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Cahill - United States Marshal By Richard T. Jameson
After the late-career high of True Grit, only The
Cowboys and The Shootist escaped the curse of half-baked
scripts, recycled material, and lackadaisical filmmaking that
characterized John Wayne's last half-dozen years in movies. Cahill
is no exception, but it's more energetic than The Undefeated and Chisum
(likewise nominally directed by Andrew V. McLaglen), with a certain Gothic
tinge. Also, the theme of a dedicated professional who lets his job keep
him from being part of his children's lives appears to have had some
relevance for the producer-star. Marshal Cahill's two sons (Summer
of '42's Gary Grimes and
the preteen Clay O'Brien) are so unhinged by paternal
"negligence" that they get caught up in a twisted bank-robbery
scheme with a very bad guy, a veritable bogeyman (George Kennedy). Cahill
has to sort his familial crisis and several outlaw crews, with the
assistance of a sardonic half-breed scout (Neville Brand) who teases him
mightily.
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FILM
FACTS |
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|  | Director: Andrew V. McLaglen
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|  | Stars: John Wayne, George Kennedy, Gary Grimes
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|  | Released: July 11, 1973
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|  | Availability: DVD VHS | | |
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