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Synopsis

The Spanish Civil War took place from 1936 to 1939, with the losing guerrilla fighters exiled to France. The heroic Manuel Artiguez found sanctuary in the French town of Pau and for the next twenty years led raids into Spain, but has recently grown old and tired. When Manuel receives word from Carlos, a friend and smuggler, that his elderly mother, Pilar, is dying in a San Martín hospital, he plans to see her before she departs the world. The ambitious and arrogant San Martín police chief Captain Vinolas wants desperately to get his bitter foe Manuel and show his bosses that he’s the man who got the popular guerrilla fighter, and thereby sets a trap for him by using paid informer Carlos to lure him to the hospital. Before Pilar dies, she gets the hospital priest, Father Francisco, who is torn between following the letter of the law or the spirit of the law, to get word to her son not to come. Just arriving to stay with Manuel is Paco, an 11-year-old whose guerrilla fighter father was recently killed by Vinolas. The kid destroys the priest’s letter, thinking the priest is lying and hoping that this will be Manuel’s best chance to kill Vinolas in San Martin. But when the kid spots Carlos and recognizes him as an informer, he tells a skeptical Manuel the truth. Despite knowing a trap is set for him, Manuel gets up enough of his former courage to return one last time to San Martin and try to kill the informer and Vinolas. —Ozu’s World of Reviews

Director

Original

Fred Zinnemann

Vienna-born Fred Zinnemann had childhood dreams of becoming a musician, and later planned on a law career, before his viewing of the movies of Erich Von Stroheim drew him into the movie business, initially as a cameraman. He came to the United States in 1929, and later found work as an editor, and subsequently as an assistant to documentary filmmaker Robert Flaherty, and then as an assistant to choreographer Busby Berkeley. He joined MGM in the late ‘30s as a director of comedy shorts, and won an Academy award for his 1938 short subject That Mothers Might Live. Zinnemann moved up to full-length features in 1941, but found little opportunity to work on anything but B-pictures until 1948, with The Search, a drama set in post-World War II Europe. He didn’t really become a major recognized box-office name as a director, however, until 1952 when his Western drama High Noon, starring Gary Cooper, which had been perceived by most observers as headed for commercial disaster, became a monster… read more

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Daniel S.

24Nov11

I've always been fond of unsuccessful movies, I dont' know why. Maybe because, unconsciously, I see the beauty of the film that could have been shot instead. Take Behold a Pale Horse for instance. When you see it, you can already feel the nostalgy that will emanate from Zinnemann's last movie Five Days One Summer (1982) shot 18 years later, you can also foresee in the final scene of the shooting, the great last scene of The Day of the Jackal (1973). I also love the idea that underlies Behold a Pale Horse that is the final return to the Mother, to the Mother Country. Now, as a whole, the film didn't work for me. Perhaps, it will for you. Already forgotten. Unfortunately.

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