Chato's Land

What Chato's land doesn't kill, Chato will.

6.5
19721h 40m

In 1870s New Mexico, a half-breed kills a bigoted sheriff in self-defense but the posse that eventually hunts him finds itself in dangerous territory.

Production

Logo for United Artists

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Chato Destroys The Canteens

Chato Destroys The Canteens

Thumbnail for video: Will Takes A Spill

Will Takes A Spill

Thumbnail for video: Breakfast Is Interrupted

Breakfast Is Interrupted

Thumbnail for video: John Landis on CHATO'S LAND

John Landis on CHATO'S LAND

Cast

Photo of Charles Bronson

Charles Bronson

Pardon Chato

Photo of Jack Palance

Jack Palance

Quincey Whitmore

Photo of James Whitmore

James Whitmore

Joshua Everette

Photo of Simon Oakland

Simon Oakland

Jubal Hooker

Photo of Ralph Waite

Ralph Waite

Elias Hooker

Photo of Richard Jordan

Richard Jordan

Earl Hooker

Photo of Victor French

Victor French

Martin Hall

Photo of William Watson

William Watson

Harvey Lansing

Photo of Roddy McMillan

Roddy McMillan

Gavin Malechie

Photo of Paul Young

Paul Young

Brady Logan

Photo of Lee Patterson

Lee Patterson

George Dunn

Photo of Peter Dyneley

Peter Dyneley

Ezra Meade

Photo of Verna Harvey

Verna Harvey

Shelby Hooker

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Reviews

J

John Chard

7/10

Go then, and God mark you for the man you are.

Chato's Land is directed by Michael Winner and written by Gerry Wilson. It stars Charles Bronson, Jack Palance, James Whitmore, Simon Oakland, Richard Baseheart, Ralph Waite and Richard Jordan. Shot on location in Andalucia, Spain, with photography by Robert Paynter, it's musically scored by Jerry Fielding. Plot finds Bronson as half Apache, Pardon Chato, who is forced to kill the local sheriff in self defence and finds himself being hunted by a town posse led by Captain Quicey Whitmore (Palance). However, as the posse trail him into the wilderness it becomes apparent that the tables have been turned, with Chato given further cause to inflict harm upon his pursuers.

The first of six collaborations between Charles Bronson and Michael Winner, Chato's Land finds the pair setting the marker for what would define their work. With the Western genre going thru a resurgence, Chato's Land is very in-keeping with the type of Western that was being released in the early 70's: namely violent, uncompromising and certainly gritty. These things, as history now shows, were tailor made for Winner, who perfectly utilises Bronson's silent and brooding assets to great effect.

Often suspected to be an allegory of the United States' involvement in Vietnam, it's thematically correct in that respect. But the timing of the film would suggest this to not be the case. Chato's Land is more than just a revenge Western; a film about white men out of their usual terrain being pursued by a man of a different ethnicity, it wants to, and does quite well, be a picture dealing in racism, violence and the folly of hypocritical justice. But even tho Wilson's script brings these issues to light, they are not fully formed, with Winner at times dragging the film to a stand-still. However, the group dynamic is a good one, with the inevitable character differences creating a tinderbox waiting to ignite, while Winner doesn't skimp over the violence, puncturing the narrative with savage thrusts.

Bronson was 50 years old when making the film, his physicality here is very impressive. The role of Chato is hardly a stretch for him, in fact it's very much a perfect fit. He's basically asked to be a phantom in the landscape, but he casts an imposing presence each time he's called on to deliver some Chato justice. In pursuit are a mixed bunch of actors, with Palance, Whitmore and Baseheart the obvious professional standouts, while Simon Oakland leaves an indelible mark as grizzled father of the Hooker boys, Jubal. Fielding's (The Wild Bunch) score is efficient, but workmanlike, and Paynter's (Lawman) photography never really makes the landscape as imposing as it should be. Overall it's a mixed bag, but for fans of revenge type Westerns, and Palance, it's easy to recommend, but it still should have been more intelligent than it ultimately is. 7/10

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