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The Professionals (film) 

The Professionals

original film poster by Howard Terpning
Directed by Richard Brooks
Produced by Richard Brooks
Written by Richard Brooks
Frank O'Rourke (novel A Mule for the Marquesa)
Starring Lee Marvin
Burt Lancaster
Robert Ryan
Woody Strode
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release date(s) November 2, 1966 U.S. release
Running time 117 min
Language English
IMDb profile

The Professionals is a 1966 Western movie directed by Richard Brooks. A kidnap-rescue adventure set in about 1917, it features a small group of experts heading into Mexico to free the Mexican-born wife of a wealthy Texan from several hundred bandits. The film is based on the novel A Mule for the Marquesa by Frank O'Rourke.

Contents

Synopsis

The professionals are team leader Henry (Rico) Fardan (Lee Marvin), explosives expert Bill Dolworth (Burt Lancaster), horseman Hans Ehrengard (Robert Ryan) and bow-and-arrow marksman Jake Sharp (Woody Strode). These men are hard and cynical professionals but have a code of honour. The bandits are led by Jesus Raza (Jack Palance), who was actually much respected as a soldier by Fardan and Dolworth, having once fought on the same side under Pancho Villa. Raza has a small army, including the female soldier Chiquita (Marie Gomez). The kidnapped wife is Maria (Claudia Cardinale), whose much older husband is J.W. Grant (Ralph Bellamy). But was she really kidnapped?

Production

The film was written and directed by Richard Brooks, who was nominated for Academy Awards for directing and writing. The cinematography, by Conrad Hall, was also nominated for an Oscar.

It was filmed partly in Death Valley and Valley of Fire, showing the latter prominently. The railway scenes were filmed on Kaiser Steel's Eagle Mountain Railroad. The steam locomotive seen in the movie currently resides on the Heber Valley Railroad.


Memorable Quotations

At the beginning of the movie, while hiring the team, Grant repeatedly refers to himself as "a self-made man", a common phrase of the time to indicate his wealth had not come from inheritance. A memorable exchange from the movie occurs between Grant and Fardan near the end. Grant calls Fardan a bastard. Fardan shoots back, "Yes, sir, in my case an accident of birth. But you, sir, you are a self-made man."

Other quotations:

Fardan: "So what's on your mind, besides 100-proof women, 90-proof whiskey, and 14-carat gold?"
Dolworth: "Amigo... you just wrote my epitaph."
Maria Grant: "Go to hell!"
Dolworth: "Yes, ma'am. I'm on my way."
Dolworth (to Ehrengard): "You light this fuse and dynamite — not faith — will move that mountain into this pass. Peace, brother!"
Dolworth to Fardan, "Well, I'll be damned."
Fardan: "Most of us are."

External links

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