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Major Dundee, not a great movie but a great star-driven, big budget 1965 studio western, is back in all its fractured glory and confidence. Full Review | Apr 29, 2005
- Major Dundee - Rotten Tomatoes
During the end of the Civil War, Major Dundee guards...
- Major Dundee - Rotten Tomatoes
During the end of the Civil War, Major Dundee guards Confederate prisoners, Union deserters and ordinary hard-bitten criminals in a remote fort.
The film holds a present-day 97% approval rating based on 32 reviews (with an average rating of 7.3/10) on the review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes, with the site's critics consensus declaring the film "a Western-type with big war scenes, shot with bombast typical of Sam Peckinpah". [25]
The restored version of "Major Dundee" is a good film directed by Sam Peckinpah. The story of revenge and seeking glory by a stubborn officer has great moments, mainly the constant friction between Union and Confederate soldiers that are forced to team-up.
Major Dundee (1965) – Film Review. Peckinpah, with the reins on. By Sarah Morgan. Ask a film fan to name a Sam Peckinpah western and chances are they’ll say The Wild Bunch, and with good reason – it’s one of the finest entries in the genre ever made.
Major Dundee: Directed by Sam Peckinpah. With Charlton Heston, Richard Harris, Jim Hutton, James Coburn. In 1864, due to frequent Apache raids from Mexico into the U.S., a Union officer decides to illegally cross the border and destroy the Apache, using a mixed army of Union troops, Confederate POWs, civilian mercenaries, and scouts.
During the American Civil War, Major Dundee, commander of a remote stockade, leads a cavalry outfit of Union regulars, Confederate prisoners and disreputable civilians in pursuit of an Apache...