Bite the Bullet

6.4
19752h 12m

At the beginning of the 20th century, a newspaper organizes an endurance horse race : 700 miles to run in a few days. 9 adventurers are competing, among them a woman, Miss Jones, a Mexican, an Englishman, a young cow-boy, an old one and two friends, Sam Clayton and Luke Matthews. All those individualists will learn to respect each other.

Production

Logo for Columbia Pictures

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Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Bite the Bullet (1975) Original Trailer [HD]

Bite the Bullet (1975) Original Trailer [HD]

Cast

Photo of Gene Hackman

Gene Hackman

Sam Clayton

Photo of Candice Bergen

Candice Bergen

Miss Jones

Photo of James Coburn

James Coburn

Luke Matthews

Photo of Ian Bannen

Ian Bannen

Sir Harry Norfolk

Photo of Dabney Coleman

Dabney Coleman

Jack Parker

Photo of John McLiam

John McLiam

Gebhardt

Photo of Robert F. Hoy

Robert F. Hoy

Lee Christie

Photo of Paul Stewart

Paul Stewart

J.B. Parker (uncredited)

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Reviews

W

Wuchak

6/10

***Big-budget Western about a 700-mile endurance race with a top-notch cast***

In 1906, a 700-mile horse race in the Western wilderness is sponsored by a newspaper. The racers include two former Rough Riders (Gene Hackman & James Coburn), a part-time prostitute (Candice Bergen), a punk “Kid” (Jan-Michael Vincent), an aged cowboy (Ben Johnson), a Mexican with a toothache (Mario Arteaga) and an English gent (Ian Bannen).

“Bite the Bullet” (1975) was written & directed by Richard Brooks, who said the movie is based on several historical cross-country races subsidized by newspapers and cities from 1880-1910. The most well-known was a 1908 race from Evanston, Wyoming, to Denver backed by the Denver Post with a $2500 prize, which was his main inspiration.

While this was a big budget production with a kick-axx cast it’s not often cited on Best Westerns lists, probably because the long race makes it a one-of-a-kind Western that’s not about a suspense-building story, but rather an episodic adventure with character-defining vignettes. Speaking of which, it helps if you utilize the subtitles to keep up with the sometimes mumbled dialogues.

Unfortunately, the escaped convict subplot seems shoehorned into the last act. It's like Brooks tried too hard to concoct an "exciting" ending, but ended up almost ruining the movie.

The film runs 2 hours, 12 minutes, and was shot in Nevada (Carson National Forest & Lake Mead), New Mexico (White Sands) and Colorado.

GRADE: C+/B-

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