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  • Mrs. Lowe (Ann Margret) is the widow who enlists the help of Lane (John Wayne) in finding a gold shipment that had been stolen five years ago…

    In that time ten men rode away with half a million in gold… The fellow that was running the show figured they better hide it until things cooled off… So he took the Fargo box and rode south into Mexico… He had the misfortune of getting shot… But before he died, he told his wife—the mother of his little boy— where the gold was…

    But his widow decided to get the gold, return it to the train company for a $50,000 reward, and clear her husband's name… The reason: she doesn't want her kid growing up thinking his old man ran around robbing trains…

    In mid way, and as 'gold has a way of bringing out the larceny in all of us,' Wayne, with his old-times pals and two young helpers, find themselves followed by mysterious riders who also want the buried loot…

    "The Train Robbers" features plenty of gorgeous vistas, from rocky scrub to a sea of rippling sand dunes… Also Wayne delivers one of his most memorable lines addressing Margret, 'I've got a saddle that's older than you are, Mrs. Lowe.'
  • The picture talks about a widow (Anne Margret , though Wayne felt she had stolen too many scenes) who contracts as employer to a motley group of cowboys (Jon Wayne , Rod Taylor , Ben Johnson, Christopher George , Vinton and Jerry Gatlin replacing Jack Elam) to help her retrieve the robbed gold of the Well Fargo in order to delete her late husband's bad name who had previously stolen it . The gold is located on a far desert and they'll have to cross various places until achieve their objective and being pursued by some cutthroats and a detective of Pinkerton agency (Ricardo Montalban) .

    The highlights of the film are the imposing attack by the bunch of baddies on the train remains where the protagonists are sheltered and , of course , the final confrontation results to be pretty exciting . In the motion picture there is western action , continuous riding , emotion , tension , adventures , relaxed acting and results to be quite entertaining as well as fun . John Wayne's and Ann-Margret's character names , "Lane" and "Mrs. Lowe," are the same as Wayne's and Geraldine Page's characters' names in ¨Hondo¨ by John Farrow . The storyline is simple and plain but the final plot line has an astounding surprise that turns out to be the best part of the movie . Good support cast , such as : Ricardo Montalban , Ben Johnson , Jerry Gatlin , and Christopher George who played along with Wayne in "El Dorado" (1967) and "Chisum" (1970) . Excellent musical score by Dominic Frontiere , author of various enjoyable western soundtracks , thus : ''Barquero'', ''Chisum'' and ''Hang high'' . Glittering and impressive cinematography by William H. Clothier at his last film , habitual photographer of John Wayne films , it is colourfully shown on the numerous outdoors that are stunning location shots . This low-key pic was produced by John Wayne and his son Michael G. Wayne , proprietaries of the Batjac Productions . The movie was professionally directed by Burt Kennedy , author and screenwriter of a few classic Western mostly performed by Randolph Scott and directed by Budd Boetticher . The flick will appeal to John Wayne fans and western moviegoers . Rating: Nice and good . It's worthwhile seeing.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    John Wayne and voluptuous Ann-Margret co-star in writer & director Burt Kennedy's "The Train Robbers," a rambunctious western shoot'em up about a notorious outlaw's widow who hires the Duke to recover a half-a-million in stolen gold from her husband's last hold-up. She wants the money returned to Wells Fargo so she can clear her husband's name. Wayne summons his trusty old saddle pals Rod Taylor, Ben Johnson and Bobby Vinton to accompany him on this perilous journey. Taylor brings along a couple of young gunmen, Christopher George and Jerry Gatlin, to find the buried treasure. No sooner has Wayne, Ann-Margret, and company saddled up and crossed the border into Mexico to find the fortune in gold than a train load of gunslingers show up and pursue them. Meanwhile, lurking on the fringes of the action is an enigmatic but elegantly-attired, cigar-smoking hombre who never loses sight of them.

    Our heroes meet at a lonely railway station in Liberty, Texas, rather like the depot in Sergio Leone's "Once Upon a Time in the West." The small town appears empty. The wind blows across the boardwalk at the hotel and sways the rocking chairs back and forth. A metal sign buckles in the breeze. Jesse (Ben Johnson of "Rio Grande") awaits the arrival of Lane (John Wayne) on a train that was due in the day before, and everybody is astonished when Mrs. Lowe (Ann-Margret of "Viva Las Vegas") gets off the train with Lane. Jesse and Grady (Rod Taylor of "Dark of the Sun") remember Lane as "bull-headed," and they discover to their relief that he hasn't changed an iota. Later, we learn that Jesse and Grady served together under Lane in the Union Army during the American Civil War where they endured their baptism under fire at Vicksburg. Life for these three has been going up one hill of adversity after another. Feisty Calhoun stands up to Lane, and Lane wallops Grady. Grady thinks that Lane ought to be happy that Calhoun stood up to him, but Lane wants men who will stand alongside him not against him. Calhoun demands to know what they are getting themselves into, and Lane observes that they are doing what any hired gun does . . . risking their lives. Earlier, before Lane and Mrs. Lowe got off the train, Grady told Jesse that he has shown up for the job simply because it amounted to "something to do."

    After initial misgivings about endangering a woman on a long ride through the desert, Lane and company head out. Before they leave the station, Lane boils Mrs. Lowe's shirt so that her late husband's pallbearers won't mistake her as a man and try to shoot her. An army of twenty gunmen—we never see these guys up close—shadow our heroes across the parched terrain to the accompaniment of "Rat Patrol" composer Dominic Frontiere's giddy-up score that signals the change of locale when everybody plunges across the Rio Grande into old Mexico. Along the way, during several campfire scenes we learn more about our heroes. Eventually, the feuding between Calhoun and Lane ends and they become friends. Finally, our heroes find the railroad train in the middle of the Mexican desert. They dig into the boiler and find the gold, but they aren't about to go anywhere because that ubiquitous army of gunmen that has been trailing them arrives. As our heroes fortify themselves for the ensuing gun battle, Jesse and Grady swap memorable but pithy dialogue. "Don't get old," Grady warns Jesse, "you'll live to regret it." The twenty gunmen attack them, but our heroes emerge unscathed largely because—in Lane's words—"they could shoot worth a damn."

    Our heroes head back across the border, but the remaining gunmen beat them back to Liberty and prepare a reception for them. Everything ends with a bang-up shoot-out at the railway station where Lane met Jesse and Calhoun. Our heroes virtually blow the town to bits with dynamite so they can defeat the villains. During this fracas, Mrs. Lowe pulls a fast one on our heroes in what constitutes an O'Henry reversal. The well-dressed stranger (Ricardo Montalban of "Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan") turns out to be a Pinkerton detective who has been on Mrs. Lowe for five years. He explains that she was never married and that Lowe died with a bullet in the back in the bordello where Mrs. Lowe worked. She reveals that Mrs. Lowe's name is Lily. Our heroes scramble after the departing train that carries the pseudo Mrs. Lowe and the gold.

    Burt Kennedy got his start writing laconic but entertaining oaters for director Budd Boetticher in the 1950s. Wayne's film production company Batjac produced many of Boetticher's existential westerns so it is no surprise that Kennedy went on to pen westerns for Wayne. The first collaboration between Wayne and Kennedy was the superlative "The War Wagon." Mind you, "The Train Robbers" isn't half as exhilarating as "The War Wagon," but this nifty little sagebrusher never runs out of steam and the dialogue is fun to hear. Rod Taylor is nothing short of brilliant as Wayne and Johnson's friend. Okay, all the characters are pretty much stereotypical and of them gets so much as a scratch. Wayne plays his usual stalwart hero and leathery Ben Johnson is his wise sidekick. Naturally, Ann-Margret is a feast for the eyes. The scene where Wayne tries to get her drunk so she will reveal the whereabouts of the gold is amusing. Later, when she comes onto Wayne, he deflects her amorous advances with the line, "M'am, I've got a saddle older than you." Although it is painfully predictable from fade-in to fade-out, "The Train Robbers" qualifies as a rip-snorting adventure that benefits immeasurably from veteran Wayne lenser William H. Clothier's gorgeous widescreen photography. John Wayne fans will enjoy this familiar but engaging western.
  • I was in college when I first saw THE TRAIN ROBBERS. I was already a die hard John Wayne fan. I followed his later career with great interest. Since due to the political climate of the day one was not the most popular individual on a campus declaring the fact that you liked this star's work. I didn't simply declare this fact. I shouted it from the rooftops. I dragged all my friends to see this picture because I felt it both reflected the best of Duke's earlier work and still stayed consistent with the aging hero he was portraying. Burt Kennedy's lean and taut script reminded me of the best of his work on the Randolph Scott and Budd Boetticher westerns of the fifties. The simple yarn of Ann-Margret hiring John Wayne and his crew of Ben Johnson, Rod Taylor,Christopher George, Jerry Gatlin and Bobby Vinton to recover half a million dollars in stolen gold is very simple in it's directness. They are are gunmen who just stay on the right side of the law. If they were japanese they could almost be described as landless sellswords or ronin. They exist simply from job to job. The status quo for Lane John Wayne's character is changed by the presence of the woman. Mrs. Lowe, He finds himself sexually attracted to Mrs. Lane, a woman young enough to be his daughter yet still capable of reminding him of the things he's lost in his life.Ann-Margret's character is curious about Lane who won't or more importantly can't talk about himself. Ben Johnson's character Jesse fills in the the necessary exposition but never tells more than he immediately has to. Burt Kennedy also plays with his audience. In BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID George Roy Hill has his leads chased by faceless men that they eventually are able to identify. In THE TRAIN ROBBERS our crew is chased by nameless men we never get to identify, people who remain throughout the film as a constant unknown quantity. This is a situation I don't recall ever seeing before in an A grade Wayne western. There is a scene toward the end of the film where Mrs. Lowe makes an overture to Lane which he reluctantly rejects. He feels he is too old to have feelings of this nature. The film starts to proceed to what might be considered a predictable conclusion. Burt Kennedy does not oblige. He gives us a surprise ending that totally satisfies on each and every viewing. There are other considerable assets to this project. Dominic Frontiere's score is a rouser. The opening of the film and the first fifteen minutes contain no score at all. All of a sudden we have an expansive score on the par with Alfred Newman's HOW THE WEST WAS WON or Jerome Moross's THE BIG COUNTRY. The only other score Mr. Frontiere ever delivered on a par with this film was Ted Post's HANG'EM HIGH. The other major contributor to this project was William H Clothier superb cinematography. This was the last of his 17 collaborations with the Duke and no movie ever looked cleaner or sharper. I know this film has many detractors. Everyone is entitled to his opinion but I feel this is on the high end of Duke's later work. As for Burt Kennedy I feel he delivered a movie even Howard Hawks would have liked to claim as his own.
  • Late in his career, John Wayne made quite a few very leisurely films where he just kind of walked through the parts. Of course, considering he was pretty old and had been battling with cancer, it certainly isn't much of a surprise. What is a surprise is that he was, on occasion, able to play some of the roles he played--such as in BRANNIGAN and his final film, THE SHOOTIST. THE TRAIN ROBBERS is such a leisurely romp. Sure, they ride their horses a lot (probably too much, if you ask me), but the action scenes were pretty subdued other than a gunfight here and there and a couple punches--sort of a kinder, gentler sort of John Wayne.

    This film is about a widow who wants Wayne and his friends to cross into Mexico to rescue some stolen gold and return it for the reward. Along the way, there are a lot of good moments of dialog between those in the party and, not surprisingly, the old professional Ben Johnson came off best in these scenes.

    While the overall film offered few big surprises, the ending was pretty exciting and for Wayne fans this is a must-see. For others, it's a pleasant enough Western--you could certainly do a lot worse!

    By the way--Two final comments. Bobby Vinton was in the movie but you'd hardly notice. Also, in one scene, a mule knocks one of them into a huge mud puddle. Only seconds later, the same guy is barely wet at all--an interesting continuity problem.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Well, a Western with a twist ending - you don't see that very often. Usually the white hat hero rides off into the sunset with the pretty lady by his side, but this one served up what could have been a set up for a sequel. I think once was enough though.

    Once this got under way it reminded me a lot of the Burt Reynolds flick "Sam Whiskey". Both pictures have the same plot, a 'widow' hires on an aggressive gunman to retrieve the gold her husband stole and return it to the authorities to clear the family name. The Reynolds picture was a little more complicated since it required Mission Impossible-like coordination, so it kept you on your toes a bit more as the viewer. This one runs a bit slower, in fact there seems to be a fair amount of down time after Lane (John Wayne) and his group whittle down the twenty man posse in the desert.

    As far as leading ladies go, it's a toss-up between "Sam Whiskey" and "The Train Robbers". Angie Dickinson did the honors in the earlier film (1969), while Ann-Margret cuts a pretty mean profile in this pic. I've never mentioned it before, but the lack of that second 'a' in Margret's name always seems to bother me, it's like an itch that can't be scratched. You have to admit though, she looked darn good in her boiled shirt; heck, she even looked good in that wet blanket.
  • Whilst the Western genre for movies has died out since the sixties, most, if not all, John Wayne films are good and enjoyable today. However, with that said, this film (to the seasoned Western viewer) feels like nothing new and exciting. And again, with that said, it is not a bad film by any means. John Wayne puts up, yet again, a stellar performance with the backdrop being a decent adventure film with enough action to entice you for its duration.

    Whilst nothing brilliant, The Train Robbers is just an easy film to watch and make time fly. If you are not a Western fan, then give this one a miss because it will not promote you to watch another one, but for the more fans of the genre, this will not be so hit and miss for you.
  • Rather routine but very well made Western - with touches of both humor and heart - starring The Duke as Lane, who, with his buddies Jesse (Ben Johnson) and Grady (Rod Taylor) and three other men, decide that they will help out a widow named Mrs. Lowe (a ravishing Ann- Margret). A long time ago her husband had participated in a major gold robbery, and now she wants the long-hidden gold recovered and returned to the bank in an effort to clear the guy's name. The group embarks on a somewhat treacherous, if not epic, journey to their destination, sometimes fighting amongst themselves along the way.

    Western expert Burt Kennedy wrote and directed this entertaining movie. It's got enough laughs, poignancy, action, and suspense to make it a good viewing. There are plenty of gorgeous vistas (and matte shots by Albert Whitlock), all wonderfully photographed by cinematographer William H. Clothier, in his final feature film. The story is really nothing truly special, but it holds your attention for a decently paced 92 minutes. Certainly the opening credit sequence does have a very tense, watchful quality going for it. The main asset is an array of engaging performances: The Duke is typically commanding, Johnson and Taylor very amiable, Ann-Margret quite appealing. Rounding out Lanes' gang are Christopher George as Calhoun, singer Bobby Vinton as Ben Young, and stuntman Jerry Gatlin as Sam Turner. Ricardo Montalban makes a few fleeting appearances as a mysterious character whose presence is explained at the end of the picture. And the big reveal is worth a chuckle.

    This may not be a great film of its kind, but it is a good one.

    Seven out of 10.
  • bygard27 April 2007
    I find The Train Robbers to be a surprisingly under-appreciated western. The more times I see it, the more I appreciate it myself. Sure, the feel and the look may be old-fashioned for its time but I don't care. Kennedy, Wayne and the rest of the group have obviously settled to make a fine basic western romp, not a new-styled masterpiece, and have reached the goal with very satisfying results. There can be seen a few little touches of Leone's 'Once Upon a Time in the West' (the first scene of Ben Johnson waiting at the train station), Siegel's 'Two Mules for Sister Sara' (a sister Sara-type treatment of the female character) or Hill's 'Butch Cassidy & the Sundance Kid' (the pursuing gang of riders). It also brings to mind Peckinpah's 'Ride the High Country'. But after these slight touches it's always back to the good old' Wayne stuff and I have nothing to complain about that.

    With the music underlining heavily the handsome photography makes some highly iconic and beautiful pictures. There are frames that look a lot like classic western paintings. The nature and the people are seen beautifully during the long ride through deserts, rivers and storms. Sometimes it almost feels like watching 'Easy Rider' of the Wayne generation on horses. "Let's go to Mexico."

    The action works fine like it always does when these old times film pros have been on the job. The men might be saddle-weary, but still gutsy enough and well worn like good saddle leather. You can tell the experience and good times as well from their voices. There is also a lot of warmth shining out of them, specially from Wayne's side. Ann-Margret has no real competition being the only woman in the picture. Besides "sticking out from the right places" she holds up pretty well especially with Wayne, who easily blew other actors aside with his strong presence on the screen.

    With appropriately ironic note to its end the whole raid for the lost gold serves as a very good early seventies western and a decent one in Wayne's canon.
  • Released in 1973 and written & directed by Burt Kennedy, "The Train Robbers" stars John Wayne as Lane, a former Civil War officer who enlists a couple of his old subordinates (Ben Johnson & Rod Taylor) and a few younger gunfighters (e.g. Christopher George & Bobby Vinton) to help a widow (Ann-Margret) obtain a hidden cache of gold to honor her family's name. They travel 200 miles from West Texas into the Mexican desert while being chased by a gang who also wants the money, not to mention a mysterious man who has his own agenda (Ricardo Montalban).

    While I relish this Western, it does have its flaws. The story is wholly contrived and contains a couple questionable dialogues, not to mention the "yeah, right" activities of the Montalban character. But I've seen way worse Westerns; the overrated "The Searchers" (1956) comes to mind.

    If you like authentic breathtaking Southwestern vistas, notable Western music (reminiscent of "How the West was Won"), a tried-and-true cast (including cutie Ann-Margret) and desert adventure marked by a long chase with numerous camping-out scenes (almost a survival movie), not to mention an exceptional centerpiece set, featuring a dilapidated abandoned train in the desert, and a quality surprise ending, you can't go wrong with "The Train Robbers." The magnificent Western cinematography is particularly notable: Myriad frames from practically every sequence could be used as awesome Western art. Then there's the fact that this is essentially a Western "road movie," albeit without the road (you could call it a trail movie).

    On top of this you get some dialogue exchanges that are nigh iconic for the Western genre. For instance, we've all seen those Westerns where the aging protagonist and a female half his age fall in love and ride off into the sunset, but there's a scene in "The Train Robbers" where the hot widow reveals her attraction to the aged-but-commanding Lane wherein he frankly informs her: "I got a saddle that's older than you are, Mrs. Lowe." This, of course, swiftly douses any romantic sparks.

    Some criticize that the title is misleading, but it's applicable in three ways: (1.) Mr. Lowe robbed a train of $500,000 in gold before the movie begins, (2.) Lane & his team "rob" the abandoned train in the desert, and (3.) when the group decide to chase the train at the end one of them specifies that he's going to "rob a train!"

    As for the cavil that there's no central villain and that the gang chasing the protagonists are faceless gun-fodder, while this is true you have to respect the film for saying, "Villain, villain? We don't need no stinking villain." Besides, there IS a villain in the predominant cast. A conman IS a villain, albeit with a smile and charm. The ending reveals all and those who complain about the lack of a key antagonist are doofuses who can't see the forest for the trees.

    For those who scratch their heads at various elements of the plot, just connect the dots from the various dialogues and it makes sense. It's all there.

    I admit that "The Train Robbers" is palpably flawed for the reasons cited earlier. If the filmmakers would've just taken a little more time and spent a little more money to work out the kinks it could've been a latter-day Wayne Western on the level of "True Grit" (1969), "The Cowboys" (1972) and "Rooster Cogburn" (1975). Still, its highlights make it not far off; it's an entertaining cult Western.

    The film runs 92 minutes and was shot in Durango, Sonora & Chihuahua, Mexico; and Yuma, Arizona.

    GRADE: B
  • edwagreen17 November 2015
    4/10
    **
    Warning: Spoilers
    A rather typical John Wayne western with the Duke literally very comfortable in his favorite genre of western films.

    Hired by the widow of a dead train robber, Wayne and others seek to locate the gold that her husband stole and return it to the authorities so that they can collect a reward and at least her husband's name can be cleared.

    The plot is revealed in less than 15 minutes after the film begins and is then devoted to traveling over difficult terrain, shooting between the good guys versus the original robbers and others, Wayne getting the "widow" Ann-Margret intoxicated so as to learn more and other Wayne riders such as Rod Taylor and Ben Johnson revealing themselves.

    As the story goes on it is highly predictable, but at the very end it is shown that you can't trust anyone or their respective stories.
  • I have never seen a John Wayne movie that I didn't enjoy, although some of the very early stuff was a little hammy.

    The Duke always gave his best in all his films. Who cares about little little blips here and there. The Good guy always wins, and usually gets the girl.

    This film excels because of the way it leads the viewer down a dirty dusty path, with a wonderful twist just where you don't expect it.

    As always - Excellent Scenery, even the animals have their own little cameos.

    There is plenty of drama, and enough suspense to keep up concentration levels

    There are the usual little two way quips, and enough dialogue to paint a clear enough background to the key characters.

    Ben Johnson is his usual dry character, Rod Taylor plays a likable delayed adolescent, Ann Margret fills her part amply!

    Good Fun - Plenty of Bangs - Well Cast - Memorable Quips.

    Nobody minds a bit of repetition if it works, and contributes to the storyline which it does well.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    THE TRAIN ROBBERS is another solid John Wayne adventure, not one of his best stories but certainly watchable enough. It's a film where you can just sit back and enjoy both the ruggedness of the scenery and the main actor, the performances of the recognisable supporting cast members, and the regular action bits with all of the shoot-outs, horse riding, and fist fights you could want. These films are neither the best nor the worst of the genre; they're merely pretty good, and pass the time ably enough.

    Wayne leads a posse of cowboys who are tasked by a beautiful widow to receive a missing gold shipment located on the far side of the desert. The film follows their journey through a hostile terrain as they face pursuit by the dedicated Ricardo Montalban and battles with various murderous bandits. There's a heck of a lot of horse riding here if that's your thing. Wayne is well supported in this one by a fading Rod Taylor (little seen after the 1960s), a hardy Christopher George, and the reliable Ben Johnson. Ann-Margaret does quite well in the rather thankless widow role.
  • This 1972 CinemaScope production* should have been a thrilling ride. As it is, it comes across as cardboard people filmed in front of some fairly stunning scenery, on horseback, travelling right to left for the first part of the picture and then left to right later on for the home stretch.

    It might have looked okay in a first run theatre, (let's face it, the picture was never intended to be shown on home video – the medium didn't exist in the early 1970s), but any film has to have more than dazzle to capture the imagination. In this case, we have a poorly plotted film featuring an ageing John Wayne doing what he does best: wandering about showing us when an all American male may and may not break the rules. He breaks no rules with his co-star, Ann-Margret. In fact there is no chemistry at work at all between them at all. The most stunning thing about Ann-Margret is the way she always has her hair and eyeliner perfect, regardless of how long she's been on the dusty trail. She never, apparently, needs to comb or wash it, and the one outfit she wears for most the movie never gets dirty. Nothing ever happens to make any of the characters come alive, despite some earnest "buddy talk" once in a while.

    I'd wanted to like the film, but it is a caricature of John Wayne's true self. It's the type of sloppy and soppy movie that was somewhat of a hallmark in the late 1960s and 1970s. The music is diabolical – irritating to the point of wanting to turn the sound off altogether. The dialogue is little better – it might have been better being a silent movie.

    Is it funny? Not when it is intended to be. The funniest part of the film is when the gang is searching for a rail-road track in a sand storm, and off to the right of the picture behind them, we get a clear view of the camera dolly track right out there in the desert! The director's signature, perhaps? More likely, just forgot just how wide widescreen can be!

    The film is interesting only to see how John Wayne was milked mercilessly for his type-cast roles during his later career. He gives the appearance in this outing that he doesn't really care if the picture ever makes the big screen or not. It doesn't work as a "road" movie; it fails as a "quest" film, and it doesn't even get off the starting grid as a "buddie picture". It's a pity director Burt Kennedy didn't fire the scriptwriter – but then it was his own script. Producer was John Wayne's son, Michael Wayne - maybe as a living memorial to him. But it is a film that would have been better dead and buried before it ever got past the storyboarding stage.

    It would stand up to a John Wayne retrospective if shown on a large-enough screen, although "Brannigan" (1975) is more interesting way of viewing an ageing Duke, since at least he ends up in London in that one. (I reserve further comment on "Branigan" as the first and only time I've watched it was on its first theatrical release. "The Train Robbers" I watched - on video widescreen - yesterday). But in any case, neither film comes near to a masterpiece such as "The Searchers" (1956).

    My rating: 3 out of 10 – and that's generous. *Seems to be a difference of opinion regarding year of release.
  • I know this film since I was a kid. Nothing new here. I watched it yesterday, once more. It could have been made by Andrew Mac Laglen. All these westerns made in the late 60's and early 70's, starring John Wayne and his pals, have nothing to do with the same period Sam Peckinpah's or Monty Hellman's ones, the new western, another kind. But I like the both. The new generation was more downbeat, the counter culture, the death of the old west. Wayne was thousand miles away from this. On the contrary, he was still in the old western, from the fifties and forties.

    So, what could I say more about TRAIN ROBBERS?

    I like this kind of westerns, and always will do.

    Period.
  • The shot composition in this film is excellent. The key frames from every scene could easily fill an art museum. This film is worth watching for that alone. Watch this film with the sound off. Wayne and Margaret, the lead actors, do a fine job. Rod Taylor as a cowboy? Sorry, but no. The secondary supporting actors are miscast as well. They would be better suited for urban settings. Ricardo Montalban is underused.
  • Widow Ann-Margret hires John Wayne and his gang to go into Mexico and recover some gold stolen by her late husband. In the '60s and '70s, John Wayne's movies featured him acting opposite an assortment of actors he had seldom, if ever, acted with before. This includes older stars who, for one reason or another, had never appeared in a Wayne film in the glory days, as well as newer stars. Most of this is because Duke's old friends had either died, retired, or just gotten too old to play most of the roles in his films. You do have Ben Johnson here, and he's solid, but you also have Ann-Margret, Rod Taylor, Christopher George, Ricardo Montalban, and Bobby Vinton. Gone are the days of Ward Bond and John Qualen. All of these actors do fine but none match Duke's screen presence. This was often the case in his later years where he had to carry the movies himself.

    Ann-Margret's young enough to be Duke's granddaughter so the thought of them having a romance is pretty gross. Thankfully, the movie never goes there beyond an amusing scene where Duke turns her down. It goes without saying she's beautiful and sexy, as usual. Director Burt Kennedy was no fool and in one scene where she has to change into some jeans, the camera lingers on her backside like a Levi's commercial. Speaking of Kennedy, what was with all the horse riding footage? Did he have to fill time? Anyway, it's light on action but pleasant overall. A decent time-killer.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Train Robbers (1973): Dir: Burt Kennedy / Cast: John Wayne, Ann-Margaret, Rod Taylor, Ben Johnson, Ricardo Montalban: Appealing western about identity as John Wayne and his outlaws are hired by a widow to locate gold in order that she can return it. It was originally stolen by her late husband. Starts out fine until it falls into clichés with nameless gun slinging villains in hot pursuit zeroing in for a gun fight. Director Burt Kennedy is backed by great action sequences and a production that pays off. It doesn't quite measure up to The Wild Bunch or Stagecoach but fans of westerns will be entertained thoroughly. John Wayne plays the leader who knows the dangers that come with the territory yet evidently begins failing his judgements. Ann-Margaret plays the widow in the most interesting role. Wayne tells her to stand out in terms of how she dresses so to avoid certain death although he maintains watch over her well being at the same time. Supporting roles aren't as broad but feature Rod Taylor and Ben Johnson who are both capable performers. Ricardo Montalban is also featured in a key role but nonetheless the film mainly goes to the leads here. This is hardly the best western ever produced but it most certainly delivers on action scenes and all the clichés. Theme regards activities associated with oneself and the uncertainty of clouded decisions. Score: 6 / 10
  • The Train Robbers is a solid John Wayne movie. It was colorful, it had sufficient action, a good cast, and even a good plot twist. John Wayne didn't really have any badass moments, but the movie was still really enjoyable.
  • One of the good, though less talked about John Wayne films that sort of slipped between the cracks of True Grit and Rooster Cogburn, The Train Robbers is a bit light-weight most of the time, but a lot of fun, especially the exciting cat-and-mouse game played out in the final thirty minutes.

    Writer/director Burt Kennedy wrote some of the best unsung westerns ever. Each of them are loaded with the nuances that almost every modern attempt at the genre seems to lack, things like hard decision making and the hazards of crossing the frontier, stuff that made this and other Kennedy-scripted movies really satisfying.

    It's great to see the Duke here, riding alongside such great co-stars as Rod Taylor, Ben Johnson, and Christopher George, though Ann-Margaret seems a bit miscast. With her in the movie, you can pretty much guess the final scene way in advance!

    From the fifties onward, Wayne made a point to cast young teen idols, singers, and up-and-comers in his pictures, like Tab Hunter, Fabian, Ricky Nelson, Glen Campbell, Jeffrey Hunter, and James Caan. With that in mind, the casting of Bobby Vinton still seems like an odd choice, as he was pretty old-school, even for 1973! He's alright though, in his limited role as Wayne's sidekick's sidekick's sidekick!
  • The 'classic' western, or better: the 'John Wayne Western' was, by 1973, dead. Sergio Leone had made some great things in the sixties, and Peckinpah's The Wild Bunch and maybe even Butch Cassidy were great inventions. All that made a return to the classic storytelling you'd expect from a Wayne western totally unnecessary.

    Kennedy tries to be old-fashioned. The problem - if you want old western you watch old westerns, and after you've seen 'Once upon a time in the west' and the 'The Wild Bunch', THE TRAIN ROBBERS is quite uninteresting. Wayne does a fine acting job, and so does the rest of his supporters, but what's it all worth when the story lacks thrill? The cinematography is awesome, I dig the bombastic score and there's a great little twist at the end, plus a funny line or two. That's it. Most of the time they're riding. Long boring ever-recurring riding. Beautiful. But still boring.

    Then of course there is Ann-Margret, who is one of the most beautiful women in movie history, but is not really presented in the way she deserves. Somehow she appears, thanks to bad hairdo and bad makeup, less attractive than in some other things she did around this time (the French-American thriller The Outside Man for example). It was a bad career move I'd say - after Carnal Knowledge she had everything an actress in Hollywood needs - beauty, talent and success, and what did she do? - A supporting role in an average John Wayne- western. I'd like to know why.

    To sum it up - good music, good cinematography and fine acting. Ann-Margret's nevertheless a plus to the film. It's a simple plot, no thrill, no innovation. It's not terrible though, mind you. It's just a neat little western entertainment, nothing more.

    6 1/2 out of 10
  • Ann-Margret has hired John Wayne and company to find some stolen gold that her husband along with other outlaws had robbed. It's in Mexico, a four day ride according to her. So off our intrepid group goes to Mexico.

    Of course those other outlaws are after it also so therein lies the tale.

    Burt Kennedy did so much better for the Duke in The War Wagon than in this one. Pity because the chemistry between the cast is pretty good. If this were back in the days of B westerns, I can easily see Wayne with Ben Johnson and Rod Taylor in a kind of Three Mesquiteer series with a bigger budget.

    There are so few action sequences. The chemistry is good, but that's only part of it. In my review of The Comancheros I mentioned that Wayne and Stuart Whitman's chemistry was excellent and it carried the film. But there was a LOT more action in The Comancheros than in The Train Robbers. It's only 90 minutes and that is short for a feature film by 1973.

    There is a real explosive climax with the nameless, faceless, villains that have been pursuing the group at the end. And Ricardo Montalban's Pinkerton man at the end really gives an unexpected twist to the proceedings. That was pure Burt Kennedy.

    I think most fans of John Wayne will be disappointed in this one.
  • The Train Robbers is written and directed by Burt Kennedy. It stars John Wayne, Ann-Margret, Rod Taylor, Ben Johnson, Christopher George, Bobby Vinton, Jerry Gatlin and Ricardo Montalban. Music is by Dominic Frontiere and cinematography by William H. Clothier.

    Mrs. Lowe (Margret) hires Lane (Wayne) and his assembled crew to retrieve half a million U.S. dollars that her late husband stole during a train robbery. If they can find it and return it to the railroad, Mrs. Lowe will clear the family name and the Lane crew will pocket the $50,000 reward. However, there's also a considerably large posse out searching for the gold, and who is the strange man travelling alone observing things from afar?

    A Technicolor/Panavision production filmed out of Durango in Mexico, The Train Robbers is small in plot but huge of entertainment heart. Gorgeously photographed by the highly skilled Clothier, director and writer Kennedy blends action, suspense and comedy as he straight out focuses on characterisations being expanded among the landscape beauty. With under ten speaking parts in the piece, and man made property kept to a minimum, it's very much a pared down production. This in no way hurts the film, in fact it's refreshing to see such an airy Oater, one that is made in the 70s but feels very much like a throwback to the 50s production line of Westerns.

    The town of Liberty, Texas, forms the starting point for the movie, a near ghost town of a place, the arrival of the train bringing Mrs. Lowe and Lane feels like an intruder and accentuates the sparseness that will dictate the tone of the movie. Once the group head out into the wilderness it becomes about conversations and characters reacting to revelations born out by those conversations. In the distance is the heavy numbered posse out for the gold as well, but we only glimpse them like they are shifting ghosts of the terrain, they themselves intruding on the Lane group who as the journey unfolds start to bond and learn about life and each other.

    Once the group locate the site of the stolen gold, it allows Kennedy and Clothier the chance to showcase some more striking imagery. Here out in the sand swept desert is what ultimately looks like a locomotive graveyard , the image is strong and it also signals the point where the film goes up a gear and the action enters the fray. All dusty paths then lead to an explosive finale and even as the dust settles we get a narrative twist that's very very cheeky. The cast are having fun, and hats off to Margret who manages to let her Mrs. Lowe character be more than just a honey-pot in the middle of mucho machismo.

    I love The Train Robbers, I really do, it's beautiful to look at and features cast and characters that are so easy to warm to. Sure there's flaws and it's routine and hardly treads new ground at a time when the Western was on its knees and struggling to stand up. But it's made with love and respect for those genre fans willing to whisk themselves back to the heady days of the Western. While those moaning about The Duke's girth are very much missing the whole point of it all, both thematically and as a hat tipper to genre tropes. 8/10
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Mrs. Lowe (Ann-Margret) is a widow of a man who led a 10 men gang who robbed a train of $500k of gold. He hid the gold, but was killed before he could return to it. She wants to tell railroad the location of the gold so she could clear the family name for her son. Lane (John Wayne) convinces her to get the gold themselves to get the $50k reward money. Lane gathers up his gang, but is soon being followed by others who want the gold for themselves.

    The biggest problem for this movie is the motivations. John Wayne is so perfectly good. There's a half a million dollars out there, and he never tries to steal it. When it's all over, they even give away the reward money. And Mrs. Lowe's story doesn't add up. She should be worried about being robbed showing the location. There is an easy trust at the start that makes no sense. Even with the reveal, the trust seems out of place. Everybody's motivations are all seen through rose colored glasses.

    The setting is beautifully desolated. Director/writer Burt Kennedy blew up a few things. It looks good. The action is reasonable, but the shootouts aren't that exciting. The story is straight forward and bland. It's an uninspired western.
  • "The Train Robbers" features a lot of horses, and a lot of people on horses chasing other people on horses. It also has a lot of gorgeous western style scenery - in all honesty some of the best sceneries I've come across. It also has a pretty solid cast - headed up by John Wayne and Ann-Margret and including folks like Rod Taylor and Ricardo Montalban. Even the story, I suppose, isn't too bad in that it could have been a lot more interesting than it turned out to be. Ann-Margret is Mrs. Lowe, a widow who wants to find a stash of gold stolen by her husband and return it to its rightful owners, thus clearing him. John Wayne is Lane - the head of the crew she hires to help her out on the quest. But the execution of the story doesn't work.

    There's too many chases. There's not enough excitement. There's too many inane conversations depicted. We have a couple of old cowboys talking to each other about getting old. There's John Wayne talking to a young cowboy about growing up. Mrs. Lowe seems to make a play for Lane only to be told "I've got saddles older than you." Probably true enough. Yes, the dialogue is less than riveting much of the time. I do give it a bit of credit for an unexpected and somewhat amusing twist at the very end that I did not see coming. But really, it leaves a lot to be desired. (2/10)
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