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  1. Rated 3/5 Stars • 04/06/22. In 1912 Sonora, Mexico, Arizona lawman Sheriff Lyedecker (Jim Brown) chases Joe "Yaqui Joe" Herrera (Burt Reynolds), a half-Yaqui, half-white bank robber who has ...

    • (51)
    • Tom Gries
    • PG
    • Jim Brown
  2. Duration 1 h 50 m. Rating TV-MA. Genres. Adventure. Drama. War. Western. Tagline All they need is . . . 100 RIFLES. In 1912 Sonora, Mexico, native revolutionary Yaqui Joe robs a bank to buy arms for his oppressed people, but finds himself sought by an American lawman and the Mexican Army.

    • Tom Gries
    • Jim Brown
  3. 100 Rifles. Directed by: Tom Gries. ... 3 Apr 2021. azbest23 . 8 Mar 2021. d783hfw . ... others' reviews or ratings, or errors on the page. Don't comment just to ...

    • (45)
    • Tom Gries
    • Tom Gries
    • 26 March 1969
  4. Roger Ebert. Roger Ebert was the film critic of the Chicago Sun-Times from 1967 until his death in 2013. In 1975, he won the Pulitzer Prize for distinguished criticism. Action. Even in the most routine Westerns, some sort of balance has to be struck between the shooting and the talking. Scenes of heroes and bad guys killing each.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › 100_Rifles100 Rifles - Wikipedia

    100 Rifles is a 1969 American Western film directed by Tom Gries and starring Jim Brown, Raquel Welch and Burt Reynolds. It is based on Robert MacLeod's 1966 novel The Californio. The film was shot in Spain. The original music score was composed by Jerry Goldsmith, who had previously also scored Bandolero!, another Western starring Welch.

  6. This was a great premise, but the direction is off. Everyone is overacting the hell out of it. I expect that from Burt Reynolds, but not as much from Raquel Welch and definitely not from Jim Brown. The action is good though, and the set pieces are amazing. Unfortunately this achievement is undercut by the rough Mexican stereotypes played by white men (one of whom sounded like he had a British ...

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  8. 100 Rifles Even in the most routine Westerns, some sort of balance has to be struck between the shooting and the talking. Scenes of heroes and bad guys killing each other are all much alike. We watch for the official clichés like the guy who gets dragged by his horse, or the Indian crawling along the rooftop who is hit and throws his arms into the air, screaming "Aiiee" and all that. But ...

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