The Treasure of Pancho Villa

The Treasure of Pancho Villa

Original film poster
Directed by George Sherman
Produced by Edmund Grainger
Written by J. Robert Bren and
Story by Gladys Atwater
Starring Rory Calhoun
Shelley Winters
Gilbert Roland
Music by Leith Stevens
Cinematography William E. Snyder
Edited by Harry Marker
Production
company
Edmund Grainger Productions
Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures
Release dates
  • October 19, 1955 (1955-10-19) (US)[1]
Running time
92 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Box office $1.15 million (US)[2]

The Treasure of Pancho Villa is a 1955 American Technicolor Western film directed by George Sherman and starring Rory Calhoun, Shelley Winters and Gilbert Roland. The film was shot on location in Mexico.

Plot synopsis

During the Mexican Civil War of 1913, mercenary Tom Bryan (Rory Calhoun) and his Lewis machine gun he names ("La Cucaracha") joins a band of revolutionaries headed by Colonel Juan Castro (Gilbert Roland). Though paid for his services, Bryan is tired of the squalid life he is living in Mexico and is considering offering his services to Cuba.

Bryan is offered one more highly paid job. Castro is planning an assault and robbery of train carrying a vast amount of gold belonging to the central government. Because of the strength of the escort of Federales on two trains, one carrying an artillery piece on a flat car, his men are dubious of success. Castro has two aces up his sleeve; Bryan with his machine gun, who will be disguised as a passenger on the train, and Pablo Morales, an expert dynamiter, who will blow up a bridge separating the two trains. Castro senses treachery by Morales as the two did a robbery years ago with Castro leaving Morales behind, however Castro is reassured by Morales' wife that he is a Villista and is not a traitor.

After wiping out the Federales, they steal the gold shipment from the government train, gold that Castro intends to deliver to revolutionary leader Pancho Villa. Pursued by the Mexican Army, they flee to the mountains along with Ruth Harris (Shelley Winters) an American who was living in Mexico as a schoolteacher but who became a soldadera after her father was murdered. Villa and his men do not appear at the rendezvous; however, Morales gains the loyalty of some of Castro's band to keep the gold for themselves. Bryan also wants the gold for himself, wishing to use it to finance his own revolution in another country where he can loot the nation and retire in splendour. He guns down most of the Mexicans with his Lewis gun in order to keep the gold.

Morales, Ruth and the others are captured by the Federales, with Morales offering them the gold, Bryan, and Castro in exchange for money and amnesty. Because of her American nationality, Ruth is escorted to Tampico to be deported to America, while the others are to be executed.

Tracked by Yaqui Indians working with the government pursuers, Bryan is reconciled to Castro’s ideals, and the two build a gun emplacement out of the bags of gold to make a last stand. The Federales send Morales with a white flag of truce and a hand grenade, but Castro kills him first. Castro is killed by the pursuing Mexicans and Bryan has to blow up the gold in order to prevent them recovering it. This starts an avalanche that buries both the gold and the pursuers. Unarmed and broke, the solitary Bryan makes his way to Tampico to be reunited with Ruth.

As Bryan leaves the place where he has buried Castro, he looks up at the vultures circling and tells them that they have feasted on many things but if they should ever have done so on Castro, they would have feasted on a real man.

A real treasure

Pancho Villa had seized a treasure of 122 bars of silver from a train near Chavarria[3][4] in 1913; the treasure was allegedly not recovered.[5]

Cast

Quotes

"Mercenary" is a three dollar word. I'm a hired gun - Tom Bryan

See also

Notes

  1. "The Treasure of Pancho Villa: Detail View". American Film Institute. Retrieved June 2, 2014.
  2. 'The Top Box-Office Hits of 1955', Variety Weekly, January 25, 1956
  3. Rouverol, Jean Pancho Villa: A Biography Doubleday, 1972
  4. Guzmán Martín Luis Memoirs of Pancho Villa University of Texas Press, 1965
  5. http://www.bc-alter.net/dfriesen/mextreasure.html
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