William L
I watched this film completely by accident, which is in fairness the only way someone should watch it. Savalas is the only actual actor in the group; everyone else is painfully talentless, and his performance isn't particularly noteworthy. Maharis has zero leading man potential. The plot could have been passable, with an entirely different cast and dialogue. As it is, Land Raiders scrapes the bottom of the barrel even by the standards of crapped-out Westerns from the period. (1/5)
Rated 1/5 Stars •
Rated 1 out of 5 stars
08/12/20
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Audience Member
Great depiction of savagery and cowardice. When you want people to go against the very thing they are against, you create a situation to force them to.
Rated 5/5 Stars •
Rated 5 out of 5 stars
02/20/23
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Audience Member
An all-round lacklustre effort with Telly Savalas going through the motions as the bad-guy (not that he had a great repertoire anyhow), but the story is fairly bland and two-dimensional.
Rated 2/5 Stars •
Rated 2 out of 5 stars
02/06/23
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Audience Member
Telly Savalas and George Maharis are brothers (?) who feud while also fending off indian attacks. I was rooting for the indians because it would have ended this dull spaghetti western sooner. Fernando Rey and Arlene Dahl also appear in the film, but I think the Bruno Nicolai score is probably the only reason to watch.
Rated 2/5 Stars •
Rated 2 out of 5 stars
01/31/23
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Audience Member
Although Austrian-born director Nathan Juran made a name for himself with his science fiction themed films, such as "The 7th Voyage of Sinbad," "The Deadly Mantis" and "First Men in the Moon," he was no stranger to westerns. He helmed three Audie Murphy frontier fracases, "Drums Across the River," "Gunsmoke," and "Tumbleweeds" as well as the Fred MacMurray western "A Good Day for a Hanging." Nathan Juran's last western, the Columbia Pictures' release "Land Raiders" is an average but uneven horse opera about a materialistic, amoral Arizona rancher
who will stop at nothing to steal land so he can build himself an empire. "Land Raiders" is a 1950s style western with 1960s sensibilities. In other words, the villains make life extremely tragic for the Apaches in the first two-thirds of this movie, but the Indians has the last word. Lensed on location in Spain and Hungary and graced with an exhilarating score by Ennio Morricone's orchestrator Bruno
Nicolai, this dusty sagebrusher deals with deceit and racism on a widespread basis.
Ultimately, Savalas plays the villainous brother and Maharis is cast as the heroic sibling. A major criticism of this western is the suspension of disbelief required to accept these two actors as kind. Although the story is pretty formulaic, "Land Raiders" contains many examples of great editing, especially the shifts from one story to an entirely different one. This outdoor adventure has no shortage of action with rampaging Apaches on the warpath and whites who are willing to kill them to collect the bounty on their scalps. The major problem with "Land Raiders" is the Ken Pettus screenplay that focuses on the sibling rivalry between the Mexican brothers Vincent Carden (Telly Savalas of "Kelly's Heroes") and Paul Cardenas (George Maharis of "The Satan Bug") who hate each other's guts with a passion. The ugly secret that has made them sworn enemies looks like something out of a 1950s movies. Furthermore, Vince forsakes his Mexican heritage because he wants to assimilate and become an American, while Paul refuses to turn his back on his Hispanic origins. Between them is the mysterious death of Paul's fiance, Luis Rojas (Jocelyn Lane of "The Angry Hills"), who died from a broken neck after her horse threw her. Nevertheless, everybody in the town of Forge River holds Paul responsible for her death, but the local town sheriff, John Mayfield (Phil Brown of "Star Wars"), could not assemble enough evidence to arrest him, so Paul has roamed the southwest with the memory of Luis plaguing him. Meanwhile, the Army wants to make peace with the Apaches and they dispatch Major Tanner (Guy Rolfe of "King of the Khyber Rifles") to persuade Carden in the name of peace to stop offering a reward on Apache scalps. Vincent pays his gunmen $10 for male Apaches, $5 for female Apaches, and $2.50 for their children and he has no plans to stop this unsavory practice. Paul is riding in the opposite direction when he encounters a wagon train, warns them about Apaches on the warpath, and saves one wagon. He saves the Sheriff Mayfield's gorgeous daughter, Kate (Janet Landgard of "The Swimmer") and decides to hang around town. When Vince learns from Colonel Tanner that an Indian agent from Washington,D.C., plans to sit down with the Apaches and smoke the peace pipe, Vincent figures out that prosperity will do his business no good so he sends his gunmen out to kill the Indian agent and frame the Indians for his death. Eventually, all of Vince's evil catches up with him in the form of three arrows in his chest after the Apaches storm Forge River and kill just about everybody in sight. The major flaw in this western is that Telly Savalas overshadows George Maharis with his dynamic screen presence and Maharis' hero comes off looking pretty useless. Talk about a lopsided yarn!
Rated 2.5/5 Stars •
Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars
01/17/23
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Audience Member
Telly wars with the Apaches and his brother in this passable old school Western. Extremely dated, especially when you consider this was released shortly after THE WILD BUNCH.
Rated 2.5/5 Stars •
Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars
02/24/23
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