Gregory Peck plays Mackenna, a lawman who fatally wounds an old Indian chief who ambushes him.
Before dying, the Indian shows Mackenna a map to a legendary lost valley of gold. Not believing it to be real — and map or the canyon of gold — Mackenna burns it.
That’s when an old nemesis, the outlaw Colorado (Omar Sharif) shows up with his gang. Seems he had been trailing the old Indian with hopes of securing the map.
Now he’s convinced that Mackenna, having seen it, will remember it well enough to lead him to the treasure.
Before long, the outlaw band and the lawman have been joined by a contingent of upstanding citizens from the nearby town of Hadleyburg. They’re eager to get rich too, and it that means becoming partners with Colorado, so be it.
The group also includes Inga Bergman (Camilla Sprav), the daughter of a judge Colorado killed. MacKenna, who got his job because of the judge, assumes the role of her protector.
But in doing so, he arouses the jealousy of a former lover, the pretty Indian Hesh-Ke (Julie Newmar), who bears a scar on her cheek and wields a wicked temper.
Early in the film, the Quincy Jones’ theme song “Old Turkey Buzzard” begins playing. Take it as a warning: You’re about to witness a turkey. A turkey on a grand scale.
Parts of the film are gloriously photographed. A cast that includes Gregory Peck, Omar Sharif, Telly Savalas as a deserting cavalry sergeant, Eli Wallach as leader of the Hadleysburg contingent and Raymond Massey in what would be his final film should have added up to a better result.
But this wannabe epic is marred by poorly mismatched cinematography, cheesy special effects, a script full of holes and implausibility and a climax that borders on the ridiculous.
Julie Newmar, best remembered as Catwoman on the “Batman” TV series, takes a nude dip in a river at one point in the film. MacKenna and Inga decide to take a swim too. Which first leads to an underwater makeout session between Hesh-Ke and Mackenna, which then turns into an underwater catfight between Hesh-Ke and Inga. Yep, that’s how illogical parts of this movie are.
Supposedly the film was shorn of 45 minutes of footage just prior to release. Who knows whether the extra footage would have helped or made the film more tedious?
Directed by:
J. Lee Thompson
Cast:
Gregory Peck … Mackenna
Omar Sharif … John Colorado
Telly Savalas … Sgt. Tibbs
Camilla Sparv … Inga Bergmann
Keenan Wynn … Sanchez
Julie Newmar … Hesh-Ke
Ted Cassidy … Hachita
Lee J. Cobb … The Editor
Raymond Massey … The Preacher
Burgess Meredith … The Storekeeper
Anthony Quayle … Old Englishman
Edward G. Robinson … Old Adams
Eli Wallach … Ben Baker
Eduardo Ciannelli … Prairie Dog
Dick Peaboby … Avila
Rudy Diaz … Besh
Robert Phillips … Monkey
Shelley Morrison … Pima Squaw
Robert Porter … Young Englishman
David Garfield … Adams’ boy
Pepe Callahan … Laguna
Madeleine Taylor Holmes … Old Apache woman
Duke Hobbie … Lieutenant
Victor Jory … Narrator
Runtime: 128 min.
Title song: “Old Turkey Buzzard”
by Quincy Jones
Memorable lines:
Prairie Dog: “Now you have the gold. You will wish you never see this map. The spirits will kill you. No laugh. It is a secret place.”
MacKenna: “Ah, so that’s what it’s supposed to be. Cannon del Oro. The Lost Adams. Don’t worry, old man. I won’t go looking for it. Wasted three good years chasing that old goose. There is no Lost Adams.”
Colorado: “I know this fellow. He’s a good card player. He always remembers the cards. If he saw the map, he remembers it. So we have a map — m his head.”
Ben Baker to Colorado: “I told you, everyone knows. You can’t keep gold a secret. It travels in the air.”
MacKenna: “I’ll take you there. I’ve got no choice. But I’ll tell you this. Not many of you will be coming back.”
MacKenna: “Has it crossed your mind that you’ll never see that canyon if you kill me?”
Colorado: “I won’t kill you. But I’ll hurt you awful bad.”
MacKenna about Hesh-Ke: “Don’t make her mad. She’s a little bit crazy.”
MacKenna to Inga Bergman, as she begins dreaming of what they could do with the gold: “You’re out of your mind. Now wake up. Your share. My share. There aren’t going to be any shares. I know him (Colorado). He doesn’t share with anybody.”
A similar ride into The Lost World canyon looking for gold (and not dinosaurs) was a much better film I think directed by Henry Hathaway. The Garden Of Evil, 1954. Rita Moreno in a brief early role, Bernard Herman’s one and only score for a western. The effects much better. No awful rear screen projection. Garden of Evil along the lines of The film versions of King Solomon’s Mines.
Carl Forman wrote and produced Mackenna’s Gold. Pales in comparison to his work on that little western High Noon.
I think it was based on a novel by Heck Allen, who wrote Tex Avery’s MGM cartoons. Guess Wild and Woolfy was a precursor.
This was a hit in the Soviet Union. I suspect that it triggered the spate of Soviet westerns in the 1970s, the first being “White Sun of the Desert” in 1970, set in Kazakstan in the 1920’s.
This film needs to be viewed with same willing suspension of disbelief that one employs to watch a Ray Harryhausen film of the 1950’s or 1960’s. A kid’s movie, if you will.