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Hour of the Gun

 
Movies:

Hour of the Gun

  • Director: John Sturges
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Western
  • Movie Type: Revisionist Western, Docudrama
  • Themes: Out For Revenge, Vigilantes
  • Main Cast: James Garner, Jason Robards, Jr., Robert Ryan, Albert Salmi, Charles Aidman
  • Release Year: 1967
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 100 minutes

Plot

John Sturges directed this sequel to his Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, which is more of a melancholy character study than an action Western. The Edward Anhalt screenplay (based on Douglas D. Martin's Tombstone's Epitaph) traces Wyatt Earp's (James Garner) moral decline from a lawman with high ideals to a mean-spirited vigilante bent on personal revenge. Ironically, Doc Holliday (Jason Robards), an admitted lawless gambler, reacts to Earp's vengeful turnabout by becoming the moral force that Earp has rejected. When Earp's brothers are killed by goons employed by Ike Clanton (Robert Ryan), Earp becomes obsessed with vengeance and organizes a posse to track down the killers. ~ Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide

Review

Director/producer John Sturges never thought much of Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957), his first screen treatment of the confrontation between the Earps and the Clantons in 1881 Tombstone, AZ. In conversations during the final years of his life, he maintained that the latter film was a production that was planned, scripted, designed, and cast by its producer, Hal B. Wallis, for which he was merely hired to direct. Sturges was much prouder of Hour of the Gun, his 1967 production dealing with the same subject -- which he seems to have made almost as a response to the earlier movie. With Hour of the Gun, he attempted to do with the story of Tombstone, AZ, and the conflict between the Earps and the Clantons what he did with Sergeants 3 and The Great Escape. The movie opens with the famous showdown on October 26, 1881, and covers the story starting from that event. Where the earlier picture played off of the mythology surrounding the gunfight, Wyatt Earp, and the Clantons, the 1967 movie hews much closer to the facts, including the trumped-up trial to which the Earps and their ally Doc Holliday were subjected after the shoot-out (which resulted in their acquittal), the subsequent attack on Virgil Earp, and the murder of Morgan Earp.

The script, by Edward Anhalt, is a good one, but in trying to stick so closely to historical fact, Sturges hems in his actors. James Garner tries for something very different from his usual performance here, avoiding any trace of his usual geniality in portraying a taciturn, emotionally repressed Wyatt Earp, deeply troubled and torn by the obligations and limitations of the law, in a pursuit of justice that turns to vengeance. He literally melts into the role of Earp, but the spare nature of Anhalt's script doesn't give the actor enough to work with in forming a whole character; perhaps the real Wyatt Earp was too contemptible by today's standards to flesh the role out too much in the script. Garner had played vengeful, brutal characters before (including in the Western Duel at Diablo) with some effectiveness, but here he's wasted to some degree. Only the two best actors in the cast, Jason Robards Jr., playing the most colorful character in the story, Doc Holliday, and Robert Ryan as the villain of the piece, Ike Clanton, fare well, overcoming the restrictions imposed on their roles by the straightjacket of historical accuracy. Sturges succeeds in his goal of demythologizing the subject at hand, and the historical figures represented in front of us, but fails to hold our interest dramatically for the duration of the movie's 101 minutes. Even Jerry Goldsmith's score seems dull and uninspired, and the whole movie dampened down the career momentum that Sturges had built up early in the decade with The Magnificent Seven and The Great Escape. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide

Cast

Steve Ihnat - Andy Warshaw; Michael Tolan - Pete Spence; Frank Converse - Virgil Earp; Sam Melville - Morgan Earp; Austin Willis - Anson Safford; Richard Bull - Thomas Fitch; Larry Gates - John P. Clum; Karl Swenson - Dr. Goodfellow; Bill Fletcher - Jimmy Ryan; Robert Phillips - Frank Stilwell; William Schallert - Herman Spicer; Jon Voight - Curly Bill Brocius; Lonny Chapman - Turkey Creek Johnson; Monte Markham - Sherman McMasters; William Windom - Texas Jack Vermillion; Edward Anhalt - Denver Doctor; Walter Gregg - Billy Clanton; Jim Sheppard - Tom McLowery; Jorge Russek - Latigo

Credit

Alfred Ybarra - Art Director, John Sturges - Director, Ferris Webster - Editor, Jerry Goldsmith - Composer (Music Score), Charles Blackman - Makeup, Lucien Ballard - Cinematographer, John Sturges - Producer, Lawrence J. Cuneo - Set Designer, Victor A. Gangelin - Set Designer, Sass Bedig - Special Effects, Edward Anhalt - Screenwriter

Similar Movies

My Darling Clementine; The Revengers; Straw Dogs; Death Wish
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Wikipedia: Hour of the Gun
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Hour of the Gun
Directed by John Sturges
Produced by John Sturges
Mirisch-Kappa (Production company)
Written by Edward Anhalt
Douglas D. Martin's novel:
Tombstone's Epitaph
Starring James Garner
Jason Robards
Robert Ryan
Music by Jerry Goldsmith
Cinematography Lucien Ballard, ASC
Editing by Ferris Webster
Distributed by United Artists
Release date(s) United States November 1, 1967
New York City
Running time 100 min
Country  United States
Language English
Budget $1,800,000 (estimated)

Hour of the Gun is 1967 Western film about Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday, their 1881 battles against Ike Clanton and his brothers, in the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, and the gunfight's aftermath in and around Tombstone, Arizona.

The film is based on the book Tombstone's Epitaph by Douglas D. Martin, with a screenplay by Edward Anhalt, and directed by John Sturges. This film attempts more historical accuracy than most motion picture accounts of the events, and explores what happened after the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral.

The film stars, James Garner as Wyatt Earp, Jason Robards as Doc Holliday, and Robert Ryan as Ike Clanton.

Contents

Production

The movie can be seen as a sequel to John Sturges's own more fictionalized film from ten years earlier, Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, which had featured Burt Lancaster as Earp and Kirk Douglas as Holliday. Where Gunfight at the O.K. Corral is more about the main gun battle, this film begins with the gunfight and moves forward from there. Because Hal B. Wallis had scripted everything in the earlier Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, Sturges was disappointed with that film.[1] Hour of the Gun is more of a psychological "melancholy character study".[2]

Garner also played the lead as Wyatt Earp in a different movie filmed twenty-one years later, Blake Edwards's Sunset (1988), a comedy thriller based on the 1920s period during which Earp was a technical adviser for silent films. The film's music is composed by Jerry Goldsmith.[3]

Hour of the Gun was filmed in the state of Durango, Mexico; at Estudios Churubusco Azteca (studio) in Mexico City, México D.F., Mexico; San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato, Mexico; and in Torreón, Coahuíla, Mexico.[4]

Cast

Reception

Bruce Elder, at Allmovie, calls Garner's portrayal of Earp as "taciturn, emotionally repressed, deeply troubled and torn", but criticizes Edward Anhalt's script as being too strict to historical facts and confining the actors, especially Garner.[1] Eleanor Quin at Turner Classic Movies (TCM) calls it "Sturges' finest film"; and says that it is a "conflict between moral righteousness and the temptation of personal revenge".[5] Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun Times, says: "Garner turns in one of his best performances."[6]

References

  1. ^ a b Elder, Bruce. - Review: Hour of the Gun. - Allmovie. - Retrieved: 2008-06-02
  2. ^ Brenner, Paul. - Plot Synopsis: Hour of the Gun. - Allmovie. - Retrieved: 2008-06-02
  3. ^ Full cast and crew: Hour of the Gun. - IMDb. - Retrieved: 2008-06-02
  4. ^ Filming Locations: Hour of the Gun. - IMDb. - Retrieved: 2008-06-02
  5. ^ Quin, Eleanor. Hour of the Gun. - Turner Classic Movies. - Retrieved: 2008-06-02
  6. ^ Hour of the Gun. - Chicago Sun Times. - October 24, 1967. - Retrieved: 2008-06-02

External links


 
 

 

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