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The Treasure of the Sierra Madre

United States

1948

126 Min
  • Currently 4.3/5 Stars.
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DIR John Huston

PROD Henry Blanke

SCR John Huston, B. Traven

DP Ted D. McCord

CAST Humphrey Bogart, Walter Huston, Tim Holt

Synopsis

John Huston’s 1948 treasure-hunt classic begins as drifter Fred C. Dobbs (Humphrey Bogart), down and out in Tampico, Mexico, impulsively spends his last bit of dough on a lottery ticket. Later on, Dobbs and fellow indigent Curtin (Tim Holt) seek shelter in a cheap flophouse and meet Howard (Walter Huston), a toothless, garrulous old coot who regales them with stories about prospecting for gold. Forcibly collecting their pay from their shifty boss, Dobbs and Curtin combine this money with Dobbs’s unexpected windfall from a lottery ticket and, together with Howard, buy the tools for a prospecting expedition. Dobbs has pledged that anything they dig up will be split three ways, but Howard, who’s heard that song before, doesn’t quite swallow this. As the gold is mined and measured, Dobbs grows increasingly paranoid and distrustful, and the men gradually turn against each other on the way toward a bitterly ironic conclusion. The Treasure of the Sierra Madre is a superior morality play and one of the best movie treatments of the corrosiveness of greed. Huston keeps a typically light and entertaining touch despite the strong theme, for which he won Oscars for both Director and Screenplay, as well as a supporting award for his father Walter, making Walter, John, and Anjelica Huston the only three generations of one family all to win Oscars.

(From http://www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll?p=avg&sql=1:50884 )

Director

John-huston

John Huston

The son of actor Walter Huston, American film director John Marcellus Huston was born in Missouri, travelling widely with his family in vaudeville circles, he enjoyed a wild and unconventional youth.

He boxed, rode horses in Mexico and wrote for magazines in New York, before writing dialogue for Hollywood. Before breaking into directing, Huston also spent time acting and street-performing in Paris and London.

His first film, ‘The Maltese Falcon’, was made in 1941, becoming the classic adaptation, and making a star out of Humphrey Bogart. Bogart also appeared in Huston’s next few films: ‘Key Largo’, ‘Across The Pacific’ and ‘The Treasure of The Sierra Madre’.

It was with the latter that Huston won his first Best Director Oscar. His father, Walter, also appeared in the film, winning Best Supporting Actor.

Making military documentaries during World War II, Huston hit the big time again with his 1950 crime film, ‘The Asphalt Jungle’. Following this was ‘The African… read more

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Displaying 4 of 17 wall posts.
Picture of Cody Kennedy

Cody Kennedy

6Dec09

Bogie's internal paranoia and the futility of acquiring quick wealth  

Peter Tran

30Oct09

A dark, visceral, but at the same time, hopeful and spiritual meditation on ambition and the true nature of wealth.  
Picture of John "The K man" Smith

John "The K man" Smith

28Oct09

An excellent film, it shows what gold does to a mans soul. And the greed that stalks the souls of good men cursed with the burden of an instant fortune. Its an excellent study on the human condition and what makes us human, and how easily we can lose that in sight of mass fortunes.  
Picture of Spencer Draper

Spencer Draper

5Sep09

A fascinating film-how did this ever get made in 1948?  

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Untitled

By Todd Kushige​machi on December 14, 2009

Director John Huston makes a small cameo at the beginning of his 1948 masterpiece. He plays a gentleman repeatedly asked for money by the penniless Fred C. Dobbs. With his commanding presence, he…  read review

Untitled

By Adam Suraf on June 18, 2009

In a career of adapting difficult novels to the big screen, John Huston hardly found a text more apt to his sensibilities than B. Traven’s “The Treasure of the Sierra Madre”, a scorching 1927 anti…  read review

Untitled

By J. Ridicul​ous on June 8, 2009

If The Maltese Falcon was Huston’s film about greed, then this film is about Greed with a capital G. It may the definitive film on the cancerous and corrupting influence of the American dream, namely…  read review

Untitled

By Musycks on May 20, 2009

In one of the most enduring yet uneven careers in all of Hollywood history, this essay on greed and it’s effects may well stand at the very top of John Huston’s achievements. Huston was a fan of the…  read review

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WISE BLOOD on CRITERION!

25 posts by 18 people 11 months ago