On the day he gets married and hangs up his badge, lawman Will Kane is told that a man he sent to prison years before, Frank Miller, is returning on the noon train to exact his revenge. Having initially decided to leave with his new spouse, Will decides he must go back and face Miller. However, when he seeks the help of the townspeople he has protected for so long, they turn their backs on him. It seems Kane may have to face Miller alone, as well as the rest of Miller’s gang, who are waiting for him at the station. —IMDb
Vienna-born Fred Zinnemann had childhood dreams of becoming a musician, and later planned on a law career, before his viewing of the movies of Erich Von Stroheim drew him into the movie business, initially as a cameraman. He came to the United States in 1929, and later found work as an editor, and subsequently as an assistant to documentary filmmaker Robert Flaherty, and then as an assistant to choreographer Busby Berkeley. He joined MGM in the late ‘30s as a director of comedy shorts, and won an Academy award for his 1938 short subject That Mothers Might Live. Zinnemann moved up to full-length features in 1941, but found little opportunity to work on anything but B-pictures until 1948, with The Search, a drama set in post-World War II Europe. He didn’t really become a major recognized box-office name as a director, however, until 1952 when his Western drama High Noon, starring Gary Cooper, which had been perceived by most observers as headed for commercial disaster, became a monster… read more
One of the all time great Westerns stars Gary Cooper as a small town sheriff, who on the day of his wedding and retirement, learns that a ruthless criminal he once put away is returning to settle a score. When the town refuses to help him, he must face the criminal and his gang alone. Expertly builds suspense as it plays in almost real time, aided by Tex Ritter's haunting ballad.
One of the best examples of how to examine “man vs. man” or “man vs. himself” comes from the essential classic, High Noon from 1952. The film itself does not have the absolute complexity of intellectual… read review
One of the best Westerns ever is High Noon. Of course, everyone by now knows that it’s an allegory of the McCarthyism toll on Hollywood and that writer Carl Foreman had been blacklisted. Many even… read review