The Gaucho

1927 "INTENSELY DRAMATIC STUPENDOUS THRILLS"
7.1| 1h35m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 21 November 1927 Released
Producted By: United Artists
Country:
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
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A girl is saved by a miracle after she falls from a cliff in the Argentine Andes, and is blessed with healing powers. A shrine is built on the site, and a whole city grows around it, rich with gold from the grateful worshipers. Ruiz, an evil and sadistic general, captures the city, confiscates the gold, and closes the shrine. But the Gaucho, the charismatic leader of a band of outlaws, comes to the rescue.

Genre

Adventure, Action

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Director

F. Richard Jones

Production Companies

United Artists

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The Gaucho Audience Reviews

Protraph Lack of good storyline.
GurlyIamBeach Instant Favorite.
FuzzyTagz If the ambition is to provide two hours of instantly forgettable, popcorn-munching escapism, it succeeds.
Bob This is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.
binapiraeus Many things have been written about "The Gaucho", lots of interpretations have been made from the very day it was released, and in the almost 90 years that have passed since then, it has of course been highly praised, but it's also been subject to unjust criticism in many ways; and in recent years the public's and the critics' interest in this so very UNIQUE movie seems to slowly fade away... So I think it's high time for us to rediscover this radiant jewel of early Hollywood, and to look at it in all its unusual spirit, with the innocence and enthusiasm the audience saw it back THEN; and at the same time discover that it's lost NOTHING of its freshness and dynamism - for it's one of those films that NEVER age.And from the very beginning of the movie we have to take into account that we're about to dive right into the world of Douglas Fairbanks, that great genius and pioneer of silent film days, whose huge all-round talent as actor, director, screenwriter and producer was equaled only by that of his best friend, Charlie Chaplin. And just like Chaplin, Doug Fairbanks had his VERY own ideas of motion pictures: they should be larger-than-life, include ALL aspects of reality, and merge them into something even more beautiful, filled with more action, drama, and at the SAME time love and fun than real life itself; and, of course, with an unbreakable optimism that leads to the literally most miraculous happy endings for everyone - not only for the 'good' ones, because there ARE no 'good' and 'bad' characters in "The Gaucho": just as in real life, everybody have got their flaws (even the protagonist himself), and everybody have got their good points.And so, be prepared for a UNIQUE mixture of drama, comedy, love story, and action adventure, that changes moods so quickly that you've got to adapt to Doug Fairbanks' own moody, restless personality in order to follow and understand, and most of all enjoy the movie. It seems to start out as one of those religious films about Madonnas and miracles that were so popular at the time, with a girl being miraculously saved after falling from a cliff by the Virgin Mary (played by Fairbanks' wife Mary Pickford!), and the place of the miracle soon becoming a place of pilgrimage. BUT - a few moments later, we find ourselves in a COMPLETELY different scenery: the world of the Gauchos, the outlaws of the Argentinian pampas, with their daring, carefree, exuberant lifestyle; the very example being of course their leader, Doug Fairbanks himself, simply named 'The Gaucho'.Everybody admires him, having the courage, the personality and the charm of a real leader; and naturally most of all the girls - like the cheeky young 'Mountain Girl' (Lupe Velez), with whom he soon starts a REAL whirlwind romance: he literally ties her to his body with his 'bolas' (the Gauchos' weapon, not unlike a lasso, but much more effective) to dance a HOT tango with her; they kiss and make up all the time, they quarrel, tease each other, and are crazy for each other - undoubtedly one of the most beautiful, entertaining, unusual romances that have ever been brought to the screen! Then the action part ensues, with Fairbanks' famous stunts, and he frees the prosperous 'City of the Miracle' from greedy usurper Ruiz, and even becomes friends with the Padre - without sharing his beliefs, however, because the only thing the Gaucho believes in is - the Gaucho. UNTIL that fateful moment when, after his jealous girl attacked the pious 'Girl of the Shrine' with a knife, unintentionally wounding his hand when he held her back - a victim of the 'Black Doom' (meaning leprosy) INTENTIONALLY infects him with the dreadful disease (because, earlier, he had suggested to him, being in this condition, to find a lonely spot and kill himself - that's what HE would do, he said)... Appalled and frightened, he understands what's happened to him - but he IS a man of principles: he says goodbye cheerfully to the 'Girl of the Shrine' and to his own 'Mountain Girl', and, just like he'd said, sets out into the woods with a gun intending to shoot himself.And there, the religious element sets in again; but not in the 'usual style' of some epic by De Mille or Griffith - no, with a strange, wonderful child-like faith: the 'Girl of the Shrine' finds him and tells him that if he believes, he can be saved; she asks him if he DOES believe, and he looks at her, puzzled, and then answers: 'I believe in YOU!' Then he asks her to teach him to pray - and HERE's the lesson: he's not supposed to become some religious fanatic, he's merely required to leave aside for once his over-developed self-confidence and learn to be HUMBLE and BEG for something... And it works: as soon as he places his hand in the healing water, it gets well - and he jumps around JUST like a little boy: 'I'm healed, I'm healed!!' And, after a few more heroic actions from both, he gets his 'Mountain Girl', the 'City of the Miracle' gets its peace and justice - a most CLASSIC Hollywood Happy Ending; but it gives us MUCH more than that to keep within us: because the TRUE message is the Gaucho's line: 'Yesterday was yesterday. Today is today. There's no tomorrow until it's today.' A great, everlasting message for one of the very GREATEST movies ever made.
MartinHafer Technically speaking, this was a good movie. It's obvious United Artists put a lot of money behind this project (and why shouldn't they, as two of the company's creators were the star of this film and his wife!). The sets and costumes were nice, the matte paintings and backgrounds were among the best I've seen in a silent and the stunts were fantastic. However, the overall package was still very weird, as there was an uncomfortably odd combination of various earlier Douglas Fairbanks films along with what looked almost like the Jennifer Jones film "The Song of Bernadette"! Odd to say the least.The film begins with a religious prologue about a young shepherdess falling from a cliff but being miraculously healed by what appears to be the Virgin Mary. Soon a religious shrine is built there.Ten years have now passed. It seems that in this South American nation, a corrupt government is now oppressing the people (just like in "The Mark of Zorro" and "Robin Hood" and "The Black Pirate" and several other Fairbanks films). Fairbanks is a bandit (it's not clear if he steal from the rich and gives to the poor...maybe he just steals) and he and his men take over a small town run by government thugs. However, despite the lovely stunt-work and women who adore him, the Gaucho is a bit of a jerk. When, as the new town's leader, he's mean to someone who has some weird disease (that looks NOTHING like any real illness). As a result, this afflicted person sneaks up on him later and deliberately infects him! And, thanks to some prayers and a re-appearance by the Virgin, the Gaucho is healed and life is good.The story is great to look at but heavy-handed and silly. My advice is first see Fairbanks' more famous films--they are better. Then, if you're curious, try this freaky film. It's good but not among his best by any standard.By the way, speaking of weird, get a load of the 'house scene'. If you see the movie, then you'll know what I mean!!
carvalheiro "The Gaucho" (1927) by F.Richard Jones putting in scene Douglas Fairbanks it was at the time a kind of almost ballet movie, concerning countryside landscapes in Argentine with cattle and horses. Indeed what it was possible also to a busy adventurer like his character brought another time to audience, in such a character of a smiling enraged gentleman. Saving people in local unrest by his phlegmatic pragmatism in the fight for making a quite still concealed justice of land in relationship with sacred ritual of local mingled faith. Instinctively for a better increase of cohabitation with less weaponry and more physical agility of the body on his horse, fighting as a masked creole friend of the poor's, whose sentimentalism was as a kind of internationalism, somewhat displaced from a social liberation struggle like that. Beyond his own measure and compassion, turning out the unrest at his own capacity and getting things to his wife, as though her lover apparently change his mind stopping it, but finally accepted by him after the social turmoil. It seems to be a silent movie already displaced from its stillness as guarantee of something of new coming soon, except the hat of Fairbanks which inspires confidence on the pampas as a kind of brave and peace maker, before it had happened too so briefly as possible and soon or later. What does represent the personality of this character in that movie ? Something of the enthusiasm lost for a while with the transition from the silent pictures, a kind of masked temperament reckoned by everyone of the time as righteous integrity, from a horseman who likes being an intruder on the social turmoil, but from whom the diplomatic intervention is not out of the struggle for free speech concerning peasant local religiosity. As if it was a kind of such a specific and well represented low power against any oligarchy on the pampas, told from the time of the roots linking to such a privileged inhabitants not far away of the still recent influence of colonization from abroad. Even if populism at its beginning also it is as bringing a necessary impulse in the intoxicated souls, as strength for smashing support in civil latent unrest for a small war between contenders of both sides. For all this he is a popular figure in the middle of iconoclasts, representing the request with good conviction for maybe the impossible neutrality, that couldn't facing disturbing spirits like the soul of an impossible twin liberator for any quarrel sharing the way of means of wealth. He represents the prefiguration of the symbolic new life for the countryside, nowhere in South America with the myth of the coming industrialism from North America. He is the gate of the foreigner owner that took the empathy of the local people, as liberal exception still half colonized and masterminded by brotherhood at the place of paternalism. That's it. Fancy as outlooked caricature of such a diversified single hero in his sensibleness and mystery fashion, from the moment that took the weakness of obscurantism and whose own fearless is fighting the most powerful than himself in his melancholy.
wmorrow59 Douglas Fairbanks wrote, produced and starred in this unusual and entertaining movie at the height of his career, and the guy sure was in his prime: you'll never find him looking as virile, athletic and sexy as he does here. Sight unseen I assumed that The Gaucho would be another escapist swashbuckler flick, cut from the same cloth as Doug's earlier vehicles and aimed primarily at boys, but it proved to be a real surprise, a combination action/adventure/morality tale with a heavier atmosphere and a darker sensibility than any other Fairbanks film. Whether or not its oddness comes as a pleasant surprise is up to the individual viewer, but for my part I enjoyed the change of pace and appreciated the filmmakers' boldness in attempting something so off-the-wall.How is The Gaucho different? For starters, Doug himself is different. Based on what little I knew beforehand I figured the title character would be an essentially decent bandit chieftain, a pseudo-Hispanic Robin Hood complete with a new band of Merry Hombres, once more pitted against the wicked forces of authoritarian rule. And in fact that's pretty much what he is, but he's also a flawed character who must mature in the course of the story, thus presenting a challenge for our leading man, who, as even his most dedicated fans admit, was never the most nuanced of actors. Here Doug is still very much the star of the show, but he's playing a decidedly selfish man who doesn't seem all that interested in avenging injustice or fighting for the peasantry. The Gaucho is no Robin Hood: he's cocky and arrogant, and in the early scenes his self-confident machismo is emphasized to the point of obnoxiousness. Like many a silent movie hero the Gaucho has a trademark physical gesture, a one-handed cigarette lighting trick, but once he's exhibited this bit two or three times we begin to roll our eyes and feel he's just begging to be taken down a peg or two.It's also noticeable that, all of a sudden, Doug is attempting to fill the dance shoes of the recently departed Rudolph Valentino. When he played Robin Hood or the Black Pirate Doug's attitude toward his leading lady was more respectful than passionate, but the Gaucho represents the most maturely sexual character Fairbanks would take on in his screen career. Doug's tango with Lupe Velez is as steamy as any sequence he ever played, even incorporating a hint of S&M when he lashes his partner to himself with a sharp twirl of his bolo. These early scenes suggest that our protagonist -- who has apparently already won the day, and has everything he needs to be happy -- must be riding for a fall. This is where the story's moralizing kicks in, as the Gaucho is compelled to recognize that there are forces at work in the universe even greater than himself.A pronounced element of religious mysticism is introduced in the prologue, when a gravely injured girl on the brink of death is visited by an apparition of the Virgin Mary. The girl is healed, whereupon she herself heals a dying baby. (The Virgin is played by Fairbanks' wife Mary Pickford, with a gravity that is unfortunately somewhat undercut by her bizarre, spinning halo.) This dollop of Hollywood Godliness, usually the province of Cecil B. DeMille, is interwoven throughout, and some viewers may find the going a bit sticky. Personally I didn't have a problem with it, perhaps in part because the 'religious' sequences are presented with such straightforward earnestness; and perhaps because, if ever a hero needed to find God, it's this one.Where matters of taste are concerned one might also question the introduction of the subject of leprosy into the scenario. The condition is identified only as the 'Black Doom,' but from the context it's perfectly clear what disease was being represented. Whatever your response, Fairbanks deserves credit for sheer moxie, and for attempting to stretch the boundaries of what was considered permissible in an adventure film. He could have played it safe and re-worked Robin Hood, or cranked out another Zorro sequel, but he took a risk, and all things considered I feel he pulled it off. And it's worth noting that the story's heavier material is counterbalanced by more typical scenes of rowdy play and athleticism. Fairbanks the canny showman also gives us two spectacular sequences: in the first, a house is dragged from its foundations by a team of horses, and later there's an amazing cattle stampede that looks quite fearsome and dangerous. The Gaucho also gives us the young and wildly sexy Lupe Velez, who takes a far more active role in the proceedings than most of Doug's other leading ladies.All told it's a helluva show, and well worth seeking out. It may not be for all tastes, but no one can call The Gaucho a routine swashbuckler. I would include it with Douglas Fairbanks' most entertaining and accomplished works.