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Viva Villa!

Play trailer Poster for Viva Villa! Released Apr 27, 1934 1h 55m History Drama Play Trailer Watchlist
Watchlist Tomatometer Popcornmeter
60% Tomatometer 10 Reviews 47% Popcornmeter 250+ Ratings
After an overseer beats his peon father to death, a young Pancho Villa spills his first blood when he enacts revenge on the man. Retreating to the hills, Villa (Wallace Beery) spends a number of years as a vicious bandit, brutally attacking the wealthy, which earns him the respect of the poor. When revolutionary Don Felipe de Castillo (Donald Cook) realizes he can utilize Villa's bloodlust, he brings the bandit to the revolutionary leader Francisco Madero (Henry B. Walthall).

Critics Reviews

View All (10) Critics Reviews
Variety Staff Variety It's a big, impressive production which sets out to make Wallace Beery's Pancho Villa appear as a somewhat sympathetic and quasi-patriotic bandit. But Beery's characterization... lets Pancho down too much. Feb 23, 2012 Full Review D.F. Taylor Cinema Quarterly The whole film fails as a social document; revolutionary ideals become purposeless when there are no causes. Feb 3, 2021 Full Review Meyer Levin (Patterson Murphy) Esquire Magazine As it is, we have a relentless piece of entertainment. Apr 17, 2020 Full Review Ann Ross Maclean's Magazine This picture is noisy, violent and occasionally brutal. It is also spectacular, authoritative and intensely interesting. Wallace Beery as Pancho Villa has never been better. A picture for the hardier-minded. Jul 22, 2019 Full Review Helen Brown Norden Vanity Fair There is also no denying the fact that Wallace Beery is not everybody's Villa. Jun 12, 2019 Full Review Film4 Staff Film4 A sparky Hecht screenplay enlivens this high-gloss western. Jan 31, 2012 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

View All (16) audience reviews
Audience Member This film begins with a prologue where the people at MGM admit that this entire "biography" is fictionalized!! Then, I ask, what's the point?!?! It's like the opposite of the old TV show DRAGNET, where the names were changed to protect the innocent. Here in this film, ONLY the names are true--everything else has been changed!! Aye, aye, aye! While I am a huge fan of classic Hollywood, this is the sort of film that they did worst--with absolutely no respect for the source material. Wallace Beery looks and sounds nothing like Villa and Villa is more a sentimental comic book bandit than who he was in reality. As for the film, Wallace Beery seems to play....well...Wallace Beery--or at least a sociopathic Wallace Beery with a heart of gold! He kills, he fights, he loves, he mugs for the camera but still, down deep he loves his country and President Madero. It's all pretty entertaining and well made (especially with support from actors such as Leo Carrillo and George E. Stone) but whitewashes the life of Villa. Because of this, I can't recommend it to anyone unless they really have no desire to learn about the real life Villa. During one of Pancho's raids, he finds an American newspaper man (Stu Erwin) and kidnaps him, because he wants the reporter to glamorize the bandit's exploits. So, Erwin has an unusual inside view of this great man--a lot like Arthur Kennedy's role in LAWRENCE OF ARABIA. And the bulk of the film shows the battles, the ups and downs and death of Villa. By the way, the man they got to play Francisco Madero was amazingly similar to the real Madero--looking like his twin. At least in this sense the film got it right. Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars 02/08/23 Full Review steve d The reworking of history didn't work. Rated 1 out of 5 stars 03/30/23 Full Review Audience Member Wallace Beery plays Villa as a stereotype which takes away from the role that Pancho Villa played in the history of Mexico and frankly makes them all a bit ignorant for following him. We need a more accurate portrayal. Rated 2 out of 5 stars 02/07/23 Full Review Audience Member The life of the famous Mexican bandit and revolutionary is told in this exciting action drama. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 01/21/23 Full Review Audience Member Wallace Beery's hammy performance keeps things lively even if the story itself is highly fictionalized. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/02/23 Full Review Audience Member Good movie...Another great performance by Fay Wray and Wallace Beery. It's filmed very exceptionally for the time, that's probably with Wellman's help. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 01/25/23 Full Review Read all reviews
Viva Villa!

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Cast & Crew

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Movie Info

Synopsis After an overseer beats his peon father to death, a young Pancho Villa spills his first blood when he enacts revenge on the man. Retreating to the hills, Villa (Wallace Beery) spends a number of years as a vicious bandit, brutally attacking the wealthy, which earns him the respect of the poor. When revolutionary Don Felipe de Castillo (Donald Cook) realizes he can utilize Villa's bloodlust, he brings the bandit to the revolutionary leader Francisco Madero (Henry B. Walthall).
Director
Jack Conway
Producer
David O. Selznick
Distributor
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Production Co
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Genre
History, Drama
Original Language
English
Release Date (Theaters)
Apr 27, 1934, Original
Release Date (DVD)
May 5, 2015
Runtime
1h 55m