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They Shoot Horses, Don't They?
Overlook Pick

They Shoot Horses, Don't They?

People are the ultimate spectacle.
76
User Score368 ratings
TMDB 7.616+19692hEnglish
Drama

Synopsis

In the midst of the Great Depression, manipulative emcee Rocky enlists contestants for a dance marathon offering a $1,500 cash prize. Among them are a failed actress, a middle-aged sailor, a delusional blonde and a pregnant girl.

Director
Sydney PollackFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Palomar Pictures International5 production companies
Release
December 10, 1969Released
Box Office

Top Cast

8 of 30
Jane Fonda
Jane Fonda
Gloria Beatty
Michael Sarrazin
Michael Sarrazin
Robert Syverton
Susannah York
Susannah York
Alice LeBlanc
Gig Young
Gig Young
Rocky Gravo
Red Buttons
Red Buttons
Sailor
Bonnie Bedelia
Bonnie Bedelia
Ruby Bates
Michael Conrad
Michael Conrad
Rollo
Bruce Dern
Bruce Dern
James Bates

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
CinemaSerf
Jul 15, 2025

Despite the constant streams of sweat on display here, there is something physically and emotionally arid about this two hours of cinematic torture. With the depression in full swing, the down-at-heart “Gloria” (Jane Fonda) heads to California in the hope of becoming a starlet. Meantime, equally disheartened “Robert” (Michael Sarazin) is frustrated that he can’t make a career at the other end of the camera. Desperate for cash, they join a throng of other unfortunate folks in a dance marathon which awards the winners $1,500 (minus deductions!). The whole thing is rather cynically administered by “Rocky” (Gig Young) and as the dancers go round the floor, so we go round the dancers and we meet an group of people whose problems and demons are laid bare. First amongst those somewhat tragic equals would appear to be “Alice” (Susannah York) but it’s a close run thing with a pregnant couple really struggling to keep pace and with, for me anyway, the most poignant of all - the sailor (Red Buttons) who had done his bit for Uncle Sam, but was now reduced to this most torturous form of fund raising which his body was now ill equipped to handle. As the days pass, and the excellent make-up artists do their work, the visceral nature of the characterisations emerge unrelentingly, leaving us with a distinctly uncomfortable watch that exposes a fruitlessly venal culture based on the premise of dog eat dog. Perhaps, though, as these people endure physically and psychologically, they might begin to realise that the pot of gold at the end of this rainbow isn’t actually the cash, but a sense of self-respect. The last ten minutes settle things in quite traumatic fashion and suffice to say there is no chocolates and Champagne. The dialogue is sparingly potent with gentleness and optimism gradually replaced by a stoic realisation of the relentlessness of their predicament and I think Sarazin, Fonda and particularly York give the performances of their careers in the slow-burning exposé of human toxicity.

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