poster

The Treasure of Pancho Villa (1955)

5.8 | Oct 19, 1955 (US) | Western | 01:32

WITH GUTS AND GUNFIRE they blasted their way into history!

In 1915, an American adventurer joins the supporters of Mexican revolutionary Pancho Villa.

Featured Crew

Director
Art Direction
Director of Photography
Screenplay
Original Music Composer
Producer
Sound
Editor

Cast

profile
Rory Calhoun
Tom Bryan
profile
Shelley Winters
Ruth Harris
profile
Gilbert Roland
Colonel Juan Castro
profile
Joseph Calleia
Pablo Morales
profile
Fanny Schiller
Laria Morales
profile
Carlos Múzquiz
Commandant (as Carlos Mosquiz)
profile
Tony Carbajal
Farolito (as Tony Carvajal)
profile
Pasquel Pena
Ricardo (as Pasquel Pená)
profile
Lita Baron
Birdcage Flirt in Plaza (uncredited)
profile
Rodd Redwing
Yaqui Tracker (uncredited)

Reviews

avatar
John Chard
5 | Mar 17, 2015
Muera Villa. The Treasure of Pancho Villa is directed by George Sherman and adapted to screenplay by Niven Busch from a story written by J. Robert Bren and Gladys Atwater. It stars Rory Calhoun, Gilbert Roland and Shelley Winters. Music is by Leith Stevens and cinematography by William Snyder. It's 1915, Mexico, and two adventurers are in the throes of revolutionary greed, loyalties and plain stubbornness... It's all rather dull, really, a film not without a good action quotient, yet it drags itself through the slumber with weak characterisations. Winters is shoehorned into the pic as a sort of love interest, but ultimately her character achieves nothing more than under developed dressage, while Calhoun and Roland are saddled with some dire passages of chatter that come off as weak willed time filler. There's some sturdy machismo on show, especially when Calhoun lets fly with his Lewis Machine Gun, the location photography at Morelos (Technicolor/SuperScope) engages the eyes, and the last hurrah battle excites, but this is one that quickly fades from memory, sadly. By this point even the buzzards have had enough... 5/10