
"Chuka" (1967)Rod Taylor plays Chuka, a strong, silent, drifting gunslinger in a Western that was one of the last of its genre. Taylor (Rodlor Inc.) also was a co-producer. Rod described his goals in making "Chuka":
Taylor invested an incredible amount of effort in his Western -- filming "Hotel" by day and working on the script for "Chuka" at night. It took him 22 months to put the picture together. A 1967 magazine article described his labor:
The creation was not the success that Taylor deserved, however. Movie critic Leonard Maltin sums up common commentary about "Chuka":
That good cast includes Sir John Mills as the unbending commander, Ernest Borgnine as a tough sergeant, James Whitmore as a gruff scout and Luciana Paluzzi as Chuka's long-lost love. Chuka arrives at a besieged prairie fort and tries to persuade the commander and his troops to overcome their hatred of the Indians and their own squabbling in order to stave off an attack by the starving tribes. Chuka is, in Taylor's words, "a disreputable hero" but a man who proves his heroism repeatedly. TV Guide calls the movie "a well-paced Western that suffers from the cliches of the genre," and many viewers complain of the too-clean set. But one nevertheless concluded that fans of old Westerns will "get a bang out of this flick." Even as a non-fan of Westerns, I found this to be a highly watchable movie. The macho posturing -- and then bonding -- between Rod and Ernest Borgnine is fun to watch. And, unrepentant romantic that I am, I was moved by the emotion in the scene when Chuka's love finally comes to him. |
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