| Director : | F. Richard Jones |
|---|---|
| Starring: | Charles Stevens, Douglas Fairbanks, Geraine Greear, Gustav von Seyffertitz, Lupe Velez, Mary Pickford |
| Composer : | Sydney Jill Lehman |
| Country : | U.S. |
| Genre s : | Action-Adventure, Silent |
| Type: | B&W |
| Year: | 1927 |
| Language: | English intertitles |
| Length: | 96 |
| Aspect Ratio: | 1.33;1 |
SYNOPSIS
Douglas Fairbanks carries his adventurous spirit high into the Andes in The Gaucho, an inventive and playful comedy thriller. Fairbanks reveals new
facets of his formidable talents and demonstrates an uncommonly fierce
bravado that makes even his simple act of lighting a cigarette a marvel of
machismo.
Armed with a pistol, the requisite sword and exotic Argentine bolas (which
he hurls with remarkable skill, disabling his foes and, in one delightful
scene, entwining himself with Lupe Velez for an especially intimate tango),
Fairbanks shines as the reckless titular ne'er-do-well. His appetites for
adventure, women and riches lead him to the City of the Miracle, a colossal
shrine carved in a mountainside which houses a young girl (Geraine Greear)
gifted with the power to heal. When the shrine is robbed by a pack of
bandits, the roguish gaucho becomes its unlikely savior in an adventure with
as many dramatic peaks as the Andes themselves, lightened by raucous comedy
and flavored with moments of haunting beauty.
The Gaucho's relative darkness of tone makes it one of Fairbanks's most
fascinating pictures today. No longer the admirable representative of
healthy virtue, Fairbanks's character is a heavy drinker, falls prey to a
deadly plague known as the "Black Doom" and carries on a carnal courtship
with the tempestuous Velez. Even the religious conversion experienced by the
protagonist near the film's climax implies a life previously devoted to
iniquity that ran counter to the virtuous image Fairbanks
cultivated throughout his career.
(Original music composed and performed by Sydney Jill Lehman)
REVIEWS
"Drop-dead breathtaking! Fairbanks's best film." -- Village Voice, 1996.
DVD Features