Jason Robards is Cable Hogue, a man left in the desert to die by his two partners, Bowen and Taggart.
Somehow, just when he’s about to give up, he finds water where there should be none.
His life saved, he stubbles to town, convinces a banker to help him turn the water hole into a stage station and falls for a pretty prostitute named Hildy (Stella Stevens).
But Hildy has her eyes on a comfortable life in San Francisco; and Hogue won’t leave his stage station.
It’s become a profitable venture, but that’s not why he’s hesitant to leave. He figures Bowen and Taggart might return, giving him an opportunity for revenge.
And that’s a day he’s been waiting for since the day they betrayed him.
A wonderful, wonderful film. One of the best Westerns ever, though it was made without epic intentions.
That’s because Sam Peckinpah struck movie magic when he paired Jason Robards and Stella Stevens as lovers in this film. It’s difficult to imagine anyone not being touched by their story.
A strong supporting cast includes David Warner as a lecherous preacher named Joshua ad Strother Martin and L.Q. Jones as the villains of the piece.
Jerry Goldsmith serves up another memorable Western score, and the film succeeds even though Peckinpah’s several attempts at slapstick comedy fall flat.
Ignore that. Just watch Robards and Stevens, who never looked lovelier, light up the screen.
Directed by:
Sam Peckinpah
Cast:
Jason Robards … Cable Hogue
Stella Stevens … Hildy
David Warner … Joshua
Strother Martin … Bowen
Slim Pickens … Ben Fairchild
L.Q. Jones … Taggart
Peter Whitney … Cushing
R.G. Armstrong … Quittner
Gene Evans … Clete
William Mims … Jensen
Kathleen Freeman … Mrs. Jensen
Susan O’Connell … Claudia
Vaughn Taylor … Powell
Max Evans … Webb Seely
James Anderson … Preacher
Runtime: 121 min.
Memorable lines:
Cable Hogue to lizard in the desert: “Sorry, old timer, but you’re only part poison. And I’m hungry for meat.”
Taggart, as he and Bowen abandon Cable: “It’s all yours, Cable — 50,000 gallons of sand.”
Joshua: “That excavation — a wine cellar perhaps?”
Cable: “No, that’s a three-holer. Expectin’ a lot of business.”
Cable: “You wouldn’t doubt a man of the gospel, would you?”
Banker: “Of course. That’s the first man I’d doubt.”
Joshua: “Vengeance is mine sayeth the Lord.”
Cable: “Well, that’s fair enough with me… just as long as he don’t take too long and I can watch.”
Hildy: “I was asked to leave by the good people of the town.”
Cable: “Dead Dog? Good people? I never met any. ‘Cept you.”
Cable, admiring Hildy’s beauty: “Now that’s a picture.”
Hildy: “You’ve seen it before.”
Cable: “Lady, no one’s ever seen you before.”
Joshua: “Did it ever occur to you, Cable, how wise and bountiful God was to put breasts on a woman? Just the right number in just the right place. Did you ever notice that, Cable?”
Cable: “Well, where in the hell would he put ’em? On their backside?”
Joshua: “It’s a thought.”
Hildy: “You’ve been awful nice to me, Hogue. Never bothered you none what I am?”
Cable: “Hell no, it never bothered me. I enjoyed it. Now, what the hell are you? Human being. Try the best you can. We all got our own ways of living.”
Hildy: “And loving?”
Cable: “Gets mighty lonesome without it.”
Joshua: “Funny thing. Doesn’t matter how much or how little you’ve wandered around, how many women you’ve been with. Every once in a while, one of them cuts right through, right straight into you.”
Cable: “What do you do about it?”
Joshua: “I suppose when you die, maybe you get over it.”
Nice page – great sleeper movie