Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Cockfighter

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
8.6
/
10
1
Votes
Alchetron8.6
8.6
1 Ratings
100
90
81
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
Rate This

Rate This


Genre
  
Drama

Screenplay
  
Country
  
United States

7.3/10
IMDb

Director
  
Music director
  
Duration
  

Language
  
English

Cockfighter movie poster
Release date
  
1974 (1974)

Writer
  
Charles Willeford (novel), Charles Willeford (screenplay)

Cast
  
(Frank Mansfield), (Omar Baradansky), (Jack Burke),
Ed Begley Jr.
(Tom Peeples), (Dody White Burke), (Randall Mansfield)

Similar movies
  
Intact
,
Fish Tank
,
Hard Eight
,
Runner Runner
,
Bare
,
The Heart is Deceitful Above All Things

Cockfighter 1974 theatrical trailer


A man (Warren Oates) who trains fighting cocks vows to remain silent until one of his birds wins a championship.

Contents

Cockfighter movie scenes

Cockfighter (also known as Born to Kill) is a 1974 film by director Monte Hellman, starring Warren Oates, Harry Dean Stanton and featuring Laurie Bird and Ed Begley, Jr. The screenplay is based on the novel of the same name by Charles Willeford.

Cockfighter movie scenes The film boasts Warren Oates s greatest performance and that is really saying something He was one of the greatest actors to emerge from the 60s

Warren Oates plays a world-weary gambler trying to make big money cockfighting. Always on the road, he works inside and outside the rules to try to work up to the biggest fight of the year.

Films you should see before it s too late 2 cockfighter monte hellman 1974 trailer


The plot

The plot begins in medias res with a mute Frank Mansfield (played by Warren Oates) locked inside a trailer preparing his best cock for an upcoming fight. He slices the chickens beak slightly so that it looks cracked in order to increase the betting against him in the upcoming fight. He bets his trailer, girlfriend, and the remainder of his money with fellow cocker Jack (played by Harry Dean Stanton). Mansfield loses the fight (ironically because of the cracked beak), almost all of his belongings, and is set on a rambling path to win the Cockfighter of the Year award.

Cockfighter


Frank visits his home town, his family farm, and his long-time fiancee Mary Elizabeth (played by Patricia Pearcy). Mary Elizabeth has long grown tired of Mansfields cockfighter ways and asks him to settle down with her. Frank decides in favor of cockfighting, leaves Mary Elizabeth, sells the family farm for money to reinvest in chickens, and starts a partnership with Omar Baradinsky (played by Richard B. Shull). The partnership takes them all the way to the cockfighting championships.

The screenplay

Willeford adapted the novel to the screen himself and made several major plot changes among many smaller changes in detail. The author indicated that Cockfighter is based loosely on the structure of the Odyssey, so it is most significant that the author removed the entire subplot with the beautiful widow Berenice, perhaps the Calypso character. Removing this character also excluded the protagonists short-lived music career from the plot, although the movie does show Mansfield plucking a guitar at one point. Two other significant characters in the novel are also missing from the movie: Doc Riordan (a pharmacist / inventor who supplies Mansfield with conditioning medicines for his chickens) and the Judge who sells the Mansfield farm. The final scene of the movie also presents a dramatic shift from the end of the book: Mansfield claims that Mary Elizabeth loves him as she walks off, whereas in the book he realizes the relationship is over and he is free.

There are many subtle details changed in the movie, most of which are insignificant to the plot. For example, it is emphasized in the book that Icky is a rare blue chicken, whereas in the movie he is a white chicken called "White Lightning". The Mansfield farm is in Ocala in the book, in Decatur, Georgia in the movie. Possibly for some comic relief in the movie, Baradinsky goes back to the motel tournament rather than driving on to a separate tournament as in the novel. He hides his cash under the dead chickens in the bathtub and does not lose money like everyone else in the holdup. By the time of the Milledgeville tournament, Middletons wife had died in the book, but in the movie Middleton (played by Willeford himself) refers to his wife as living. And finally, in the movie, Mansfield does not "regain" his voice until after Mary Elizabeth leaves.

Reception

The film struggled to find an audience and Roger Corman said it was the only movie he backed in the 1970s that lost money. He had it recut and reissued under the title Born to Kill but it still did not succeed.

References

Cockfighter Wikipedia
Cockfighter IMDbCockfighter Rotten TomatoesCockfighter themoviedb.org