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ActionDramaWestern

Chuka

- He's a man called Chuka and you don't forget it!

A group under siege at an Army fort grapple with painful memories.

Release Date : 1967-07-23

Language :English

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : RodlorParamount PicturesNew Art Film Company

Production Country : United States of America

Alternative Titles :

Cast

Rod Taylor

Character Name : Chuka

Original Name : Rod Taylor

Gender : Male

Ernest Borgnine

Character Name : Sgt. Otto Hahnsbach

Original Name : Ernest Borgnine

Gender : Male

John Mills

Character Name : Colonel Stuart Valois

Original Name : John Mills

Gender : Male

Luciana Paluzzi

Character Name : Señora Veronica Kleitz

Original Name : Luciana Paluzzi

Gender : Female

James Whitmore

Character Name : Lou Trent

Original Name : James Whitmore

Gender : Male

Victoria Vetri

Character Name : Señorita Helena Chavez

Original Name : Victoria Vetri

Gender : Female

Louis Hayward

Character Name : Major Benson

Original Name : Louis Hayward

Gender : Male

Joseph Sirola

Character Name : Jake Baldwin

Original Name : Joseph Sirola

Gender : Male

Marco López

Character Name : Hanu

Original Name : Marco López

Gender : Male

Michael Cole

Character Name : Spivey

Original Name : Michael Cole

Gender : Male

Hugh Reilly

Character Name : Capt. Carrol

Original Name : Hugh Reilly

Gender : Male

Barry O'Hara

Character Name : Slim

Original Name : Barry O'Hara

Gender : Male

Gerald York

Character Name : Lt. Daly

Original Name : Gerald York

Gender : Male

Reviews

J

John Chard

@John Chard

2024-05-16

We're the scum of the United States Army. Colonel. Chuka is directed by Gordon Douglas and adapted to screenplay by Richard Jessup from his own novel. It stars Rod Taylor, John Mills, Ernest Borgnine, Luciana Paluzzi, James Whimore, Louis Hayward and Victoria Vetri. Music is by Leith Stevens and Pthe Color photography by Harold E. Stine. 1876 and Fort Clendenon is host to a bunch of army misfits and a lovelorn gunslinger, hardly a group capable of defending the Fort against an impending Arapaho attack... A super cast and a rather gorgeous colour print can't avert this being a distinctly average Siege Oater. Prodution wise it's a hodgepodge, an uneasy blend of stuffy looking studio bound sequences, matte paintings and airy locales, while the acting, sparse characterisations and general reliance on non meaty chatty filler scenes, all make it an odd viewing experience. The chat angle is most frustrating, not so much because there is so much of it so as to make this a 90% talky piece, but in that there are moments of great dialogue, where interesting character arcs are dangled, but alas they are threads that are never pulled to the benefit of all. Action is sparse but what there is is competently staged, with the siege itself - while not worth the wait - has enough moments of excitement and intelligence so as to not annoy. A very good and intriguing ending further adds to the strange mix of poor and good of it all, but ultimately it's average and hardly essential for fans of Westerns and the stars involved. 5/10