And Starring Pancho Villa as Himself
And Starring Pancho Villa as Himself | |
---|---|
Written by | Larry Gelbart |
Directed by | Bruce Beresford |
Starring | Antonio Banderas Eion Bailey Alan Arkin Jim Broadbent |
Music by | Joseph Vitarelli |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Producers | Joshua D. Maurer Mark Gordon Larry Gelbart |
Cinematography | Peter James |
Editor | Mark Warner |
Running time | 112 minutes |
Production company | HBO Films |
Original release | |
Network | HBO |
Release | September 7, 2003 |
And Starring Pancho Villa as Himself is a 2003 American made-for-television western film for HBO in partnership with City Entertainment and starring Antonio Banderas as Pancho Villa, directed by Bruce Beresford, written by Larry Gelbart and produced by Joshua D. Maurer, Mark Gordon, and Larry Gelbart. The cast also includes Alan Arkin, Jim Broadbent, Michael McKean, Eion Bailey, and Alexa Davalos.
Maurer, who originally conceived the story and did extensive research, sold the project to HBO and then brought on Gordon and hired Gelbart to write and collaborate on the screenplay. At the time of production, this was the most expensive 2-hour television/cable movie ever made, with a budget of over $30 million. The movie was shot almost entirely on location in and around San Miguel de Allende, Mexico.
Plot
[edit]The film opens in 1923 with studio executive Frank N. Thayer (Eion Bailey) receiving a letter in the mail, alongside a medallion of the Virgin Mary.
The film then shifts to the height of the Mexican Revolution. Pancho Villa (Antonio Banderas) finds himself without adequate funding to finance his war against the military-run government. He also finds himself at odds with the Americans because of the Hearst media empire's press campaign against him. He has a Jewish-American lieutenant of his, Sam Dreben (Alan Arkin) to send feelers to American film studios. Villa's plan is to convince them to send film crew to film his battles. D.W. Griffith (Colm Feore) is immediately interested and convinces Mutual Film Studios boss Harry E. Aitkin (Jim Broadbent) to send a crew. As Aitkin's nephew, Thayer is initially assigned an errand boy for the studio, but he makes a good impression with Villa, who demands that Thayer be placed in charge of the project. Thayer and a camera crew team film Villa leading his men to victory in battle. Despite the failure of this initial footage (which draws derisive laughter from potential backers) Thayer convinces Aitkin to invest even more money in a second attempt, and also convinces Villa to participate in making a more narrative film.
Thayer returns to Mexico with a director, actors, producers, cameramen and screenwriters, and begin to film Villa's previous exploits using a younger actor, future film director Raoul Walsh (Kyle Chandler) as Villa. The filming goes well, although Villa becomes angry that the screenwriters and the director have decided to use creative license to enhance the film. However, he agrees to do a cameo appearance as an older version of himself. Meanwhile, Thayer begins a romance with actress Teddy Sampson (Alexa Davalos). He also is assigned two young child soldiers as editing assistants by Villa.
The next morning, Villa assembles his men to attack the Federal-held stronghold of Torreon. Thayer and his team go in to film the battle. A skirmish on the way to the fort occurs, with Villa's army repelling the Federales, though one of Thayer's assistants loses his life. Villa's army arrives at Torreon and lays siege. Villa's army is initially successful, but they suffer heavy casualties and are forced to withdraw. That night, Villa orders his army to bombard Torreon into submission. The next morning, Villa's cavalry finishes off the last of Torreon's Federal defenders. However, Thayer and his camera crew team witness Villa personally shooting a Mexican widow in cold blood with his handgun during the aftermath of the battle. Disgusted, the team leaves.
The Life of General Villa is shown in theaters in the U.S., and to great success, although Thayer and his crew end up regretting their participation. Thayer is also dismayed to find out that Teddy, who is attending the premiere, has broken off their romance. Nine years later, Thayer meets with Drebin in a restaurant. Having lost an eye and arm during the Revolution, he laments at the current Mexican government being no better than Huerta's. He is equally displeased that Thayer did not gift Villa with a copy of the film as promised. The movie then returns to Thayer in his office, where he reads the letter. It is from his surviving assistant, who has since grown to manhood, married, and has a child with Villa as a godfather. He also recounts that Villa had been assassinated en route, and that the people of Mexico have missed his absence. The letter inspires Thayer to return to Mexico in order to screen the film, where it is met with a passionate audience who deliver a standing ovation Villa's ending speech.
Thayer then goes on to narrate that Villa has since been reinterred in Mexico City to great fanfare, while the film has since become lost. He also states that he has become a footnote in history, though he "does not mind being a footnote to a legend."
Cast
[edit]- Antonio Banderas as Pancho Villa
- Eion Bailey as Frank N. Thayer
- Alan Arkin as Sam Dreben
- Jim Broadbent as Harry Aitken
- Matt Day as John Reed
- Kyle Chandler as Raoul Walsh
- Michael McKean as William Christy Cabanne
- Colm Feore as D. W. Griffith
- Alexa Davalos as Teddy Sampson
- Anthony Head as William Benton
- Saul Rubinek as Eli Morton
- Damián Alcázar as General Rodolfo Fierro
- Pedro Armendáriz, Jr. as Don Luis Terrazas
Context
[edit]The film concerns the filming of The Life of General Villa (which was shot in 1914) and is seen through the eyes of Frank N. Thayer, a studio boss's nephew who gets a career boost when he is placed in charge of the project. The resulting film became the first American feature-length movie, introducing scores of viewers to the true horrors of war that they had never personally seen. Thayer sold the studios on making the film despite their concerns that no one would sit through a movie longer than 1 hour, by convincing them that they could raise the price of movies to ten cents, doubling the going price at that time. The actual contract that Pancho Villa signed with Frank N. Thayer and the Mutual Film Company on January 5, 1914, to film the Battle of Ojinaga still exists and is in a museum in Mexico City. The original film has been lost, but some unedited film reels of the battle, showing Pancho Villa and his army fighting Federal forces, as well as photographs and publicity stills taken from the original film, still exist. Raoul Walsh, who played Villa as a young man in The Life of General Villa, wrote extensively about the experience in his autobiography Each Man in His Time, describing Villa's charisma as well as noting that peasants would knock the teeth out of corpses with rocks in the wake of firing squads in order to harvest the gold fillings, which was captured on film and had the projectionists vomiting in the screening room back in Los Angeles.
The original film's producer, D. W. Griffith, directed The Birth of a Nation in 1915, which featured Walsh as John Wilkes Booth. That same year, Walsh directed the first gangster movie, Regeneration, on location in the Lower East Side of New York City, and went on to direct approximately 138 movies, including such films as The Big Trail (1930) with John Wayne (Walsh discovered Wayne as a propman, renamed him, and cast him in the lead in this widescreen epic), Me and My Gal (1932) with Spencer Tracy and Joan Bennett, The Bowery with Wallace Beery and George Raft, The Roaring Twenties with James Cagney and Humphrey Bogart, High Sierra (1941) with Ida Lupino and Bogart, They Died with Their Boots On (1941) with Errol Flynn and Olivia de Havilland, White Heat (1949) with Cagney, and Band of Angels (1957) with Clark Gable and Sidney Poitier.
Accolades
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "2004 Artios Awards". www.castingsociety.com. Retrieved October 12, 2004.
- ^ "Nominees/Winners". IMDb. Retrieved May 8, 2019.
- ^ "6th Costume Designers Guild Awards". Costume Designers Guild. Retrieved May 21, 2016.
- ^ "The BFCA Critics' Choice Awards 2003". Broadcast Film Critics Association. 10 January 2004. Archived from the original on 30 July 2011. Retrieved 16 March 2011.
- ^ "And Starring Pancho Villa as Himself – Golden Globes". HFPA. Retrieved July 5, 2021.
- ^ "'Pirates' reels in most MPSE noms". Variety. Retrieved June 28, 2019.
- ^ Jill Feiwell (January 18, 2004). "Hair, makeup nods weaved". Variety. Retrieved November 15, 2019.
- ^ "And Starring Pancho Villa as Himself". Emmys.com. Academy of Television Arts & Sciences. Retrieved July 13, 2017.
- ^ "Producers Guild Awards 2004". Producers Guild of America. Archived from the original on December 15, 2008. Retrieved April 10, 2020.
- ^ "Nominees & Winners – Satellite™ Awards 2004 (8th Annual Satellite™ Awards)". International Press Academy. Satellite Awards. Archived from the original on February 2, 2008. Retrieved April 7, 2019.
- ^ "Writers Guild Awards Winners: 2005-1996". Writers Guild of America. Archived from the original on May 17, 2019. Retrieved April 10, 2012.
- ^ "Nominees/Winners". Art Directors Guild. Retrieved July 28, 2018.
External links
[edit]- 2003 television films
- 2003 films
- American drama television films
- 2003 drama films
- Films about filmmaking
- Films about Pancho Villa
- Films set in 1914
- Films set in 1923
- Films set in Manhattan
- Films set in Mexico
- Films set in New Jersey
- Films set in Texas
- Films shot in Mexico
- Mexican Revolution films
- Films with screenplays by Larry Gelbart
- Films directed by Bruce Beresford
- Drama films based on actual events
- 2000s English-language films
- English-language drama films