IMDb RATING
6.2/10
2.5K
YOUR RATING
Travelers in the 1870s Southwest discuss a recent murder trial in which all the principals told differing stories about the events.Travelers in the 1870s Southwest discuss a recent murder trial in which all the principals told differing stories about the events.Travelers in the 1870s Southwest discuss a recent murder trial in which all the principals told differing stories about the events.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaPaul Newman was concerned about his accent, so he spent two weeks in Mexico with dialect coach Walon Green.
- GoofsWhen the Wife (Bloom) is fighting Juan (Newman), she falls and hits the camera rig, causing the picture to shake a little.
- Crazy creditsExcept for the title and company name, the beginning of the movie has no opening credits.
- ConnectionsFeatured in MGM 40th Anniversary (1964)
Featured review
Newman deserves credit for trying something boldly unusual
Newman's fifth film for Martin Ritt, "The Outrage" was based on the classic Japanese film "Rashômon," but Ritt transplanted the tale to the South Western U.S. following the Civil War
Carrasco has been convicted of raping a woman (Claire Bloom) and murdering her husband (Laurence Harvey), but four eye-witness accounts conflict All agree that the bandit raped the woman, but only one asserts that he committed the killing
Sadistic, defiant, and challenging, Carrasco snarls, sneers, and walks with macho arrogance, to hide the fact that he can only be strong by tying a man to a tree and raping his wife
The role allowed Newman to give a bravura performance, not unlike Toshiro Mifune's in the Kurosawa film, and the stylization would fit the story if everybody else weren't playing it so straight As it is, the performance seems too showy, easily understandable, exaggerated
Carrasco has been convicted of raping a woman (Claire Bloom) and murdering her husband (Laurence Harvey), but four eye-witness accounts conflict All agree that the bandit raped the woman, but only one asserts that he committed the killing
Sadistic, defiant, and challenging, Carrasco snarls, sneers, and walks with macho arrogance, to hide the fact that he can only be strong by tying a man to a tree and raping his wife
The role allowed Newman to give a bravura performance, not unlike Toshiro Mifune's in the Kurosawa film, and the stylization would fit the story if everybody else weren't playing it so straight As it is, the performance seems too showy, easily understandable, exaggerated
helpful•2213
- Nazi_Fighter_David
- Jan 27, 2009
- How long is The Outrage?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $3,000,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 36 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
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