Billy Two Hats | |
---|---|
Directed by | Ted Kotcheff |
Written by | Alan Sharp |
Produced by | Norman Jewison Patrick J. Palmer |
Starring | Gregory Peck Desi Arnaz, Jr. Jack Warden David Huddleston |
Cinematography | Brian West |
Edited by | Thom Noble |
Music by | John Scott |
Production company | Algonquin Films |
Distributed by | United Artists |
Release date |
|
Running time | 100 minutes |
Countries | United Kingdom[1] Israel[1] United States[1] |
Language | English |
Budget | $1.1 million[1] |
Billy Two Hats is a 1974 American Western film directed by Ted Kotcheff. It stars Gregory Peck, Jack Warden and Desi Arnaz, Jr.
Filmed on-location in Israel, Billy Two Hats is from a script by Scottish writer Alan Sharp, the screenwriter of Rob Roy and Ulzana's Raid.
Plot
Following a bank robbery in the American west, the partner of Scottish outlaw Arch Deans is killed and his young Kiowa half breed friend Billy Two Hats is captured.
While Billy is being transported, Deans gets the drop on Sheriff Henry Gifford at a remote trading post, enabling Billy to escape. As they flee, the sheriff's friend, the trading post owner, named Copeland, takes down his old long-range buffalo rifle and fires a shot that kills Deans' horse, breaking his leg. Billy builds a travois on which Deans can ride, dragged behind Billy's horse. Deans and Billy encounter trouble on the trail, four Indians demand whiskey from them but Billy talks their way out of it.
Billy and Deans encounter Spencer and his wife, Esther, at their remote homestead. Deans persuades Spencer to take him in his wagon to get horses on the condition that Billy stay with Esther to protect her and the homestead from marauding Indians. Billy is also to keep a look out for the pursuing Gifford.
Billy and Esther spend their time together talking and develop romantic feelings for each other. Esther, a young mail-order bride from the East, is unhappy with her older abusive husband. She falls in love with the young good looking Billy. Gifford finds the two in bed together, assumes Billy raped the woman, becomes enraged, and beats him. Esther attempts to explain but can't because she stutters uncontrollably when distressed.
Deans and Spencer encounter trouble on the trail, the four Indians who demanded whiskey from Deans and Billy earlier, ambush their wagon in a canyon, killing the horse and besiege them. Spencer is killed.
Gifford, Esther and Billy then set out after Deans. They find Deans near death. With Esther's help Billy kills Gifford. Deans dies of his wounds. Not believing in burying the dead, Billy places his body in a tree atop a hill, Indian fashion. He and Esther ride off together.
Cast
- Gregory Peck as Arch Deans
- Desi Arnaz, Jr. as Billy Two Hats
- Jack Warden as Marshal Henry Gifford
- David Huddleston as Copeland, Saloon Owner
- Sian Barbara Allen as Esther Spencer
- John Pearce as Spencer
- Dawn Little Sky as Copeland's Squaw
- W. Vincent St. Cyr as Indian Leader
- Henry Medicine Hat as Indian
- Zev Berlinsky as Indian
- Antony Scott as Indian
- Vic Armstrong as Harry Sweets Bradley
Reception
Variety called the film "a fresh, different oater (the first filmed in Israel) that opens with violence and contains some throughout but never lingers lovingly on mayhem and gore; ergo, it's tame for the Sam Peckinpah bunch, but so well handled in every way it should have a good future both here and abroad."[2] Gene Siskel of the Chicago Tribune gave the film 2 stars out of 4 and wrote, "When the action turns, as inevitably it must, to conversation between Peck and Arnaz, 'Billy Two Hats' becomes vapid. And when young Arnaz strikes up a romance with a rancher's stuttering mail-order bride, the action and dialog become positively embarrassing."[3] Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times wrote, "Writer Alan Sharp's characters are all well-drawn and well-acted, but 'Billy Two Hats'' pacing is too languid and its style too portentous to sustain interest in them."[4] John Raisbeck of The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote, "Like Ulzana's Raid, also written by Alan Sharp, Billy Two Hats is a film of hunters and hunted, centring on the father/son relationship; only here the traditional roles are reversed, with the grizzled Deans (Gregory Peck wrestling unsuccessfully with a Scottish accent) having to lean on his resourceful young companion. The motif, however, is handled with an obviousness which characterises much of the film."[5]
See also
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 "Billy Two Hats". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. American Film Institute. Retrieved June 1, 2019.
- ↑ "Film Reviews: Billy Two Hats". Variety. November 7, 1973. 19.
- ↑ Siskel, Gene (May 14, 1974). "The evil's better than the good". Chicago Tribune. Section 2, p. 4.
- ↑ Thomas, Kevin (March 13, 1974). "Peck, Arnaz Jr. Team in 'Billy Two Hats'". Los Angeles Times. Part IV, p. 15.
- ↑ Raisbeck, John (April 1974). "Billy Two Hats". The Monthly Film Bulletin. 41 (483): 69.