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The Fugitive

United States, Mexico

1947

104 Min
Black and White
1.37:1
English
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
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DIR John Ford, Emilio Fernández

PROD Emilio Fernández, Merian C. Cooper, John Ford

SCR Dudley Nichols

DP Gabriel Figueroa

CAST Henry Fonda, Dolores del Río, Pedro Armendáriz, Leo Carrillo, J. Carrol Naish

MUSIC Richard Hageman

Venice (Best Film): International Award

Director

Original

John Ford

Maine-born John Ford (born Sean Aloysius O’Fearna) originally went to Hollywood in the shadow of his older brother, Francis, an actor/writer/director who had worked on Broadway. Originally a laborer, propman’s assistant, and occasional stuntman for his brother, he rose to became an assistant director and supporting actor before turning to directing in 1917. Ford became best known for his Westerns, of which he made dozens through the 1920s, but he didn’t achieve status as a major director until the mid-‘30s, when his films for RKO (The Lost Patrol 1934, The Informer 1935), 20th Century Fox (Young Mr. Lincoln 1939, The Grapes of Wrath 1940), and Walter Wanger (Stagecoach 1939), won over the public, the critics, and earned various Oscars and Academy nominations. His 1940s films included one military-produced documentary co-directed by Ford and cinematographer Gregg Toland, December 7th (1943), which creaks badly today (especially compared with… read more

Original

Emilio Fernández

If he did not already exist, it would be necessary to invent Emilio “El Indio” Fernández. His manneristic visual style, his folkloric themes and characters, and his distinctively Indian physiognomy made him an integral element of Mexico’s culture of nationalism, as well as the nation’s best-known director. Fleeing Mexico after the defeat of his faction in the rebellion of 1923, Fernández ended up digging ditches in Hollywood. As has been the case with so many Latin American artists and intellectuals, Fernández discovered his fatherland by leaving it: “I understood that it was possible to create a Mexican cinema, with our own actors and our own stories. . . . From then on the cinema became a passion with me, and I began to dream of Mexican films.” Making Mexican cinema became Fernández’s obsession and, as is so often true of cultural nationalism, a short-term gain was to turn into a long-term dead end.

Perhaps that which most distinguishes Fernández’s films is their strikingly… read more

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Picture of NealEdelstein

NealEdelstein

25Nov10

A noir picture that feels strangely ahead of it's time. Stunning b/w photography.

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Shots from The Fugitive

5 posts by 4 people almost 2 years ago