Not to be confused with
the amazing German film Aguirre: The
Wrath of God, which was also released in 1972, this American production is
a routine action picture starring the venerable Robert Mitchum as a gun-toting
con man wreaking havoc in South America during the 1920s. Notwithstanding
Mitchum’s top billing, the lead character is actually portrayed by workaday
Scottish actor Ken Hutchison. He plays Emmet, a ne’er-do-well European stranded
in a dingy Latin American nation. Emmet reluctantly accepts a job from
corpulent gringo crook Jennings (Victor Buono) to drive a truck filled with
illegal liquor to the U.S. Along the way, Emmet meets an amiable priest named Father
Van Horne (Mitchum). Next, Emmet gets into a hassle while preventing banditos from
raping a native woman, Chela (Paula Pritchett). Unexpectedly, Van Horne comes
to his new friend’s aid—by unleashing the machine gun hidden in his luggage. Yet somehow, the storyline gets even more
random after that turn of events.
A powerful military official, Colonel Santila
(John Colicos), recruits Emmet, Jennings, and Van Horne for a suicide mission
to depose Thomas De La Plata (Frank Langella), the crazed aristocrat controlling
a small town, so the movie’s climax involves a violent showdown between the
“heroes” and De La Plata’s ruthless gang. Featuring all of these disparate
elements plus other incidental flourishes, like Rita Hayworth’s tiny role as De
La Plata’s mother, The Wrath of God
is diffuse in the extreme. Produced and
directed by the proficient Ralph Nelson, the movie can’t decide on a consistent
tone or a main character: The picture vacillates between black comedy and
bloody action while the Emmet and Van Horne characters compete for prominence. Nonetheless, some
of what happens is mildly exciting, and some of the actors deliver enjoyably
florid performances. Buono’s sardonic volatility complements Langella’s
over-the-top intensity, for instance, although Mitchum is Mitchum, to the
degree that he sometimes seems as if he wandered in from another movie. Poor
Hutchison gets lost in the shuffle, particularly since his character’s
motivation seems to change with every scene. (Available at WarnerArchive.com)
The Wrath of God: FUNKY
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