranger Jake Cutter (John Wayne) captures gambler Paul Regret (Stuart Whitman), but soon finds himself teamed with his prisoner in an undercover effort to defeat a band of renegade arms merchants and thieves known as Comancheros.
20 April 1904, Carlsbad, New Mexico, USA
January 16, 1949 in Evansville, Indiana, USA
July 4, 1901 in near Clarno Township, Lake County, South Dakota, USA
26 April 1899, Decatur, Texas, USA
13 November 1920, Miami, Arizona, USA
16 December 1931, Washington, USA
31 July 1921, St. Paul, Minnesota, USA
19 February 1924, New York City, New York, USA
November 25, 1918 in Shamokin, Pennsylvania, USA
6 February 1904
23 August 1895, Mödling, Lower Austria, Austria-Hungary
5 March 1894, London, England, UK
29 May 1904, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
17 September 1908, Edmonton, London, England, UK
December 10, 1903 in Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico
8 September 1894, High Forest, Minnesota, USA
12 April 1912, Budapest, Austria-Hungary [now Hungary]
16 September 1908, Paterson, New Jersey, USA
October 9, 1915 in Puerto de la Cruz, Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain
October 19, 2006
Interesting, at times brutal, John Wayne western with strong cast and locale.
June 13, 2011
Because he was largely a journeyman filmmaker who took whatever jobs the studio assigned him, most historians and critics regard Michael Curtiz merely as a capable gun-for-hire who was lucky enough to find himself attached to good projects.
October 15, 2005
Lively and cheerful, but too banal to be a top-rate Curtiz or Wayne film; nevertheless it's a pleasingly entertaining film.
April 24, 2009
A good old school western with solid acting, a great musical score, wonderful cinematography and beautiful desert scenery.
June 20, 2011
Charming and agreeable, it moves along at a good clip. Shot in widescreen saturated CinemaScope, ... it's entertaining in a predictable way.
May 06, 2007
Wayne is decent, but this is a compromised Western due to the fact that ailing director Michael Curtiz (it's his last film) has no appreciation for the genre.

