In 1870, five ex-Confederate soldiers get embroiled in a foreign civil war south of the border.In 1870, five ex-Confederate soldiers get embroiled in a foreign civil war south of the border.In 1870, five ex-Confederate soldiers get embroiled in a foreign civil war south of the border.
José Greco
- Ramon
- (as Jose Greco)
Álvaro Ruiz
- Chico
- (as Alvaro Ruiz)
Ignacio Gómez
- Padre
- (as Ignacio Gomez)
Rey Vásquez
- Innkeeper
- (as Rey Vasquez)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaProduction was completed in 1969; the film remained unreleased until 1972.
- GoofsIn the battle, the cannons do not recoil after firing, showing that they are not real.
- Crazy creditsOpening credits prologue: South America, 1870
- ConnectionsEdited into Tela Class: Caçadores de Zica (2007)
Featured review
Cheese Grater.
The Proud and Damned is written and directed by Ferde Grofe Jr. It stars Chuck Connors, Cesar Romero and Andres Marquis. Music is by Gene Kauer and Douglas M. Lackey, and cinematography by Remegio Young.
1870 and five ex Confederate mercs arrive in South America and become embroiled in another Civil War of sorts...
Pretty poor offering, a pic that was completed in 1969 but wasn't released until three years later, one can only think that after viewing it, some financial backer saw it for the dud it is and refused release! The plot principal is sound, the fact it's a Western filmed in Columbia and set in South America (the place unnamed) is an interesting point of note, plus Connors and Romero at least have fans from which to launch potential for cult fandom. But hopes of a good film are dashed quite early.
Is being boring a valid criticism? Well yes it is, and this is a snore bore. The cast turn in auto-cue acting, all of them saddled with direlogue, the editing is messy, and the musical score irritating as it fluctuates between sorrowful guitar to bandido marching music, with some flamenco type jolly that's out of place as well, and what little action there is is laughably constructed. A bold turn of events in the narrative is worth a point at least, as is the outcome of it all - though it doesn't really make grounded sense - but ultimately this is one that deserves to stay obscure. 2/10
1870 and five ex Confederate mercs arrive in South America and become embroiled in another Civil War of sorts...
Pretty poor offering, a pic that was completed in 1969 but wasn't released until three years later, one can only think that after viewing it, some financial backer saw it for the dud it is and refused release! The plot principal is sound, the fact it's a Western filmed in Columbia and set in South America (the place unnamed) is an interesting point of note, plus Connors and Romero at least have fans from which to launch potential for cult fandom. But hopes of a good film are dashed quite early.
Is being boring a valid criticism? Well yes it is, and this is a snore bore. The cast turn in auto-cue acting, all of them saddled with direlogue, the editing is messy, and the musical score irritating as it fluctuates between sorrowful guitar to bandido marching music, with some flamenco type jolly that's out of place as well, and what little action there is is laughably constructed. A bold turn of events in the narrative is worth a point at least, as is the outcome of it all - though it doesn't really make grounded sense - but ultimately this is one that deserves to stay obscure. 2/10
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- hitchcockthelegend
- Jul 8, 2017
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