Movies & TV > Physical Media > Westerns > Movers & Shakers






Price: $10.40 ($16.99)

(as of 2013-01-06 04:51:31 PST)

You save $6.59 (39%)

Usually ships in 24 hours

Rating: 4.6 / 5.0 (181 votes)

Released: 2009-05-19

Buying Choices

43 new from $4.98
10 used from $3.50

(as of 2013-01-06 04:51:31 PST)




The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (Paramount Centennial Collection) by Paramount

No valid json found

Movie Details

Director
John Ford
Studio
Paramount
Runtime
123
Rated
NR (Not Rated)
Binding
DVD

Check All Offers Add to Wish List Customer Reviews Trade-In List

Description

John Wayne, James Stewart, Lee Marvin, Vera Miles. A senator returns to his home town to pay last respects to a friend who, many years earlier, helped him rid the small frontier town of the vicious killer, Liberty Valance. 2 DVDs. 1962/b&w/123 min/NR/widescreen.

Actors

  • James Stewart
  • John Wayne
  • Vera Miles
  • Lee Marvin
  • Edmond O'Brien

Format

  • AC-3
  • Black & White
  • Dolby
  • Dubbed
  • NTSC

Editorial Review

“When the legend becomes fact, print the legend.” That's more than the code of a newspaperman in The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance; it's practically the operating credo of director John Ford, the most honored of American filmmakers. In this late film from a long career, Ford looks at the civilizing of an Old West town, Shinbone, through the sad memories of settlers looking back. In the town's wide-open youth, two-fisted Westerner John Wayne and tenderfoot newcomer James Stewart clash over a woman (Vera Miles) but ultimately unite against the notorious outlaw Liberty Valance (Lee Marvin). Ford's nostalgia for the past is tempered by his stark approach, unusual for the visual poet of Stagecoach and The Searchers. The two heavyweights, Wayne and Stewart, are good together, with Wayne the embodiment of rugged individualism and Stewart the idealistic prophet of the civilization that will eventually tame the Wild West. This may be the saddest Western ever made, closer to an elegy than an action movie, and as cleanly beautiful as its central symbol, the cactus rose. –Robert Horton

More Details

Binding
DVD
Aspect Ratio
2.35:1
Disks
2

Similar Products

Rio Bravo
John Wayne: The Searchers
El Dorado
True Grit (Special Collector's Edition)
Cahill – United States Marshal

Comments





[FACEBOOK LIKEBOX HERE]

Become a fan of GetBestMovie.com on Facebook for the inside scoop on the most popular movies.