Hombre is a 1967 revisionist western film directed by Martin Ritt, based on the novel of the same name by Elmore Leonard. It stars Paul Newman, Richard Boone, Martin Balsam, Diane Cilento and Fredric March. Newman's amount of dialogue in the film is minimal and much of the role is conveyed through mannerism and action. This was the sixth and final time Ritt directed Newman, they had previously worked together on The Long Hot Summer, Paris Blues, Hemingway's Adventures of a Young Man, Hud and The Outrage. In late 19th-century Arizona, an Apache-raised white man, John Russell, faces prejudice... in the white world after he returns for his inheritance upon his father's death. Deciding to sell the house in order to buy a herd of horses—which does not endear him to the boarders who live there or to the caretaker, Jessie—Russell ends up riding a stagecoach with Jessie and unhappily married boarders Doris and Billy Lee Blake leaving town. Three others ride with them: Indian agent Professor Alexander Favor, his aristocratic wife Audra and the crude Cicero Grimes. Mrs.
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| Release date: | March 21, 1967 |
| Directed by: | Martin Ritt |
| Runtime: | 111 Minutes |
| Producer: | Martin Ritt, Irving Ravetch |
| Editor: | Frank Bracht |
| Music by: | David Rose |
| Cinematography: | James Wong Howe |
| Screenplay by: | Harriet Frank Jr., Irving Ravetch |
| Genre: | Western, Action |