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Zwei Ritten Zusammen

Originaltitel: Two Rode Together
  • 1961
  • 12
  • 1 Std. 49 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,7/10
7426
IHRE BEWERTUNG
James Stewart and Richard Widmark in Zwei Ritten Zusammen (1961)
Trailer for Two Rode Together
trailer wiedergeben1:14
2 Videos
53 Fotos
Klassischer WesternDramaWestlich

Ein korrupter US-Marshall wird von seinem alten Freund aus der Armee dazu gedrängt, mit den Comanchen über die Freilassung weißer Gefangener zu verhandeln, muss dann aber feststellen, dass d... Alles lesenEin korrupter US-Marshall wird von seinem alten Freund aus der Armee dazu gedrängt, mit den Comanchen über die Freilassung weißer Gefangener zu verhandeln, muss dann aber feststellen, dass deren Wiedereingliederung in die Gesellschaft ihre Konsequenzen hat.Ein korrupter US-Marshall wird von seinem alten Freund aus der Armee dazu gedrängt, mit den Comanchen über die Freilassung weißer Gefangener zu verhandeln, muss dann aber feststellen, dass deren Wiedereingliederung in die Gesellschaft ihre Konsequenzen hat.

  • Regie
    • John Ford
  • Drehbuch
    • Frank S. Nugent
    • Will Cook
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • James Stewart
    • Richard Widmark
    • Shirley Jones
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,7/10
    7426
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • John Ford
    • Drehbuch
      • Frank S. Nugent
      • Will Cook
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • James Stewart
      • Richard Widmark
      • Shirley Jones
    • 81Benutzerrezensionen
    • 52Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 2 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos2

    Two Rode Together
    Trailer 1:14
    Two Rode Together
    TWO RODE TOGETHER (New & Exclusive) Masters of Cinema Trailer
    Trailer 1:17
    TWO RODE TOGETHER (New & Exclusive) Masters of Cinema Trailer
    TWO RODE TOGETHER (New & Exclusive) Masters of Cinema Trailer
    Trailer 1:17
    TWO RODE TOGETHER (New & Exclusive) Masters of Cinema Trailer

    Fotos53

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    Topbesetzung66

    Ändern
    James Stewart
    James Stewart
    • Marshal Guthrie McCabe
    Richard Widmark
    Richard Widmark
    • First Lt. Jim Gary
    Shirley Jones
    Shirley Jones
    • Marty Purcell
    Linda Cristal
    Linda Cristal
    • Elena de la Madriaga
    Andy Devine
    Andy Devine
    • Sgt. Darius P. Posey
    John McIntire
    John McIntire
    • Maj. Frazer
    Paul Birch
    Paul Birch
    • Judge Edward Purcell
    Willis Bouchey
    Willis Bouchey
    • Mr. Harry J. Wringle
    Henry Brandon
    Henry Brandon
    • Chief Quanah Parker
    Harry Carey Jr.
    Harry Carey Jr.
    • Ortho Clegg
    Olive Carey
    Olive Carey
    • Mrs. Abby Frazer
    Ken Curtis
    Ken Curtis
    • Greeley Clegg
    Chet Douglas
    • Deputy Ward Corby
    Annelle Hayes
    Annelle Hayes
    • Belle Aragon
    David Kent
    David Kent
    • Running Wolf
    Anna Lee
    Anna Lee
    • Mrs. Malaprop
    Jeanette Nolan
    Jeanette Nolan
    • Mrs. Mary McCandless
    John Qualen
    John Qualen
    • Ole Knudsen
    • Regie
      • John Ford
    • Drehbuch
      • Frank S. Nugent
      • Will Cook
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen81

    6,77.4K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    7Slim-4

    Leisurely John Ford Western doesn't have much action, but the pleasant story makes up for it.

    This is not your typical John Ford Western. The usual cast of Ford characters is on hand. Henry Brandon reprises his role as the Comanche chief Scar, which he played so well in the "Searchers". This time he plays a more sympathetic role as the real life Comanche chief Quanah Parker. The evil Clegg clan from "Wagonmaster" is also on hand. They are not quite as evil this time around. The Comanches are played by the usual Navajos recruited for countless Ford Westerns. The awesome arid scenery of Monument Valley has been appropriately replaced by rolling grass covered plains country.

    The two protagonists in the film are played by James Stewart and Richard Widmark. Stewart plays a gunfighter serving as sheriff of the Texas town of Tascosa. Widmark is the cavalry officer who summons him to Fort Grant to rescue Comanche captives. They ride together on this mission, which is relegated to a small part in the plot. Although they are friends, their partnership is uneasy from the start. Stewart is going on the mission for money. Widmark is ordered by the colonel (played by John McIntyre) to go. The tension between the two leads at one point to Stewart drawing, but not firing, his gun.

    This film contains elements of "The Searchers". Like the other film the theme is captivity by the Indians. Just as in "The Searchers" captivity is viewed as degrading. Linda Cristal plays the captive in this film. "I am not worth fighting for", she says. Ford goes one step further here. Captivity by the Indians is depicted as extremely arduous. The protagonists find few living captives to rescue. The captives they do find are shown as prematurely old and savage. Cristal is an exception. Although she has been a wife to the Comanche chief Stone Calf for five years, she retains something of her aristocratic Mexican upbringing. Perhaps her strong Catholic faith enabled her to avoid the complete degradation typical of captives. Like Debbie in "The Searchers", she has the prospect for redemption. In "The Searchers" it is the strength of the family which provides redemption. Here it is a stagecoach to a new life in California.

    The pace in this film differs from many Ford films. There is only one action scene. Much of the film is spent in quiet moments. In the opening scene McCabe (Stewart) is relaxing on the porch of the saloon. It is obvious that he has his law enforcement duties well in hand. In another scene he and Lieutenant Gary (Widmark) are resting on the banks of a river. There is also a significant interlude as the wagon train camps at Oak Creek. There is also a dance at the fort. At the end of the film McCabe returns to Tascosa to find someone else relaxing in his place.

    McCabe is an interesting character. His ethics are questionable. He owns 10% of everything in Tascosa, he says. He'll do almost anything for money. He makes it clear to the colonel that he figures that each captive he brings back is worth $500. He then makes a deal with Henry J. Wringle (played by Willis Bouchey) to bring back a boy, any boy, for $1000. Wringle wants to get on with his business and can't afford to waste more time looking for his wife's son. McCabe is more than happy to oblige him, bringing back a boy whose savagery is unquestioned.

    In the end there is redemption for both Stewart and Cristal. Both of their characters are interesting and well acted. It is a pity that so many other characters in this movie are wasted. Woody Strode's part as Stone Calf is particularly disappointing. The script gives him very little to say and do. He is around only long enough to go against Stewart in the film's only action sequence. Andy Devine provides much of the film's humor, but is not really credible as what McCabe calls "that hippopotamus of a sergeant".

    I wish the film had spent more time focusing on Stewart and Widmark's mission to the Comanche camp as the film's title suggests. Unfortunately, it's only a footnote. Despite the flaws, the leisurely pace and Stewart's portrayal of the amoral McCabe make this film a treat.
    7ma-cortes

    Marvelously shot Ford film with a lively look at the complex reintegration of captives

    Desperate relatives spend years searching for their loved beings abducted by Indians in this lengthy Western . The US Army is under pressure from the families of white captives of the Comanches . A Texas marshal, Guthrie McCabe (James Stewart), is persuaded by an army lieutenant (Richard Widmark) and a Major (John McIntire) to negotiate with the Comanches to secure their rescue and for the return of captives . But the expedition results to be a flop. However, just two prisoners are released ; their reintegration into community proves to be highly difficult , and complications , problems ensue .

    This nice Western contains interesting characters , full of wide open space and dramatic moments . Outdoors are pretty good and well photographed by Charles Lawton Jr , story first-rate and powerful told too. Good Western with James Stewart sort playing himself as corrupt and cynical marshal who takes a percentage on his works . Entertaining film thanks to James Stewart for his cynical character and ironic point of sight . Also Widmark is excellent , while a great featured-role acting by veteran John McIntire . Solid support cast leads some eye-catching performances which include Andy Devine ,Jeanette Nolan ,John Qualen, Ken Curtis , Woody Strode, Henry Brandon as Quanah Parker and many others . ¨Two rode together¨ has a similar plot to ¨The searchers¨ though the Ford's vision about West is pretty cynical and less idealist. This classic picture ranks as one of the main of John Ford's works . It contains Ford's usual themes as familiar feeling , a little bit enjoyable humor, friendship and sense of comradeship but also lots of cynicism . Thought-provoking screenplay portraying in depth characters and brooding events with interesting issues running beneath script surface is written by Frank S. Nugent based on a novel by Will Cook , titled ¨Comanche captives . This may not be Ford or Stewart's best Western , as many would claim , but it's still head ad shoulders above most big-scale movies . You'll find the final terrible or over-melodramatic according to your tastes , though it's lovingly composed by John Ford who really picks up the drama towards the ending . Rating : Better than average .
    9Quinoa1984

    like a dark-comic sequel to the Searchers: less about the search than those brought home

    I'm not sure why John Ford had such a problem with Two Rode Together as he did (according to the trivia page Ford considered the film "crap" even after his favorite writer came in to make it more like a Ford picture). It brings many of his favorite, or just preferred, themes to come back to: male camaraderie, the very fragile divide between whites and Indians in the late 19th century, and a sense of balance between leisure pace and high dramatic tension and stakes. Maybe he thought he was repeating himself, or had other ideas that didn't make the final cut of the script or lost them in the direction. There's a lot of meat on the bones of Two Rode Together, even if if it does shy away from real greatness. It takes its story seriously, and also leaves some time for some unexpected human comedy between its two leads (or just mostly James Stewart).

    It's premise is a little like a re-working or quasi-sequel to the Searchers. In that film Wayne was on a dogged search for his niece after she'd been captured by the Comanches and spends years tracking them down, only to find her totally changed (he still brings her home anyway). In Two Rode Together, a Marshall, about as tough and gruff and cruelly sarcastic as Wayne in that film, and a Major (Richard Widmark, the more level-headed and honorable of the two, if not quite as interesting), are put to task by the army to go to Comanche territory and bring back a few people that had been taken away years ago. Their families are desperate to see them again, and the Marshall is way more reluctant than the Major as he's had more experience with the Comanches (that, and the lack of pay, very shrewd and greedy he is). But they go ahead to the Comanche territory, track down a couple of them, and bring them back. This is halfway through the movie.

    The rest of Two Rode Together sees the dire straits of this assimilation, how one of them, a rowdy boy who doesn't speak a lick of English, isn't even thought to be the right son of the desperate mother, and the other, a Mexican, is pushed aside and made to feel an outcast right away. How Ford and his writer presents this isn't very insightful (I'm sure other films have explored the American-Comanche relationship with more depth or subtlety), but it's still entertaining and full of some compelling scenes. And while Ford keeps the drama moving at a nice clip- sometimes leisurely, sometimes with more force like at the dance later in the film- he lets his two stars do a lot of lifting that makes the movie very worthwhile.

    Stewart has been this cranky before, but rarely have I found this kind of grumpy but moral Marhsall so well-rounded. We laugh at some of his drunken outbursts because Stewart gives it some irony and sincerity. And there's some real tension brought out between the two characters; when he pulls out a gun he means to use it, even if he doesn't, and it's this uncertainty about him that makes it so interesting (he's not like 'Duke', for example, who you'd expect this kind of behavior). And Widmark is well-cast in this nicer-but-firm role, as a decent man who has to put up with a lot as a friend-partner-watcher of the Marshall, while also putting on a good face to his possible fiancé.

    The action is far from heavy here- only one scene with a gun firing at someone, oddly enough it's a pretty weak scene and not well directed by Ford- so it's mostly a character study, more about the decisions they make, the bit players and their words to say in scenes, and what these two men in uniform will do when they complete their mission. By the end their is some redemption and catharsis, and it's not all happy all-around, and its 'issues' it deals with about racial harmony and acceptance is never too heavy-handed. Ford cares about these people, even if he says he's like his Marshall character, just doing it for the money.
    6hitchcockthelegend

    Just how much do you think human lives are worth, McCabe?

    Two Rode Together is directed by John Ford and adapted to screenplay by Frank Nugent from the novel Comanche Captives written by Will Cook. It stars James Stewart, Richard Widmark, Shirley Jones, Linda Cristal and Andy Devine. Music is scored by George Duning and Eastman Color cinematography is by Charles Lawton Junior.

    The US Army is under pressure to negotiate the release of Comanche captives and send in a party to ransom for their release. Heading the party are cynical hard drinking Marshal Guthrie McCabe (Stewart) and his pal First Lt. Jim Gary (Widmark). The two men are at odds in how to go about dealing with the problem to hand, but bigger issues are just around the corner.....

    The Searchers lite it is for sure, Two Rode Together is a mixed bag that hasn't been helped by the quotes attributed by its director. It's well documented that John Ford only did the film out of kindness and a love of money, the great man going on record to say he hated the film, the source and etc. The shoot was far from being a happy one, with the director pitching his two stars against each other whilst grumpily putting his film crew through the mangler. The end result shows the film to be psychitzophrenic in tone and structure, where airy comedy tries to sit alongside some serious themes and fails miserably. When the moral implications of the picture are to be born out, Ford, in his half-hearted approach to the production, comes off as being either clueless, sarcastically mean or going through the motions since he had already made this film as The Searchers. Well clueless is not something you can comfortably say in relation to this particular director....

    However, film has strengths, not least with Stewart's over the top portrayal of McCabe. The actor is really giving it the full treatment, no doubt prompted by his director, this is a shallow man, motivated by ale and cash. This is non heroic stuff, he calls it as he sees it, he thinks nothing off telling the longing relatives of the missing that their loved ones are now alien to them. It's a clinical thread in the piece, deftly setting the film up for its telling last quarter as the moral questions are raised and the bitter irony leaves its sour taste. It's a mixed bag indeed, but hardly a disaster, though, and in spite of Ford's irreverence towards it, there's a worthy viewpoint in amongst all the causticism. It's just a shame that all the great individual aspects don't make a complete and rewarding whole, the blend of comedy and drama, this time, not making for a great John Ford picture. 6.5/10
    8elo-equipamentos

    The most famous long sequence plan at riverbank ever done!!!

    Two Rode Together has one of most famous long sequence plan at riverbank ever made, Jim Stewart and Widmark sitting there and talking together about several minutes without any takes, they had to improvise their dialogues to fill up the range of the bold sequence, the picture brings the unusual character to Stewart, here is a corrupt and greedy Sheriff Gruthrie who take ten per cent of all business in Tascosa.

    When he is friendly invited for Lt. Jim Gary (Widmark) for order of Major Frazer (McIntire) to go to Fort Grant, there he knows his odd assignment, making a trade with Comanche's leader to bring back many kidnapped white children, girls and boys even a older woman, carefully to don't break the peace agreement Major Frazer is willing to sent Gruthrie with the Jim Gray as civil person, Ford print out his major trademark, the humor, plenty by the way most centered on the shubby Sgt. Posey (Devine).

    Also a blatant racism over the free captives exposing them to devasting damages , in worst way on the woman as Elena (Linda Cristal), here there's no enough action, instead we have the study of human behavior, also even playing a crook Stewart display his other unknown face, marvelous acting, a fine movie from the best western director!!

    Resume:

    First watch: 1995 / How many: 4 / Source: TV-DVD / Rating: 8.5.

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    • Wissenswertes
      According to Peter Bogdanovich in "Pieces of Time" Richard Widmark stated he had more fun on this film than any other. "I'm a little deaf in this ear . . . and [John Ford]'s a little deaf in the other, and [James Stewart's hard of hearing in both! . . . So all through the picture, all three of us were goin', 'What? What? What?'"
    • Patzer
      Sgt. Posey, Andy Devine, would not have been in the cavalry of the 19th Century. Cavalry soldiers were limited to 150 lbs. for the good of the horses.
    • Zitate

      First Lt. Jim Gary: You're not gonna start a fire! Why don't you just send up smoke signals?

      Marshal Guthrie McCabe: I can't spell.

    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Directed by John Ford (1971)
    • Soundtracks
      Buffalo Gals
      (uncredited)

      Written by William Cool White

      Sung by the men trying to get Marty to go to the dance

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 4. August 1961 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Spanisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Misión de dos valientes
    • Drehorte
      • Alamo Village - Highway 674, Brackettville, Texas, USA
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • John Ford Productions
      • Shpetner Productions
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    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 49 Min.(109 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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