Dos jóvenes se dirigen al oeste en busca de fortuna y aventura.Dos jóvenes se dirigen al oeste en busca de fortuna y aventura.Dos jóvenes se dirigen al oeste en busca de fortuna y aventura.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Matthews
- (as Patrick Moriarty)
- Ringsider
- (sin acreditar)
- Barfly
- (sin acreditar)
- Townsman
- (sin acreditar)
- Townsman
- (sin acreditar)
- Bailiff
- (sin acreditar)
Reseñas destacadas
But I think a lot of credit is due to the director, George Marshall. Today, almost the only Marshall movie anyone knows is the justly famous 1939 version of DESTRY RIDES AGAIN. But he was primarily a comedy director, back to the 1920s when he directed Fox Sunshine comedies, to the 1930s, when he worked at Roach on Laurel and Hardy, through the early 1970s. And this movie was directed during his peak period and it shows it. The comedy sequences are wonderfully directed, especially the boxing match.
So, while you're enjoying the acting, remember that the funny broad comedy comes from the mind of the director.
Now I wish I had my own copy - I have to wonder if it's still available anywhere. A quintessential "buddy picture" of the first order, not only is there terrific chemistry between the characters, but it's mostly fast-paced with enough clever plot developments and deviousness to oftentimes seem quite contemporary in 2003! Any film maker looking to do a western revival which would entertain audiences today would do well to remake this picture. One hopes he would stick as close to the original as possible, because there's enough good stuff there already to get him most of the way through. Four stars on a conventional scale would be well-deserved.
Texas is directed by George Marshall {with Norman Deming assisting} and the three writing credits go to Michael Blankfort, Lewis Meltzer & Horace McCoy. It's a briskly paced black & white action Western that's not short on laughs either. In Holden and Ford it showcases two Hollywood big hitters in their fresh faced early days, with Holden pretty much unrecognisable. From a quite hilarious pugilist rules boxing match in the first quarter, to the number of machismo exchanges that drop in from time time, it's one of those film's that's hard to criticise. So I'm not going too. A small bother comes with the ending being rushed a touch, but even that is in keeping with how Marshall has directed it. So really it's a hearty recommend to anyone after some early 40s Oater enjoyment. Undemanding for sure, but executed with gusto and no little amount of class. 6.5/10
Those who seek it out, however, will be rewarded by an engaging plot which has some interesting twists and turns, by some snappy dialog -- particularly in the first meeting between Holden and Trevor -- and by a host of good supporting players, such as Edgar Buchanan who plays a devious dentist.
For fans of "beefcake," there's an early prizefight sequence in which a shirtless Holden battles the local champ in a bare-knuckle marathon. Only about 22 or 23 years old at the time, Holden's physique hadn't yet reached the maturity displayed in his later films, (most notably "Picnic"), but his bare chest, (shaved of the hair displayed earlier in "Golden Boy"),is still quite pleasing to the eye. If only the scene could be re-written so that Holden would have been matched against a stripped-to-the-waist Glenn Ford. Now, that would have been a beefcake bonanza!
It's a good story if a bit shopworn—two buddies (Ford & Holden) falling on opposite sides of the law while competing for the same girl (Trevor). The various alliances get a little confusing so you may need a scorecard to keep up. Holden gets the majority screen time, while the always low-key Ford is even more so than usual. All in all, it's a highly entertaining, fast-paced 90-minutes, thanks mainly to an expert director and a cagey old coot.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesEdgar Buchanan (Buford 'Doc' Thorpe) was a dentist before he became an actor.
- PifiasThe story set in 1866, post-Civil War Texas has everyone armed with Colt Model 1873 pistols with bullet loops full of cartridges on their gun-belts, even the movie poster has William Holden's character Dan holding a short barrel 'gunfighter's' version of the .45 caliber pistol. This is seven years before the pistol was introduced by Colt. The most common sidearm of the day would have been the Colt 1869 Army which was a cap and ball weapon that had to be hand loaded chamber by chamber with powder, wadding and a ball projectile.
- Citas
Buford 'Doc' Thorpe: What's going on here?
Dan Thomas: Outta the way, Mister.
Sheriff: Don't argue with him Doc, that's my back he's got that gun into!
Dan Thomas: Get out!
Buford 'Doc' Thorpe: He don't look dangerous, what'd he do?
Sheriff: Held up the southbound stage.
Dan Thomas: Move outta that door.
Buford 'Doc' Thorpe: Wait a minute. You got the wrong man Sheriff, if you got him.
Sheriff: Well, we caught his partner with the money on him.
Buford 'Doc' Thorpe: You did?
Sheriff: Yeah, there were no Christmas trees out there either.
Buford 'Doc' Thorpe: That's funny, I was on that stage and he wasn't one of 'em.
Sheriff: How could you tell, they was all masked!
Buford 'Doc' Thorpe: Well, the mask only hides your face. It doesn't change your voice or the way your bones is hung together.
- ConexionesReferenced in This Is Your Life: Glenn Ford (1973)
- Banda sonoraBuffalo Gal (Won't You Come Out Tonight)
(uncredited)
Written by William Cool White
Sung by Edgar Buchanan
Selecciones populares
- How long is Texas?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Bandoleros de ayer
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Balkins Ranch near Calabasas, California, Estados Unidos(Hollywood Review)
- Empresa productora
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
- Duración
- 1h 33min(93 min)
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1