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Last Train From Gun Hill |
List Price: $14.99
Your Price: $13.49 |
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Product Info |
Reviews |
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Rating: Summary: Paramount , what is your Problem? Review: Having just read recent reviews of the scheduled DVD release of Last Train From Gun Hill I am quite dissapointed to find that Paramount dropped the ball on this one. Distracting film grain, dust marks and speckles add up to the assumption that Paramount may be expecting viewers to watch this DVD with their eyes closed. No doubt ensuring the fate of this release to the bargin bin. Keep this film on your DVD waiting to be released list until the real thing comes along. Paramount seems to be content with a Low Standard approach which is puzzling and forces the consumer to feel cheated and let down.
Rating: Summary: Excellent Quality Review: I've seen this film several times over the past 25 years, and most recently on cable a few months back. I always thought that it owed much to "3:10 to Yuma," which I find much superior. However, director John Sturges' great scenic vistas of southern Arizona are greatly appreciated in this widescreen DVD. There is also great tension present as the film approaches it's climax. Solid performances by Kirk Douglas, Anthony Quinn, Carolyn Jones, Val Avery, John Anderson & Earl Holliman, make this an entertaining western in the "High Noon" tradition. I have to disagree with a previous reviewer, as the print used by Paramount for the DVD is excellent. After reading that review, I watched for "dust & speckles" in the print, and though I saw a few, I would rate this as a fine DVD (I just wish that there had been some extras, but it's a great buy, for the price). It's now part of my DVD library of westerns.
Rating: Summary: Excellent John Sturges western.......... Review: Not being a fan of Kirk Douglas nor the typical American style westerns produced in the 50's and early 60's, I was a bit apprehensive about purchasing this DVD. However being as it was directed by John Sturges who directed great movies such as The Great Escape, The Eagle Has Landed, Gunfight At The OK Corral, Ice Station Zebra and The Magnificent Seven along with with some not so great but still enjoyable movies such as Joe Kidd, McQ and Chino, I decided to purchase it. I was not disappointed. Sturges manages to build tension throughout even in situations when we already know that the hero will come out on top. With a great script, great direction and great acting all round particularly from Kirk Douglas, it's one that should be added to your collection. My only negitive on this movie is the typical unimaginative musical score found in many American westerns of this time that accompanies the first half and is then dropped for the second half to the movies benefit. Ignoring this and Last Train From Gun Hill is highly enjoyable and a movie I would watch over and over again.
Rating: Summary: ONE OF THE BEST-IF NOT THE BEST WESTRNS EVER! Review: The movie is wonderful but in my opinion the quality made by STARMAKER is really bad. I purchased 3 movies titled The last train from gun hill by Starmaker hoping to get a good one and the quality ranges from bad to worse.
Rating: Summary: Last train from gun hill Review: The movie is wonderful but in my opinion the quality made by STARMAKER is really bad. I purchased 3 movies titled The last train from gun hill by Starmaker hoping to get a good one and the quality ranges from bad to worse.
Rating: Summary: All aboard!!! Review: The title, "Last Train From Gun Hill," tells you so much about this wonderful film; a race against time, a sense of impending doom, something bad's gonna happen... you betcha!
That this film, one of my favorites from the 50's, is based around a somewhat unlikely scenario, plus a monstrous coincidence that no bookie in Vegas would give you odds on, doesn't matter. These are just what Alfred Hitchcock used to call a "McGuffin," a device or prop about which to arrange the action, and let the characters play out their stories.
It stars two powerful actors at the very top of their form; Kirk Douglas as "Marshal Matt Morgan," and Anthony Quinn as "Craig Belden." Morgan is by the book, straight as an arrow, incorruptible, the very personification of moral rectitude, and Belden is a rancher of the old school, he's had to fight tooth and nail for everything he has. The two men are old friends from way-back, each as unbending and unforgiving, in their own way, as the other.
The third major player in this drama is "Rick Belden," Craig's son, superbly played by Earl Holliman, a character the polar-opposite of his father. A weakling, braggart, coward, and a boor, everything he has, from the clothes on his back, to the money in his pocket, to the "friends" who ride with him and buy him whisky, he has for one reason, and one reason only... his last name is Belden!
Director John Sturges doesn't waste any time in setting events in motion; a young Native American woman with a child beside her is riding a horse and buggy through the countryside. She passes three cowpokes making camp, they watch as she goes by, exchange knowing looks, then set off in pursuit, calling out that they just want a little fun as they surround the buggy.
Fearful for herself and her son, the young woman lashes out with a whip and cuts a gash in the cheek of the ringleader, then whips the horse into a gallop, which results in the buggy turning over. The cowboys close in with the ringleader nursing his cut face; the woman tells her son to go for help as she backs away...
The boy returns with help all right, the town Marshal, Matt Morgan! He calls the boy by his first name and searches desperately for the young woman, and you think to yourself, "My, but he's a conscientious Marshal!" And here's that unlikely scenario I mentioned at the beginning of this review, the young Indian woman and her son aren't just town residents, they're Mogan's wife and child!!!
And here comes that coincidence that would freak out the most hardened of Vegas bookies; after discovering his wife's body, Morgan, channeling his grief and rage into finding her rapists/murderers, for the first time examines the horse his son was riding. Sporting an expensive silver-tooled saddle, the horse wears the brand of his old friend... Craig Belden!!!
So, Morgan heads off to "Gun Hill," saddle in tow, to see his old friend. Their first scene together is superb, they share a drink and discuss old times, the way men do. Then Morgan drops his bombshell; Craig's saddle and horse were found at the scene of his wife's rape and murder, he also tells him the culprit will have a pretty good scar on his cheek from the buggy whip!
Craig is genuinely horrified, he saw the scar, and Rick laughed it off, saying it was just some "fun" with a saloon girl that got out of hand. Now he knows that his son is a rapist and a murderer... and because of his reaction, so does Morgan.
Belden begs Morgan to let it go, he's sorry, it must have been an accident, and Rick is his only son, all he has left after his wife died many years ago. Morgan won't, CAN'T, let it go, and you can tell that even if the victim had been a complete stranger to him, his reaction would be the same; this sets up the rest of the film, and the deadly conflict that will engulf all three men.
Douglas, Quinn and Holliman all give excellent performances. Douglas is superb playing conflicted characters, and there's a key scene where Morgan's seething hatred of Rick explodes into physical violence. You see the internal struggle as Morgan fights to choke down his emotions, to stop himself from taking the man's life with his bare hands, and instead coldly describes what's going to happen to Rick when they put a rope around his neck and hang him.
Quinn has a role he can similarly sink his teeth into, and he does! Although less sympathetic a character than Morgan, Craig is a man you can almost feel sorry for. Proud of all he has achieved, and desperately wanting to be proud of his only son and heir, he knows Rick is a weakling and a coward, just as he knows he's partly to blame. When he faces Rick for the first time after discovering the truth, there's an electric tension in the air; Rick approaches his father, ready with more lies and evasions, and Craig turns his back and walks away. He's holding a pair of heavy work gloves, and you half expect him to turn and lash out at his son in disgust and despair.
Holliman has a thankless task, Rick has absolutely no redeeming qualities whatsoever, and he plays the part to the hilt. Whining, wheedling, lying and bullying, this is a character you can love to hate! There's also a terrific supporting performance from Carolyn Jones, TV's original "Morticia Addams," as "Linda," Craig's - sometimes abused?! -girlfriend.
Even with its somewhat contrived set-up, this is still a film I can recommend highly; Sturges and his stars do a first class job!
Rating: Summary: One of the best westerns of all time!!! Review: This film is extremely exciting and full of many "murderous" problems, such as the evil person at the beginning that murdered that poor young and beautiful Indian woman!!{I do not agree with that old reviewer that gave this movie only two stars}. I saw this movie for the first time on AMC. I made an attempt to tape it on the VCR that I had at my house, but failed, although I wanted the movie so badly, I really would hunt for it after that miserable failure!!! Several months later, I found it in the newspaper and knew they were planning to show it again, finally!! I set everything up, this time correctly, and found it at the back of the 8 hour tape that I had used to tape it with on "American Movie Classics". But, two months later, I taped it AGAIN, this time without all the other movies that I had on the other taping tape!! So, this movie is about Kirk Douglas chasing down the Belden family for the murder of his wife!!! And without further ado, I am calling this one of the best westerns of all time!!Also recommended: The Bravados, True Grit, The Sons Of Katie Elder, and River Of No Return...
Rating: Summary: You can't be serious? Review: This has got to be the WORST attempt at masquerading as a western I have ever seen, and I've seen some bad westerns. This one is inching pretty close to Billy the Kid Meets Dracula for just pure bad acting. Great story-pitiful script. You want spoilers...OK. Well, Kirk Douglas plays a Sheriff whose wife was just raped and murdered. The clue to the identity of the killer comes from a saddle he recovers while in pursuit. Oh yeah, he knows who the owner is right off cause it belongs to his best friend from the good old days, one Anthony Quinn-who is more comfortable playing Greek fishermen and Mexican banditos. Not much intrigue here folks. Anyway, ole Kirk just saunters into Anthony Quinn's ranch (aka. Saddle Owner) just grinnin' and yucking it up like old times. I suppose that's where this thing lost me. There was a reason I'd never heard of this turkey and missed this for the last 40 years. Just pathetic. 2 spurs
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