John Ford must have learned everything as Tombstone was at the time and also knew how to choose perfect actors for the film. Walter Brennan's naturalness of representation and facial expression are just incredible. Masterpiece of cinema.
Yes, it does. Black & White movie cinematography was a real art back then as testament in the night saloon scene when Doc Holiday has to operate. The subtle travel of the light emanating from an oil lamp that is being carried is truly remarkable. Love this film.
And great characters. The minstrel and his assistant. And the preacher. The nurse. The saloon musicians and the barman. to say the least. Have you ever been in love. No, I've been a barman all my life!
SO THANKFUL FOR THIS MOVIE YOU HAVE SHARED - VICTOR MATURE AND HENRY FONDA ARE ON MY A LIST FOR ALL TIME ACTORS - LOVE A CLEAR BLACK AND WHITE MOVIE - VOLUME AND VOICES ARE STILL GREAT - THANKS AGAIN
This is so eerie to me. I was born in 1944, and, like these movie makers, The gunfight at OK Corral in 1881 was only 63 years previous. This would be like my now remembering the eigth grade in 2021 - which I remember qute well. Now, 1881 is so distant to many persons. I lived in Bisbee several years and know Tombstone so well, but I assure you, Monument Valley is hundreds of miles away, and there are no Sahuaro cacti, save for one on Main Street transplanted from the Tuscon area as a gag. As a historical note, "Oh my darling, Clementine" was composed by Percy Montrose in 1884, three years after it was portrayed in 1881 here.
Yes and the scene where Wyatt is reading his younger brother's headstone born 1864 died 1882 , the O.K corral was Oct 26, 1881 the writers did not read their history on this subject. ?
@@2degucitas Yes. That's what's amazing. He's TOTALLY convincing as a dark fiend and as a light-hearted good guy. I really didn't appreciate him as I should have, before seeing this.
I remember this movie as a boy. Now that I'm much older and watching it again, I can see a little bit of Keven Costner's character...Wyatt Earp and Open Range movies are somewhat similar. great movie.
So sad to learn that Linda Darnell who played the role of Chihuahua, died some years later from burns she received in a house fire. She had been cast in approx 40 films & TV Shows before her untimely death.
i got the dvd directors cut,theres a lot of scenes that were cut out of the 1946 version when it was released,but were put back on the dvd.the cut out parts were found and put back on the film.they were good scenes dont know why they were cut out of the film,darryl f.zanuck the producer said they were unnecesssary.if you get the dvd you can see where the cuts were made,theres a commentary and short documentry on the film on the dvd.
If you lived in Texas, you may have watched the movie in one of the drive-in theaters that my step-father operated after being medically discharged from the u.s.army
Thanks for posting this movie. It sure was a nice movie. I must have seen it for the first time being a little kid in the Netherlands in the fifties before emigrating to Canada. Be safe and be blessed.... Greeting Ariaan Jonker
Victor Mature, or kirk Douglas. both great Doc Holyday, for me Victor Mature, maybe because I rate My Darling Clementine a better picture than ;Gunfight At The OK Corral.
Cathy Downs as Clementine. An attractive gal in her own right. Had a limited career, died of cancer @ age 50. She did some TV. Tombstone Territory, Perry Mason. Also in a good noir film w/ Lucy and Wm Bendix, THE DARK CORNER.
God! That is such a good film. Dadblasted good. Great to see a hero who enjoys his food, looks at his reflection in shop windows, follows the fashion of the day, leans back in his chair and plays at balancing, ties his horse up properly, carries a lady’s duffel. Better than the Val Kilmer version - and that was great.
The coolest "inaccurate" , "story", of an idea, about what someone might "imagine", what "could" have happened. If they made up narratives as they went along.
Excellent point, contibuting to my just-make remarks. If you are closer to my age - 76, you'll appreciate what I am saying even more. It all makes you pause and reflect as the years move on.
@@Kermit_T_Frog who mentioned anything about it being historically accurate? although if they had of given the characters different names everything about the movie would be considered more historically accurate based on the fact it was made so close to the time of the old west as compared to now.
when john ford was thinking about making this early on in 1945,he wanted to film it in technicolor and have tyrone power as doc holliday,but zanuck said it would be too exspensive to film in color.ford picked on victor mature during filming calling him liverlips.from a biography on ford.
I think it to be hilarious that they picked Samson (Victor Mature) to play the sickly weaken Doc Holiday.... Mature is one of my favorite actors but this was such a poor choice it is funny....
@@wsearp It's a poor choice if you look at this movie for historical accuracy. If you just look on it as a good Western drama in which the casting was an artistic choice then Victor Mature was good for the part as he really does give one of his best performances in this film. It's always struck me just how poor an opinion Mature had of his own acting because he's really good in this movie just as he was in the crime noir drama Kiss Of Death (1947).
In my opinion (historical accuracy aside) this one of Ford‘s 3 best westerns & I am NOT including THE SEARCHERS, the best moments of which are in the early reels before the unapologetic racism takes over. Mature makes an unusual but interesting Doc Holliday in CLEMENTINE & the last image in the film is unforgettable.
Christ its just a film and its entertaining so what if its not a 100% accurate or not talk about herd mentallity one person knocks the film and rest of the sheep follow Bahh
Based on Stuart N. Lake's bullshit "autobiography" of Wyatt Earp, which was used as the so-called factual basis for three movies and a television series.
@@sanjursan I liked W Bond. He was in a lot of movies before Wagon Train. Member of the John Ford stock company and a drinking bud of John Wayne. He played hvywght boxing champ John L Sullivan in Gentlemen Jim.
No one really wrote the wild west history. Just authors of paperback book writers and newspapers columnist, wrote third-hand stories in roughly same characters. "If you have truth and legend, write a legend". Movie industrie has created a gunslingers. Who can actually witness the one who pulls first, in a duel?
@@jarikinnunen1718 presume this to be finnish. as it does not translate online, i also presume it to be vulgar or mistyped. if vulgar, no one was rude to you; if mistyped, maybe you have a problem typing what you intend, which leads back to my post.
@@richardauchinleck1234 Theme is historically inaccurate movie from golden age of movie industry. Not my bad language skills. Do you know how bad english speakers the immigrants was in wild west. Even them who was GB origins. Very bad.
@@jarikinnunen1718 at least six errors in grammar and english usage in your last post. you should invest in a grammar checker if you want to effectively communicate in english. valiant effort though.
@@lornaswallow5769 I think I read once that doctors in the east would send patients with what they called "consumption" to Arizona in the hopes that the dry climate would help their breathing.
You know "Only the names are changed to protect the innocent"? This is, "Only the names are the same to play ducks and drakes with history." Great movie, though. Worth watching.
(my opinion)...this is tied with "Liberty Valence" as John Ford's 2 best American Westerns...& btw i found the cowboy's yelling out @1:17:00 as Chihuahua (Linda Darnell) moans while Doc (V.M.) digs the bullet out to be very poignant....it's haunted me ever since I 1st saw this film some 50 yrs ago....
Good choices!! My preference's are She Wore a Yellow Ribbon and Stagecoach, in that order, but to each their own. :-) I heard it said that someone once asked Orson Wells who he through the three greatest American film directors were. Without a blink he is said to have said "John Ford, John Ford and John Ford."
Maybe some of those who complain about historical inaccuracy would have preferred the good ol Clantons to be played by Newman, Redford, and Warren Beatty and the evil Earps by Palance and Lee Van Cleef. Personally I had enough of that kind of stuff in the 60s and 70s. What I thought was unlikely was that Wyatt would leave 18yr old James alone with the herd after meeting old man Clanton and stonefaced Ike, and send Virg alone to bring Billy in. Seemed like he was trying to get them killed. Great film all the same.
I DON'T HER NAME BUT I THINK I HAVE SEEN HER IN HAWAIIAN - POLY BLACK AND WHITE MOVIES - AND DEBORAH PAGET WAS A BIG STAR ALSO AT THE SAME TIME - MAKING HAWAIIAN JUMP IN THE VOLCANO MOVIES - LOL
when he was preparing this film after the war,he screened FRONTIER MARSHALL 1939 and added bits of business into this film.charles stevens as indian charlie plays the same role in both films.harry woods as the sherrif here in the beginning and ward bond also were in frontier marshall too
Considerando ter sido pelo famoso John Ford, esperava muito mais desse filme. Só foi razoável. Houve momentos até chatos. Mostrou um Doc Hollidey pela metade, estrelado pelo frio Victor Mature que só foi brilhante como Sansão. Doc Hollydei era jogador inveterado, piistoleiro com ótima pontaria. E não morreu no tiroteiro, aliás muito mal feito, sem emoção. Mesmo o grande Henri Fonda não teve excelente atuação. Há pouco tempo vi o filme "Sem lei e sem alma", com Burt Lancaster, como o famoso xerife Yearp e Kirk Douglas como o pistoleiro-jogador Doc Hollydei. Filmaço!
"What kinda town is this? Servin' liquor to Injuns? Get outta town Injun and stay out!" (kicks him in the ass). I love old movies and I love Henry Fonda but sometimes I have to cringe at parts of the dialogue. Seems to be more so in old Westerns. Still I enjoyed it.
Probably one of the greatest Western's of all time! 👍🦂🥂
John Ford must have learned everything as Tombstone was at the time and also knew how to choose perfect actors for the film. Walter Brennan's naturalness of representation and facial expression are just incredible. Masterpiece of cinema.
the whole black and white of this movie makes it extradinory, plus the subtle acting. Henry Fonda and Walter Brennan, doesn't get much better.
And directed by the great John Ford.
Yes, it does. Black & White movie cinematography was a real art back then as testament in the night saloon scene when Doc Holiday has to operate. The subtle travel of the light emanating from an oil lamp that is being carried is truly remarkable. Love this film.
And great characters. The minstrel and his assistant. And the preacher. The nurse. The saloon musicians and the barman. to say the least. Have you ever been in love. No, I've been a barman all my life!
over 50yrs since i last watched this an it`s still a powerful movie .
James earp
Born: June 28, 1841, Kentucky
Died: January 25, 1926, San Bernardino, CA
SO THANKFUL FOR THIS MOVIE YOU HAVE SHARED - VICTOR MATURE AND HENRY FONDA ARE ON MY A LIST FOR ALL TIME ACTORS - LOVE A CLEAR BLACK AND WHITE MOVIE - VOLUME AND VOICES ARE STILL GREAT - THANKS AGAIN
One of my favorites as kid in the 70's. Remember watching on Saturday afternoons.
Thank you for posting this "oldie but goodie" one of my top westerns. Perhaps my top one!
This is so eerie to me. I was born in 1944, and, like these movie makers, The gunfight at OK Corral in 1881 was only 63 years previous. This would be like my now remembering the eigth grade in 2021 - which I remember qute well. Now, 1881 is so distant to many persons. I lived in Bisbee several years and know Tombstone so well, but I assure you, Monument Valley is hundreds of miles away, and there are no Sahuaro cacti, save for one on Main Street transplanted from the Tuscon area as a gag. As a historical note, "Oh my darling, Clementine" was composed by Percy Montrose in 1884, three years after it was portrayed in 1881 here.
This moment in history,I love it thx
Yes and the scene where Wyatt is reading his younger brother's headstone born 1864 died 1882 , the O.K corral was Oct 26, 1881 the writers did not read their history on this subject. ?
Doc Holliday was a dentist not a surgeon as portrayed in this movie but that's Hollywood.
@@yikes5790 You are absolutely correct! The movie is riddled with inaccuracies, but it would take pages to list them.
The whole story is made up even the shooting scene is inaccurate
Damn, this ONE BAD-AZZ, CLASSIC MOVIE !!!!!!! EVEN, VICTOR MATURE IS GREAT IN THIS, THAT'S HOW GOOD IT IS !!!!!!
That was a great movie, glad it came up on my you tube.....wish they still made em like this.
Woke movies don't have men!
75 YEARS OLD !!! WOW.THANKS FOR THE SATURDAY AFTERNOON WESTERN.JUST LIKE THE OLD DAYS !!
The time of the movie is actually 10 years closer to the time of the actual gunfight than it is to now ;)
Wow, only 5 minutes in and I'm very impressed at how Walter Brennan sets such a dark tone with a few simple words. Fantastic acting in my book.
I always figured him as a gentle sort.
@@2degucitas Yes. That's what's amazing. He's TOTALLY convincing as a dark fiend and as a light-hearted good guy. I really didn't appreciate him as I should have, before seeing this.
You have good taste. Brennan had four Academy Award nominations from 1936-41, with three wins.
I remember this movie as a boy. Now that I'm much older and watching it again, I can see a little bit of Keven Costner's character...Wyatt Earp and Open Range movies are somewhat similar. great movie.
I like the look on Walter Brennen's face when he finds out who Henry Fonda's character is. One of the best scenes in movie history.
My opinion the best scene of the movie. He realized then he got involved with the wrong man.
What a nice song. O my Darling Clementine,
The high quality of acting talent makes this hokum cheese movie script very watchable.
Thanks great film, watching from the Philippines
Excellent western, One of the best!
“Mac, have you ever been in love”?
.......... “No sir, I’ve been bar tendin’ all my life”
Surely one of the best lines ever .......
So sad to learn that Linda Darnell who played the role of Chihuahua, died some years later from burns she received in a house fire. She had been cast in approx 40 films & TV Shows before her untimely death.
She was gorgeous, a grisly demise.
She was very beautiful. She had a huge crush on Tyrone Power, but the trouble was, he was even more beautiful than she was!
She ran into a burning house to try and save some kids, supposedly.
Linda Darnell was an amazing actress, so beautiful as well. Very sad demise, I hope she didn't suffer long :(
It doesn’t seem like this movie been out since 1946 which was probably when I first saw it. I am 82 years old
A great movie. Set the standard for many more to follow!!
i got the dvd directors cut,theres a lot of scenes that were cut out of the 1946 version when it was released,but were put back on the dvd.the cut out parts were found and put back on the film.they were good scenes dont know why they were cut out of the film,darryl f.zanuck the producer said they were unnecesssary.if you get the dvd you can see where the cuts were made,theres a commentary and short documentry on the film on the dvd.
If you lived in Texas, you may have watched the movie in one of the drive-in theaters that my step-father operated after being medically discharged from the u.s.army
One of my favorite western movies.
Thanks for posting this movie. It sure was a nice movie. I must have seen it for the first time being a little kid in the Netherlands in the fifties before emigrating to Canada.
Be safe and be blessed....
Greeting
Ariaan Jonker
A geat movie like the Gun Fight at the O K Corral, and Tombstone, you dont see good western like them anymore.
Victor Mature, or kirk Douglas. both great Doc Holyday, for me Victor Mature, maybe because I rate My Darling Clementine a better picture than ;Gunfight At The OK Corral.
Lovely sharp detailed photography, subtle music, acting and production.
6:12,what a beautiful night shot of the clouds and the sounds of the hoofbeats.
-great movie, John Ford had same kind of character here as in his other fine film Stagecoach; a drunken doc who is forced to operate.
even though he was a dentist .
Not enough historical accuracy to fill a shot glass but great actors.
It’s not a documentary, it’s a drama.
well they got the names right and that's about it lol
@@dosmundos3830 The Earps were not cowboys.... A great movie had that not used any of the names...
@@wsearp i said they got the names right and that's about it, what part of your brain got the suggestion they were somehow cowboys?
Amazing that this movie is on UA-cam. It's considered a classic.
If the copyright wasn't updated a movie goes into the public domain and can be shown royalty free.
@@jameswilliamjohnson I've heard this, but thanks anyway.
Cathy Downs as Clementine. An attractive gal in her own right. Had a limited career, died of cancer @ age 50. She did some TV. Tombstone Territory, Perry Mason. Also in a good noir film w/ Lucy and Wm Bendix, THE DARK CORNER.
Thnx for info!
God! That is such a good film. Dadblasted good. Great to see a hero who enjoys his food, looks at his reflection in shop windows, follows the fashion of the day, leans back in his chair and plays at balancing, ties his horse up properly, carries a lady’s duffel. Better than the Val Kilmer version - and that was great.
Huckleberry Hound ..... And her shoes where number nine . lol . Thanks for the classic western .
In frontier towns across the Old West the Earps stood for law and order
when u pull a gun kill a man great line
You want to watch a great movie. Watch this. Thanks for sharing.
The coolest "inaccurate" , "story", of an idea, about what someone might "imagine", what "could" have happened.
If they made up narratives as they went along.
99% B.S.,
but entertaining nonetheless.
They were closer to the actual events in Tombstone when this movie was made than we are in 2021 to the making of this movie. Kinda strange, ain't it?
Excellent point, contibuting to my just-make remarks. If you are closer to my age - 76, you'll appreciate what I am saying even more. It all makes you pause and reflect as the years move on.
Nonsense. I'm an old fart and a fan of these kind of movies, but being old does not make it historically accurate. As if that even matters.
@@Kermit_T_Frog who mentioned anything about it being historically accurate? although if they had of given the characters different names everything about the movie would be considered more historically accurate based on the fact it was made so close to the time of the old west as compared to now.
♥️♥️♥️♥️old westerns!
Absolutamente maravillosa beautiful brillianta
another tale from the old wild west , good movie ,
when u pull a gun kill a man great line
A beautiful, poetic fairy tale of the 'old west'. It ain't all accurate, it's an homage to what went before, and it's mighty pretty.
Walter Brennan does great comic work but can also be a great badass like Old Man Clanton.
He was great as judge Roy Bean in the Westerner.
One of old time classics
One of the top ten American westerns. Completely inaccurate but brilliant nevertheless. Wonderful restrained ending scene.
I like Winchester 73 as well.
John Ford, Henry Fonda and Walter Brennan
Every movie about Wyatt Earp is fictionalized, but this one probably more so than others. Great movie, though!
Kevin Costner Henry Fonda Kurt Russel ...Wyatt
Dennis Quaid Val Kilmer Victor Mature ...Doc
All differents characters
great watch big names in the western movie world boooooom
A very nice western ! Thanks
very interesting but sure not the way I always heard it happened.
Fantastic movie
when john ford was thinking about making this early on in 1945,he wanted to film it in technicolor and have tyrone power as doc holliday,but zanuck said it would be too exspensive to film in color.ford picked on victor mature during filming calling him liverlips.from a biography on ford.
I think it to be hilarious that they picked Samson (Victor Mature) to play the sickly weaken Doc Holiday.... Mature is one of my favorite actors but this was such a poor choice it is funny....
@@wsearp It's a poor choice if you look at this movie for historical accuracy. If you just look on it as a good Western drama in which the casting was an artistic choice then Victor Mature was good for the part as he really does give one of his best performances in this film. It's always struck me just how poor an opinion Mature had of his own acting because he's really good in this movie just as he was in the crime noir drama Kiss Of Death (1947).
Who came here because of the MASH episode "Movie Tonight"?
Brennan was the star of this movie with a close second to Fonda and Mature.
No such thing as a BAD HENRY FONDA's movie
Especially one directed by John Ford. 'Stagecoach' and 'The Grapes of Wrath' are two other fine examples.
try War and Peace...awful.
"Passion Of The Strong"
12:49 Cinematic Gold
In my opinion (historical accuracy aside) this one of Ford‘s 3 best westerns & I am NOT including THE SEARCHERS, the best moments of which are in the early reels before the unapologetic racism takes over. Mature makes an unusual but interesting Doc Holliday in CLEMENTINE & the last image in the film is unforgettable.
That stagecoach scene is ridiculous. Horses couldn't run like that for more than a few minutes and then collapse.
John Ford horse killer.
I enjoyed the movie
Great Western!!!
went to Tombstone the first time in 1960
The drunken Indian scene must have been a true event..saw it a couple of times before in westerns involving the Earps.
Sang this as a lad.....now a gray haird old man....a bit tufferI am...
Historical nonsense, but a brilliant film.
Christ its just a film and its entertaining so what if its not a 100% accurate or not talk about herd mentallity one person knocks the film and rest of the sheep follow Bahh
1:01:12 As Henry Fonda and Cathy Downs walk towards the church, watch how the sunlight washes from the church towards them. Great shot by John Ford.
I've seen as well
A better Western was never made!
The Film was excellent at 1946 Henry Fonda
But dies jot meet the Tombstone of Val Kilmer Doc Holiday
Well played story
32 minutes in....😎😎🎸☮️🎸🎸🎵
This movie played fast and loose with the facts of what really happened .
Hollywood does that.
Why let the facts get in the way of a good story.🤪
Based on Stuart N. Lake's bullshit "autobiography" of Wyatt Earp, which was used as the so-called factual basis for three movies and a television series.
@@LordZontar Speaking of bs, THEY DIED WITH THEIR BOOTS ON w/Errol Flynn was like that. Hollywood nonsense.
@@rufust.firefly4890 Yes indeed.
Great western
never could understand why they gave such a great film such a stupid name
Everybody knew the song and they thought it would bring in the audience - just a guess. Other movies have song titles, too.
Earp,Wyatt Earp...... kinda like Bond, James Bond.
Maybe they took it from that.... Douglas, Oliver Wendell Douglas.
Bond, Ward Bond.
@@sanjursan I liked W Bond. He was in a lot of movies before Wagon Train. Member of the John Ford stock company and a drinking bud of John Wayne. He played hvywght boxing champ John L Sullivan in Gentlemen Jim.
Real actors need few props
Some of the most Famous introductions in movie history .
Earp Wyatt Earp
Bond James Bond
No one really wrote the wild west history. Just authors of paperback book writers and newspapers columnist, wrote third-hand stories in roughly same characters. "If you have truth and legend, write a legend". Movie industrie has created a gunslingers. Who can actually witness the one who pulls first, in a duel?
Jarius, try english next time.
@@richardauchinleck1234 ookönä oolust, syökkönä jäkälää- try that.
@@jarikinnunen1718 presume this to be finnish. as it does not translate online, i also presume it to be vulgar or mistyped. if vulgar, no one was rude to you; if mistyped, maybe you have a problem typing what you intend, which leads back to my post.
@@richardauchinleck1234 Theme is historically inaccurate movie from golden age of movie industry. Not my bad language skills. Do you know how bad english speakers the immigrants was in wild west. Even them who was GB origins. Very bad.
@@jarikinnunen1718 at least six errors in grammar and english usage in your last post. you should invest in a grammar checker if you want to effectively communicate in english. valiant effort though.
A Ford classic in every way. Is there a better place to film a western then Monument Valley?
"Injun git out of toun an stee outta toun !" *BONK !!!!!*
CHIQUITA ROLE WAS WELL CASTED - SHE WAS GREAT - YIPPPEEE
Esta em ingles sem legendas, certo?
The only English is the Shakespeare!
When you consider tuberculosis is contagious, it's a wonder anybody went near Doc Holliday
These folks probably didn't know it back then.
@@lornaswallow5769 I think I read once that doctors in the east would send patients with what they called "consumption" to Arizona in the hopes that the dry climate would help their breathing.
@@kennash5719 That's true. TB was helped by a dry climate.
You know "Only the names are changed to protect the innocent"? This is, "Only the names are the same to play ducks and drakes with history." Great movie, though. Worth watching.
(my opinion)...this is tied with "Liberty Valence" as John Ford's 2 best American Westerns...& btw i found the cowboy's yelling out @1:17:00 as Chihuahua (Linda Darnell) moans while Doc (V.M.) digs the bullet out to be very poignant....it's haunted me ever since I 1st saw this film some 50 yrs ago....
Good choices!! My preference's are She Wore a Yellow Ribbon and Stagecoach, in that order, but to each their own. :-)
I heard it said that someone once asked Orson Wells who he through the three greatest American film directors were. Without a blink he is said to have said "John Ford, John Ford and John Ford."
@@paulscofield5444 ........
high praise from Mr.Wells ...
i probably would put John Huston on the list too ....
Oh, It's Oakland 😳
14:35 James Earp was born in 1841 and died in 1926 in San Bernadino CA.
Holiday did not die at the OK Corral
no,but victor mature did.
99% inaccurate but never the less a great movie,,,,,
Hamlet and Doc Holiday,
Maybe some of those who complain about historical inaccuracy would have preferred the good ol Clantons to be played by Newman, Redford, and Warren Beatty and the evil Earps by Palance and Lee Van Cleef. Personally I had enough of that kind of stuff in the 60s and 70s.
What I thought was unlikely was that Wyatt would leave 18yr old James alone with the herd after meeting old man Clanton and stonefaced Ike, and send Virg alone to bring Billy in. Seemed like he was trying to get them killed.
Great film all the same.
Were there any 2 actors in Hollywood history who looked less like they were dying of consumption than Victor Mature and Kirk Douglas?
I DON'T HER NAME BUT I THINK I HAVE SEEN HER IN HAWAIIAN - POLY BLACK AND WHITE MOVIES - AND DEBORAH PAGET WAS A BIG STAR ALSO AT THE SAME TIME - MAKING HAWAIIAN JUMP IN THE VOLCANO MOVIES - LOL
John Ford liked to film in monument valley. His sets looked liked the real old west
Hey Henry fonda
황야의 결투로 번역되었지요.
This is basically the same movie as frontier Marshall Cesar Romero plays Doc holiday Randolph Scott plays Wyatt Earp.1939.
when he was preparing this film after the war,he screened FRONTIER MARSHALL 1939 and added bits of business into this film.charles stevens as indian charlie plays the same role in both films.harry woods as the sherrif here in the beginning and ward bond also were in frontier marshall too
The Western Film is the American Classic of Hollywood
Until Italian Good Bad Ugly and music with Scene drawn to suspend reality
Great a reminders about Time and Progress
Think
Critical Race Theory and Cancel Culture
Considerando ter sido pelo famoso John Ford, esperava muito mais desse filme. Só foi razoável. Houve momentos até chatos. Mostrou um Doc Hollidey pela metade, estrelado pelo frio Victor Mature que só foi brilhante como Sansão. Doc Hollydei era jogador inveterado, piistoleiro com ótima pontaria. E não morreu no tiroteiro, aliás muito mal feito, sem emoção. Mesmo o grande Henri Fonda não teve excelente atuação. Há pouco tempo vi o filme "Sem lei e sem alma", com Burt Lancaster, como o famoso xerife Yearp e Kirk Douglas como o pistoleiro-jogador Doc Hollydei. Filmaço!
Doc Holliday was a dentist not a surgeon
thats if someone got shot in the mouth
Timothy, in the 1880's what makes you think one couldn't be both?
Yup. And Wyatt Earp forced him to work on Chihuahua and the patient on the table.
He was a gambler but educated learn classic literary.. Shakespeare
"What kinda town is this? Servin' liquor to Injuns? Get outta town Injun and stay out!" (kicks him in the ass).
I love old movies and I love Henry Fonda but sometimes I have to cringe at parts of the dialogue. Seems to be more so in old Westerns. Still I enjoyed it.
they don't make westerns like this one anymore!
Hamlet was not meant for taverns or tavern louts!!