Movies & TV > Physical Media > Westerns > Most Wished For

El Dorado

El Dorado
Paramount

March 21st, 2000







Rating: 4.3 / 5.0 (163 votes)

Released: 2000-03-21

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(as of 2013-01-06 04:52:04 PST)




El Dorado by Paramount

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Movie Details

Director
Howard Hawks
Studio
Paramount
Runtime
126
Rated
NR (Not Rated)
Binding
DVD

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Description

“I'm paid to risk my neck. I'll decide where and when I'll do it. This isn't it.” Now a two-disc presentation with all-new special features, this Paramount Centennial Collection edition of El Dorado delivers the goods. Legendary producer-director Howard Hawks teams up with two legendary stars, John Wayne and Robert Mitchum, in a classic Western drama. Mitchum plays to perfection an alcoholic but gutsy sheriff who relentlessly battles the “dark side” of the Wild West – ruthless cattle barons and crooked “businessmen.” The Duke gives an equally adept performance as the sheriff's old friend, one who knows his way around a gunfight. Featuring a supporting cast that includes James Caan, Charlene Holt, Paul Fix, Ed Asner and Christopher George, and filled with both brawling action and unexpected humor, El Dorado is pure gold.

Actors

  • John Wayne
  • Robert Mitchum
  • James Caan
  • Charlene Holt
  • Paul Fix

Format

  • Anamorphic
  • Closed-captioned
  • Color
  • Widescreen
  • NTSC

Editorial Review

El Dorado doesn't quite have the scope or ambition of Howard Hawks's greatest Westerns, Red River and Rio Bravo. But this relaxed picture, made near the end of Hawks's marvelous career, still shows the steady, sure hand of a master. Hawks reunites with John Wayne, playing a hired gun mixed up in a range war; Robert Mitchum is Wayne's old pal, now a sheriff in the midst of a hopeless drunken bender. James Caan, in one of his first sizable roles, plays a kid who can't shoot straight and wears a funny hat (every character in the movie makes fun of this hat). As the plot moves along, it begins to resemble Rio Bravo rather closely (“I steal from myself all the time,” Hawks was fond of admitting). But in El Dorado the heroes are a bit older, their powers a bit weaker; at the end Wayne must revert to a bit of subterfuge in order to get the drop on the steely gunslinger (ice-cold Christopher George) he needs to put down. As relaxed as the movie is, Hawks and Wayne and company are in good spirits, with plenty of broad humor and easy camaraderie on display. Hawks and Wayne would make just one more film, the disappointing Rio Lobo, before ending their fruitful partnership. –Robert Horton

More Details

Binding
DVD
Aspect Ratio
1.85:1
Disks
1

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