Rating: Summary: Oates, and Hellman create an existential comedy drama gem. Review: Cockfighter was set up and then marketed as a low budget exploitation film, but was turned into a somewhat existential comic character study by director Monte Hellman with just enough elements for Roger Corman to market it as an exploitation film (some violence, controversy, and a bit of nudity).Most people have not heard of 1974's Cockfighter. It bombed at the box-office and is too quirky a film about too violent and controversial a sport to be widely embraced. It's time for you to discover this gem of a film, which through some odd alignment of the stars has been given a red carpet type of DVD release by Anchor Bay, which includes a few extras. It's time to shout from the mountain-tops and let all film buffs, Warren Oates fans, 70's movie lovers , appreciators of quirky cinema concoctions and cult film aficionados know there is an excellent film out there that you probably have not seen that is worth adding to your collection as soon as possible. The film is based on a novel written by the late great Charles Willeford who also co-wrote the screenplay and plays an important supporting role in the film. Willeford's books have been the basis for a few other good quirky films like Miami Blues and the recent The Woman-Chaser. Cockfighter is set in the world where fighting cocks are bred, trained and pitted against each other for spectators and gamblers to enjoy, but is focused on Frank Mansfield (Warren Oates) a Man who has devoted his life to being the best Cockfighter on the circuit. He is willing to risk everything and anything in pursuit of his goal-- a medal. In fact because Frank Mansfield ws too cocky a few years ago, he wound up ruining his chances for the Cockfighter of the year medal. So he took a vow of silence. He would not talk ever again until he won the Cockfighter of the Year medal. It's an ironic vow of silence because fighting Cocks rarely make noise as they fight to the death in the pit. We are immersed in Frank's world and watch him lose a cockfight to his old adversary Jack (Harry Dean Stanton) that costs him his motor home trailer and current girlfriend Laurie Bird (previously seen in Two-Lane Blacktop) . He returns to his hometown, and re-acquaints himself with his old girlfriend, Mary Elizabeth (Patricia Pearcy). Mary Elizabeth would prefer marrying Frank than another suitor but doesn't consider Cockfighting a real profession and needs Frank to give it up. Our mute hero isn't about to give up his obsession and hooks up with a new partner, Omar (Richard B. Shull), a new attitude and some new fighting cocks to try again to win the coveted Cockfighter of the year medal. The adventures are unique and the world of this sport is not one you'll likely see portrayed in a film every again. The violent sport is illegal and cruel to animals and this film doesn't flinch in showing the sport for what it is. Animals were killed in the making of the movie, but they were animals destined to be killed in Cockfights. The film was made on location and the crowd extras were made up of fans and participants in the sport. Also in the film are Troy Donahue, Millie Perkins, Robert Earl Jones (Father of James Earl Jones), Ed Begley Junior and Steve (Helter Skelter, Stuntman)Railsback. Although Oates plays a man who is silent through 99 percent of the film, he delivers one of his finest performances and also does the voice-over narration. Just for Oates performance alone the film is very much worth seeing, but it's also a unique very well done film. Despite the low budget, cinematographer Nestor Almandros creates a few memorable shots while accommodating Hellman's style which uses many master shots and long takes. Nestor's lighting design accommodated Hellman's style. Some rules are broken to great effect such as when a lake background is too hot and serves as the perfect background for a love scene between Oates and Mary Elizabeth. The film has such a strong documentary verite' we can usually forget we are watching actors. In fact there are so many non-actors in the film, Hellman considers half the film a documentary anyway. Director Monte Hellman's career started with Corman on 1959's Beast from the Haunted Cave. Hellman made two odd low budget westerns with Nicholson in the late 60's, Ride the Whirlwind and the existentially fascinating; The Shooting. The Shooting also marked the first time Hellman worked with Oates. Two directors; Sam Peckinpah and Monte Hellman utilized Oates best. He made The Shooting, Two Lane Blacktop, Cockfighter and China 9 Liberty 37 with Oates. They worked well together. Perhaps their finest collaboration is Cockfighter. The DVD presents the film better than it's ever been seen before. It's still a low budget film and there's grain and some soft focus but an excellent damage free print was used for the anamorphic digital transfer. Lots of extras including one of the best commentary tracks you'll hear on DVD make this one worth getting. Cockfighter is a gem of a film you're probably never heard of. It's one of best films of the 1970's features one of Warren Oates finest performances and has been rescued from near obscurity by Anchor Bay. The film looks very good on DVD and comes with several worthwhile extras. Rent it, Buy it and tell your friends to get a copy of a great film they probably haven't heard a thing about. This isn't for everyone and the subject matter is disturbing, but those who enjoyUnique quirky independent films need to have this one. Christopher Jarmick, is the author of The Glass Cocoon with Serena F. Holder a critically acclaimed, steamy suspense thriller.
Rating: Summary: Superb DVD transfer of a classic '70s American film Review: Directed by Monte Hellman (the man behind the ultra-laid-back super-naturalistic "Two Lane Blacktop" starring James Taylor and Dennis Wilson) and fantastically photographed by the great Nestor Almendros, "Cockfighter" is one of those 'cult' films where, as Danny De Vito puts it in that mediocre attempt at satire "Get Shorty,": the visual fabric is consistently maintained while the metaphor plays on different levels! Just check out the brutal slow-motion footage of the cockfight in the hotel-room and tell me it's not one of the most artistic sequences in all of cinema! For someone to try to do that in a film like this is very touching, indeed! Just think: would anyone ever think of a film about cockfighting, something they might show at a drive-in for a week or two in some hick-town somewhere, as having great potential for artistic expression? Not Sylvester Stallone! But people like Hellman do, and did! And I have a hunch that if Hellman directed a film about arm-wrestling or rock-climbing in the '70s it would've been just as good!
Rating: Summary: Warren Oates wants to be Cockfighter of the Year Review: Director Monte Hellman gets an unforgettable performance from Warren Oates in this ambiguous character study. Oates plays Frank Mansfield, an obsessive trainer of prize-fighting cocks who takes a vow of silence after shooting his mouth for years about winning Cockfighter of the Year. Frank refuses to speak until he wins and hits the comeback trail in the South. Most people are inclined to agree that this is Oates' best performance; certainly it is the most interesting role he ever played. Like Hellman's better-known film, "Two-Lane Blacktop," this film is doing in a minimalist approach. The story seems deceptively simple, but our judgments of Frank are certainly not. He is not, to put it mildly, a nice person. The cast also includes Harry Dean Stanton, Laurie Bird, Ed Begley, Jr., Troy Donahue and Steve Railsback. This 1974 film was also released as "Born to Kill," "Gamblin' Man" and "Wild Drifter," all of which are vastly inferior titles. Charles Willeford adopted his novel to the screen and the movie was produced by Roger Corman. The DVD also includes a 54-minute 1993 documentary, "Warren Oates: Across the Border," directed by Tom Thurman. This letter-boxed version includes an above-average audio commentary track by Hellman, the theatrical trailer, along with television and radio spots. Consequently, we have an A-level package for an unforgettable and rather disturbing B-movie. The SPCA must really hate this film because I am pretty sure animals were "hurt" during its filming. Or, to put it another way, you will not be eating chicken after watching "Cockfighter."
Rating: Summary: Warren Oates wants to be Cockfighter of the Year Review: Director Monte Hellman gets an unforgettable performance from Warren Oates in this ambiguous character study. Oates plays Frank Mansfield, an obsessive trainer of prize-fighting cocks who takes a vow of silence after shooting his mouth for years about winning Cockfighter of the Year. Frank refuses to speak until he wins and hits the comeback trail in the South. Most people are inclined to agree that this is Oates' best performance; certainly it is the most interesting role he ever played. Like Hellman's better-known film, "Two-Lane Blacktop," this film is doing in a minimalist approach. The story seems deceptively simple, but our judgments of Frank are certainly not. He is not, to put it mildly, a nice person. The cast also includes Harry Dean Stanton, Laurie Bird, Ed Begley, Jr., Troy Donahue and Steve Railsback. This 1974 film was also released as "Born to Kill," "Gamblin' Man" and "Wild Drifter," all of which are vastly inferior titles. Charles Willeford adopted his novel to the screen and the movie was produced by Roger Corman. The DVD also includes a 54-minute 1993 documentary, "Warren Oates: Across the Border," directed by Tom Thurman. This letter-boxed version includes an above-average audio commentary track by Hellman, the theatrical trailer, along with television and radio spots. Consequently, we have an A-level package for an unforgettable and rather disturbing B-movie. The SPCA must really hate this film because I am pretty sure animals were "hurt" during its filming. Or, to put it another way, you will not be eating chicken after watching "Cockfighter."
Rating: Summary: Terrific Monte Hellman! Review: Hypnotically splendid, offbeat and violent drama stars the incomparable Warren Oates. Oates is nearly mute for almost the entire film after he gets a little too big for his britches. His thoughts(as narration) guide us through the story. Harry Dean Stanton is here also and is perfect. Another notch in the belt of cult director Monte Hellman(Two-Lane Blacktop/ The Shooting/ Ride in The Whirlwind/ China 9, Liberty 37). This is a truly unique film that is sadly almost forgotten. Thank goodness for dvd in the capacity that it can allow a great director like Hellman to find deserved appreciation among a new group of fans. Like the many other great Hellman films, this one has a distinct low-key dynamic that really works incredibly well and makes it stay with you long after you've watched it.
Rating: Summary: Terrific Monte Hellman! Review: Hypnotically splendid, offbeat and violent drama stars the incomparable Warren Oates. Oates is nearly mute for almost the entire film after he gets a little too big for his britches. His thoughts(as narration) guide us through the story. Harry Dean Stanton is here also and is perfect. Another notch in the belt of cult director Monte Hellman(Two-Lane Blacktop/ The Shooting/ Ride in The Whirlwind/ China 9, Liberty 37). This is a truly unique film that is sadly almost forgotten. Thank goodness for dvd in the capacity that it can allow a great director like Hellman to find deserved appreciation among a new group of fans. Like the many other great Hellman films, this one has a distinct low-key dynamic that really works incredibly well and makes it stay with you long after you've watched it.
Rating: Summary: A little 4 and a half star gem of a film... Review: I have a vhs copy of Cockfighter that's so old it's voting in the upcoming election's. I can't wait to pick up this outstanding film on dvd. This film was recomended to me about 5 years ago and has become a favorite. First off, you have to love Warren Oates. When you see him cast his spell in Cockfighter or Two Lane Blacktop(and in the many films which he almost stole as an outstanding character actor)you bemoan the fact that their is no one acting in film today that is this interesting. Oh well... The film itself is a brutal look at the outlaw "sport" which gives the film it's title. It's realism (although I've never seen a cockfight...) and honesty help create the backdrop to the story of Frank(Oates). What kind of man could wager his truck,trailer and woman on a cockfight? What kind of man could take a vow of silence after his boasting causes him to lose a shot at a cockfighting championship and medal? What kind of man foresakes the woman he loves for the "sport" and what kind of man would allow that sport to become his life? Well,Frank. The film features great proformances by Oates and Harry Dean Stanton as two men engaged in a long running rivalry. Other fine turns are added by a deep cast of character actors (some of whom have very familar faces, if not names),Hellman "regulars" and the non-actors who populate the cockfighting life. Hellman directs in a workman like fashion but that's fine-he leaves the camera pyrotechnics and gimics to those who do not have as good a story or cast to work with. Here it's all about Frank's life and work (the same thing really),the characters he bumps into and the work the actors do that bring it all alive. There is fine cinematography from Nestor Almendros and the film has the earthy and lived in look and feel of all the great 70's films. I can't tell you why but I love that look. Cockfighter has a tight script that explains Frank and his life to the viewer(with the help of his voice over narative)and ties up all loose ends. The film is off beat without ever nearing the incoherant or strange for strange's sake level and after repeated viewings I think it holds up as one of the best films of the 1970's. There are great individual moments throughout the film: the bathtub full of dead game cocks in the hotel room, some bits of inspired comedy and Ed Bagley Jr. flipping out after his pet is killed by Frank's bird during a fight are but a few. Still, the one scene that sticks in my memory is the scene in which Frank's boasting becomes his downfall and the reason he stops verbally comunicating. It's the lynch pin that holds the film together. Frank readies his bird for the fight and is full of pride as he announces to the rest of the room "That's the finest five pound chicken alive, Jack!" If you like solid acting,directing and screenwriting as well as a bit of inspired weirdness and a challenge then seek out Cockfighter.
Rating: Summary: top of the line warren oates Review: If this is the Monte Hellman directed pic from the Charles Willeford novel that I saw bacxk in the 60s, a must buy for fans of Warren Oates and Hellman. Oates is one of my faves and of his roles this is one of my vry favorites along with Alfredo Garcia, Wild Bunch, 2 Lane Blacktop. If you like Oates and those pics you will like this a lot. It is about cockfighting but thankfully there are no scenes of birds dying. As for plot, he refuses to speak because he shot off his mouth last year and blew his chance to win cockfighter of the year award which is all he wants out of life. On a talk show he said Hellman called him up and said this is the one. ""Is this the one?" "Yes." So he did it. I was alone in a Frisco grindhouse with a couple of drunks when I saw this and with fewer scenes it didn't do any better as Born To Kill.
Rating: Summary: Hrmph Review: Not what I expected from a movie with this title.
Rating: Summary: Cockfighting Exposed Review: While the film makers goal may not have been to expose just how cruel the world of cockfighting is, he achieved that aim anyway. This film does not gloss over the realities of the bloodsport. Additionally, the script writers did an excellent job in learning the lingo cockfighters use. Cockfighting is illegal in 48 states, but is still legal in Louisiana and New Mexico. I would show this movie to every voter in those two states in an effort to outlaw cockfighting. Another good source of information about this is www.louisianaagainstcockfighting.org and www.animalfighting.org.
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