Low-budget
crap riddled with amateurish editing, godawful dubbing, and vapid performances,
this violent Western was presumably made to kick-start the moribund acting
career of Jody McCrea, a second-generation performer who spent the ’50s and
’60s playing supporting roles in forgettable movies (including various Frankie-and-Annette
Beach Party flicks). The son of famed
cowboy actor Joel McCrea, Jody McCrea stars in and co-produced Cry Blood, Apache. The picture begins
when a group of outlaws massacre the residents of an Indian village while
searching for the location of hidden gold. The criminals abduct a survivor,
pretty squaw Jemme (Marie Gahva), but one of the hoodlums, Pitcalin (Jody
McCrea), tries to protect her from abuse. Meanwhile, an unnamed Indian brave
(Marcus Rudnick) returns to the village and discovers the carnage, so he sets
out to find the killers and exact vengeance. (The scene of Rudnick screaming in
pain after finding his family dead is so overwrought that it’s unintentionally
funny.) Right from the start, the picture makes zero sense. If Pitcalin’s such
a nice guy, why is he hanging around with killers? And since Indians of the Old
West era didn’t value gold, why not simply cooperate with the heavily armed
whites and avoid the slaughter? Anyway, such logical considerations are
immaterial, because nothing about Cry
Blood, Apache merits close inspection. Most of the movie comprises tedious
scenes of the criminals trekking across the prairie, with one member of the
group, Deacon (Jack Starrett), giving long-winded religious speeches. (Starrett,
who also directed the picture, was a prolific helmer of offbeat exploitation
films throughout the ’70s, with subsequent credits including 1973's Cleopatra Jones and 1975's Race With the Devil.) Aside from
the drab story and the lifeless acting (Jody McCrea being the worst offender),
the most pathetic aspect of Cry Blood,
Apache is the soundtrack, because nearly every line of dialogue sounds like
it was looped in a wind tunnel. FYI, Joel McCrea turns up at the beginning of
the picture to play his son’s character as an older man, then exits the movie
as quickly as possible. Smart move.
Cry Blood, Apache: SQUARE
3 comments:
This film was shot in 1967 but didn't get released until 1970. By then, Starrett had redeemed himself with RUN, ANGEL, RUN (1969) and THE LOSERS (1970), both box-office hits. He only took over as the director of CRY BLOOD, APACHE after writer-director Sean MacGregor was relieved of duty, presumably because he didn't know how to make a synch sound movie (and evidently still didn't when he made NOVEMBER CHILDREN and CAMPER JOHN a few years later). The movie stinks, but it got Starrett's foot in the door.
Cast & crew trivia: Rick Nervick and Carolyn Stellar are the parents of Leif Garrett, and his sister Dawn Lyn appears as an Indian child. Leif and Dawn later co-starred in DEVIL TIMES FIVE, another movie MacGregor started but didn't finish.
And then there's Don Henley as the notorious Benji...
I saw this on Grit TV, and then on Prime to see if it was censored. It wasn't. I see no reason for the R rating.... perhaps for rancid. You're review was spot-on....!
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