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Emperor of the North (1973)

Emperor of the North (1973)
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In this gritty and violent period drama set in the depths of the Great Depression, Lee Marvin stars as "A No. 1", the acknowledged King of the Hoboes. A No. 1 is famous among his fellow tramps for his ability to catch a ride on any train, no matter how risky the hop or dangerous the guards. He acts as a sort of mentor for Cigaret (Keith Carradine), a young hobo who brags that some day he'll surpass A No. 1 in his accomplishments. But neither has had the courage to ride a train guarded by Shack (Ernest Borgnine), an unusually sadistic railroad cop who will brutally beat or even murder any man who tries to catch a ride on his train. A No. 1 is determined that no one, not even Cigaret, is going to deny him his title, so taking his life in his hands, he and Cigaret hop a ride on Shack's train, and they are soon bearing the full brunt of his violent nature. Emperor of the North features superb location photography by Joseph F. Biroc and a fine supporting cast, including Charles Tyner, Simon Oakland, Elisha Cook Jr., and Sid Haig. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Starring:
Lee MarvinErnest Borgnine, (more)
Director(s):
Robert Aldrich
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
PG
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Emperor of the North

In this gritty and violent period drama set in the depths of the Great Depression, Lee Marvin stars as "A No. 1", the acknowledged King of the Hoboes. A No. 1 is famous among his fellow tramps for his ability to catch a ride on any train, no matter how risky the hop or dangerous the guards. He acts as a sort of mentor for Cigaret (Keith Carradine), a young hobo who brags that some day he'll surpass A No. 1 in his accomplishments. But neither has had the courage to ride a train guarded by Shack (Ernest Borgnine), an unusually sadistic railroad cop who will brutally beat or even murder any man who tries to catch a ride on his train. A No. 1 is determined that no one, not even Cigaret, is going to deny him his title, so taking his life in his hands, he and Cigaret hop a ride on Shack's train, and they are soon bearing the full brunt of his violent nature. Emperor of the North features superb location photography by Joseph F. Biroc and a fine supporting cast, including Charles Tyner, Simon Oakland, Elisha Cook Jr., and Sid Haig. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
120 mins

Complete Cast of Emperor of the North


Director(s):
Robert Aldrich
Writer(s):
Christopher Knopf
Producer(s):
Stan Hough
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
PG(Violence, Questionable for Children)
Categories:
Action / Adventure
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Member Reviews
 
John M.

If you like railroading, this is the movie for you. Kinda violent in places with injuries and death to homeless during the depression, plus injuries and death to railroad workers. Great scenes of Oregon Pacific and Eastern Railroad (now defunct or absorbed) tooling around the Oregon landscape. Nice old locomotives (#19 mostly), boxcars and passenger cars associated with OPE. Shows switching activities and coal locomotive operation. Actors are pretty good, although Keith Carradine hams it up. Marvin and Borgnine are great in their respective roles.

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Charles J.

Sadistic conductor Ernest Borgnine, top hobo Lee Marvin and wannabe Keith Carradine have a two hour running battle over a freight train, not a woman, in a Depression era "Bad Day on No. 19" set piece. Although shot in Oregon like The General was in 1926, this movie is 1970s in feel, message and politics, with a slight touch of Cat Ballou and a Jesus in Japan baptismal moment.

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Keith G.

Interesting, quasi-political film of depression era hobo (Lee Marvin) trying to ride train guarded by meanest guy in the world (Ernest Borgnine). He picks up a young protege (a very young Keith Carradine) along the way, The acting is solid. Score is a bit much at times, and some of the writing is variable, but there are some good scenes and thoughtful ideas here. Aka The Emperor of the North Pole.

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