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Two Rode Together

United States

1961

109 Min
Color
1.85:1
English
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
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DIR John Ford

SCR Frank S. Nugent, Will Cook

DP Charles Lawton Jr.

CAST James Stewart, Richard Widmark, Shirley Jones, Linda Cristal, Andy Devine, John McIntire, Paul Birch, Willis Bouchey, Henry Brandon, Harry Carey Jr.

ED Jack Murray

PROD DES James Crowe

MUSIC George Duning

Synopsis

The US Army is under pressure from the desperate relatives of white prisoners of the Comanches to secure their rescue. A cynical and corrupt marshal, Guthrie McCabe, is persuaded by an army lieutenant to assist in the negotiations with the Comanches. However, just two captives are released; and their reintegration into white society proves highly problematic. –IMDb

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

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Picture of Coheed 2.0

Coheed 2.0

22Apr12

Could have been a fascinating take on the western which combined humour with serious drama but the tonal shifts are far too jarring.

Picture of Jack Lehtonen

Jack Lehtonen

21Oct10

A brilliant, brilliant western... and then comes the ending. Oh well, four stars for everything leading up.

Neil Bahadur likes this

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