CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.0/10
257
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaWyatt Earp cleans up Tombstone and faces the Clanton gang at the O.K. Corral.Wyatt Earp cleans up Tombstone and faces the Clanton gang at the O.K. Corral.Wyatt Earp cleans up Tombstone and faces the Clanton gang at the O.K. Corral.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Donald Curtis
- Phineas Clanton
- (as Don Curtis)
Opiniones destacadas
Previous reviewers of this film damn it with faint praise if that, but I found it noteworthy as yet another chapter in the Wyatt Earp saga as viewed by Hollywood. The real Earp hung around Hollywood till his death around 1929 and got to know some of the movie makers. Stuart Lake's biography was published in 1931, and Clarence Kelland's TOMBSTONE on which this movie is supposedly based, according to the screen credits, was well known. Well, Hollywood and history are only kissing cousins when it comes to factual matters, and this movie brushes along a lot of truths. But the one thing it does well is the depiction of the legendary gunfight at the OK Corral. The actual fight occurred in a very short space and took a very short time totally unlike the depictions in John Ford's MY DARLING CLEMENTINE and the Burt Lancaster/Kirk Douglas GUNFIGHT AT THE OK CORRAL. The depiction here comes closest in the movies to every film and TV version (such as the "You Are There" version) to the actual event as detailed in the many recent histories of Wyatt Earp. It also depicts the murder of Morgan Earp very well since that event occurred soon after the gunfight. As a movie, however, it meanders a lot probably because it tries to tell too many stories at the same time. Earp has to contend not only with unruly cowboys and outlaws but also political corruption at the highest level. The horrendous time waster is spent on Earp's attempt to save a totally fictional person, a young man called Johnny, from a life of crime and to promote the guy's romance with a girl who follows him from Kansas. The antagonist for much of the movie is Curly Bill, played by Edgar Buchanan with much juicy relish, and he has his minions in Ike and Phin Clanton and Indian Charlie, who were real people in Earp's life, but who had no such fates as described in the movie. The shoot out at the end following an abortive robbery of a silver shipment provides an exciting climax, but has no relation to actual events. Sadly, Kent Taylor as Doc Holliday has very little to do to show his acting skills, and Richard Dix as Wyatt Earp is sometimes so low key as to seem he is sleepwalking through a movie he finds boring. Because this film is seldom seen, and has some worthwhile parts to it for western movie fans and for Wyatt Earp fans, I recommend it -- not for its historical accuracy, but for its contribution to myth making.
Truth to tell, I had never heard of Director William McGann but I do not feel too ignorant after watching this rather wayward part of the Wyatt Earp saga in the Old West.
Richard Dix plays Wyatt - nowhere near as memorably as Joel McCrea in WICHITA or Burt Lancaster in GUNFIGHT AT THE OK CORRAL, among other worthies - but the real show stealer is Edgar Buchanan as Curly Bill Brocius, a hard-drinking and fast-robbing cattle rustler.
Good B&W cinematography by Russell Harlan, terrific editing by Lewis and Rose, and entertaining script from Le Vino and Paramore make this unusual Western a must-see for any lover of Westerns. 7/10.
Richard Dix plays Wyatt - nowhere near as memorably as Joel McCrea in WICHITA or Burt Lancaster in GUNFIGHT AT THE OK CORRAL, among other worthies - but the real show stealer is Edgar Buchanan as Curly Bill Brocius, a hard-drinking and fast-robbing cattle rustler.
Good B&W cinematography by Russell Harlan, terrific editing by Lewis and Rose, and entertaining script from Le Vino and Paramore make this unusual Western a must-see for any lover of Westerns. 7/10.
Good grief. I must have been watching a different picture than the two reviewers above. This is about the fourth movie containing the famous gunfight at the OK corral I've seen and it is the most uneven version. The others are more action-packed, but this one is a case of a good cast wasted. In order, here are the best "OK corral" movies;
1."My Darling Clementine" (46) - Henry Fonda, Victor Mature, Walter Brennan 2."Gunfight At The OK Corral" (57) - Burt Lancaster, Kirk Douglas, Lyle Bettger 3."Frontier Marshal" (39) - Randolph Scott, Cesar Romero, Ward Bond 4."Tombstone, etc..." (42) - Richard Dix, Kent Taylor, Edgar Buchanan. This last one is the one we are reviewing and it is the most disappointing.
It starts out with a terrific gun fight by the local hell-raisers, led by Edgar Buchanan. It is put down by Wyatt Earp (Richard Dix), and here follows a long stretch of talking and planning, made worse by the presence of 'Johnny', a young cowhand who is followed to Tombstone by the girl he left behind, Frances Gifford. We are then treated to a romance until the final rousing gunfight between the 'good guys' and the 'bad guys'.
Oh, I almost forgot. The celebrated gunfight at the OK corral is squeezed in between romantic encounters for about 30 seconds. It takes place in close-up since the fight is in such a small area (Gunfight at the OK phone booth?) It could have been so much better but too much time was wasted on a love story - it was only 79 minutes long but seemed like hours longer.
1."My Darling Clementine" (46) - Henry Fonda, Victor Mature, Walter Brennan 2."Gunfight At The OK Corral" (57) - Burt Lancaster, Kirk Douglas, Lyle Bettger 3."Frontier Marshal" (39) - Randolph Scott, Cesar Romero, Ward Bond 4."Tombstone, etc..." (42) - Richard Dix, Kent Taylor, Edgar Buchanan. This last one is the one we are reviewing and it is the most disappointing.
It starts out with a terrific gun fight by the local hell-raisers, led by Edgar Buchanan. It is put down by Wyatt Earp (Richard Dix), and here follows a long stretch of talking and planning, made worse by the presence of 'Johnny', a young cowhand who is followed to Tombstone by the girl he left behind, Frances Gifford. We are then treated to a romance until the final rousing gunfight between the 'good guys' and the 'bad guys'.
Oh, I almost forgot. The celebrated gunfight at the OK corral is squeezed in between romantic encounters for about 30 seconds. It takes place in close-up since the fight is in such a small area (Gunfight at the OK phone booth?) It could have been so much better but too much time was wasted on a love story - it was only 79 minutes long but seemed like hours longer.
Gunslinger Wyatt Earp (Richard Dix) applies his sharpshooting talents to enforcing the law as the deputy of Tombstone, Ariz. And Tombstone, it turns out, can use Earp's help. The town is under the control of the bandit Curly Bill (Edgar Buchanan) and his gang of outlaws. With the help of his friend Doc Holliday (Kent Taylor), Earp attempts to run the bandits out of town. But Curly Bill isn't ready to comply. Only a showdown at the O. K. Corral will settle the score.
A decent retelling of the Tombstone legend starts, oddly enough, with narration by the town itself. I found that quite inventive and a great introduction- Richard Dix makes a philosophical Wyatt Earp who tries to reform Johnny -Don Castle - before he goes down the lawless route courtesy of Bill Brocious. Most of the subplot of Earp reforming Johnny takes up most of the film, and it is quite interesting.
If you're expecting an intense or dark version of Tombstone and Wyatt Earp, then you will be disappointed. This 1942 version is a lively, conversational retelling with light moments as well as action-packed ones. The finale at OK Corral is quite well done.
A decent retelling of the Tombstone legend starts, oddly enough, with narration by the town itself. I found that quite inventive and a great introduction- Richard Dix makes a philosophical Wyatt Earp who tries to reform Johnny -Don Castle - before he goes down the lawless route courtesy of Bill Brocious. Most of the subplot of Earp reforming Johnny takes up most of the film, and it is quite interesting.
If you're expecting an intense or dark version of Tombstone and Wyatt Earp, then you will be disappointed. This 1942 version is a lively, conversational retelling with light moments as well as action-packed ones. The finale at OK Corral is quite well done.
Here's Paramount's production of the Gunfight at the O. K. Corral, offering Richard Dix as Wyatt Earp, Kent Taylor as Doc Holliday, and after that, it departs from the legend, both in real characters, including third-billed Edgar Buchanan as Curly Bill Brocious, and fictional ones, like Don Castle's Johnny Duane. It offers the story as more complicated and nuanced than usual, and the usual big guns don't hold center stage as they typically do. The overall arc is a long-running feud between Wyatt Earp and Brocious; the Clantons are offered as Brocious' uppity henchmen, and the central character theme seems to be the redemption ofCastle's character, through a desire to court Frances Gifford, a saloon singer with a heart of gold; she sings one song, the anachronistic "Ta-ra-ra-boom-de-ay".
It's one of Paramount's A Westerns, and it shows in Russell Harlan's brilliant outdoors photography -- although the final shootout in the Alabama Hills shows the exact same rocks western fans have seen two hundred times. The net effect is good -- with a cast like this, it's hard not to be engaging, but it's too diffuse to be great. Director William C. McGann had a hand directing two more features, then spent the last decade of his career working in the special effects department. He died in 1977, aged 84.
It's one of Paramount's A Westerns, and it shows in Russell Harlan's brilliant outdoors photography -- although the final shootout in the Alabama Hills shows the exact same rocks western fans have seen two hundred times. The net effect is good -- with a cast like this, it's hard not to be engaging, but it's too diffuse to be great. Director William C. McGann had a hand directing two more features, then spent the last decade of his career working in the special effects department. He died in 1977, aged 84.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaCharles Stevens played Indian Charley in three films based on the Wyatt Earp legend: Alguacil de la frontera (1939), Tombstone: The Town Too Tough to Die (1942) and La pasión de los fuertes (1946).
- Citas
Curly Bill Brocious: [to Wyatt] Seems like every time I get a town organized, YOU show up!
- ConexionesVersion of Frontier Marshal (1934)
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- How long is Tombstone: The Town Too Tough to Die?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 19 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was Tombstone: The Town Too Tough to Die (1942) officially released in India in English?
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