The Bandits (film) explained

The Bandits
Director:Robert Conrad
Alfredo Zacarías
Producer:James M. George
Alfredo Zacarías
Harry Harvey Jr.
Starring:Robert Conrad
Jan-Michael Vincent
Manuel López Ochoa
Cinematography:Ted Voigtlander
Editing:Gloria Schoemann
Grant K. Smith
Music:Manuel Esperón
Distributor:Producciones Zacarías S.A.
Runtime:95 minutes (Mexico)
89 minutes
Country:Mexico
Language:English/Spanish

The Bandits/Los Bandidos is a 1967 Mexican/American international co-production starring Robert Conrad who co-wrote and co-directed the film with the producer Alfredo Zacarías. The film was shot in Mexico in 1966 during a hiatus of Conrad's The Wild Wild West television series but the film was not released in the US until May 1979.[1]

Several of the crew such as cinematographer Ted Voigtlander, stunt director Whitey Hughes, co-editor Grant K. Smith and co-producers James M. George and Harry Harvey Jr. worked with Robert Conrad on The Wild Wild West.

Plot

Three Americans drifting through Mexico find themselves caught up in the French intervention in Mexico.

Cast

Notes and References

  1. p. 20 Pitts, Michael R. Western Movies: A Guide to 5,105 Feature Films 2nd ed. McFarland, 2012