Directed by: Andrew V. McLaglen
Starring:
![]() Although this is really a John Wayne movie, Rock Hudson does get one great movie star moment. |
Before you are 20 minutes into this movie it is clear that John Wayne is the star. Rock Hudson's name may be next to his above the title but he not only gets less screen time than Wayne, but he also has the weaker role. Wayne is the wise brave hero while Hudson is merely a noble soldier. Rock does get one great movie star moment. Once his men have gotten across the Rio Grande they don all of their military splendor and fly the Confederate flag. There is an aerial shot of Hudson in his dress grays, head held proudly, with the large red plume on his hat blowing in the wind.
The movie takes place immediately following the American Civil War. Wayne is a colonel in the Union Army and Hudson is a Confederate colonel. Fate brings them together in Mexico. Wayne and a group of hired men are taking a herd of horses to sell to the Emperor Maximilian. Hudson and his men, not ready to admit defeat, are taking their families to Mexico City where Maximilian has promised them amnesty in exchange for their military service.
Both groups paths soon cross and they have encounters with bandits and with Mexican soldiers fighting for their leader Benito Juarez against French occupation. In between action scenes there is the prerequisite melodrama; a subplot involving a romance between Wayne's adopted Native American son and Hudson's daughter briefly brings race into the story. There is also another staple of John Wayne movies, a humorous drinking scene that leads to a brawl.
1969 also saw the releases of True Grit, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid and The Wild Bunch. In a great year for westerns The Undefeated was the most old-fashioned of the bunch. It is more dated than those other three movies but still makes for an enjoyable matinee.
Photos © Copyright Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation (1969)