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7.3/10
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Un cínico ex sheriff convertido en cazarrecompensas ayuda a un joven sheriff interino recientemente nombrado con sus consejos, su experiencia y su arma.Un cínico ex sheriff convertido en cazarrecompensas ayuda a un joven sheriff interino recientemente nombrado con sus consejos, su experiencia y su arma.Un cínico ex sheriff convertido en cazarrecompensas ayuda a un joven sheriff interino recientemente nombrado con sus consejos, su experiencia y su arma.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Nominado a 1 premio Óscar
- 2 nominaciones en total
Walter Bacon
- Stagecoach Passenger
- (sin créditos)
John Barton
- Townsman
- (sin créditos)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
1957 was a good year for movies and amongst all the strong contenders, The Tin Star still managed to get Oscar nominated for best original screenplay, by the same screenwriter that brought that real trail- blazing classic, Stagecoach, to life.
Anthony Mann's black & white Western isn't a long, sprawling John Ford epic, nor does it feature Ford's often comical characters but at a fairly concise 92 mins it feels like a real book - a story that's never hurried and which includes proper characterisation and dialogue. Those wanting John Wayne spitting into the dust and cowboys and Indians need look elsewhere...
I've always liked Henry Fonda - and whilst many have pointed out that Mann's main man had previously been James Stewart, Fonda takes that slim thoughtfulness that Stewart eschewed and added dignity as well as grit - maybe somewhere between a Wayne and Stewart mix. You can never take your eyes off Henry Fonda - tall, dark and brooding if there ever was one. Anthony Perkins is (of course) very different to Norman Bates in Psycho and for those of us who saw him in that long before this earlier work, will not be disappointed. Fonda plays the older, wiser but now turned to bounty hunter ex lawman, who helps out rookie sheriff Perkins, both strategically but morally, too, when an outlaw gang terrorise the town.
The near-silent ending is as tense as you'll find anywhere within any Western - and you will be both too - silent AND tense...
Radio Times gives Tin Star a rare five stars - and you won't see this undervalued and under-known western on TV very often. It does get onto Sky Movies Classics once in a while but I don't recall it ever being on terrestrial TV, at least recently, so the DVD does make good sense. If you like the western genre and not yet seen The Tin Star, you really should...
Anthony Mann's black & white Western isn't a long, sprawling John Ford epic, nor does it feature Ford's often comical characters but at a fairly concise 92 mins it feels like a real book - a story that's never hurried and which includes proper characterisation and dialogue. Those wanting John Wayne spitting into the dust and cowboys and Indians need look elsewhere...
I've always liked Henry Fonda - and whilst many have pointed out that Mann's main man had previously been James Stewart, Fonda takes that slim thoughtfulness that Stewart eschewed and added dignity as well as grit - maybe somewhere between a Wayne and Stewart mix. You can never take your eyes off Henry Fonda - tall, dark and brooding if there ever was one. Anthony Perkins is (of course) very different to Norman Bates in Psycho and for those of us who saw him in that long before this earlier work, will not be disappointed. Fonda plays the older, wiser but now turned to bounty hunter ex lawman, who helps out rookie sheriff Perkins, both strategically but morally, too, when an outlaw gang terrorise the town.
The near-silent ending is as tense as you'll find anywhere within any Western - and you will be both too - silent AND tense...
Radio Times gives Tin Star a rare five stars - and you won't see this undervalued and under-known western on TV very often. It does get onto Sky Movies Classics once in a while but I don't recall it ever being on terrestrial TV, at least recently, so the DVD does make good sense. If you like the western genre and not yet seen The Tin Star, you really should...
This is a great black and white film directed by Anthony Mann who produced some great westerns. Henry Fonda plays the role as Morg Hickman who is a bounty hunter who brings his dead man into a small western town in order to collect this reward money in the amount of $500.00 dollars. The people in this town do not like bounty hunters and show a great deal of anger towards Morg, because they want their prisoners brought back alive and ready to stand trial. There is a newly appointed sheriff named Ben Owens, played by Anthony Perkins who has no experience in being a sheriff and his girlfriend is very much against his wearing a badge. Morg becomes friends with Ben and decides to teach him how to shoot a gun and all the experiences he had as a former sheriff. The town people do not want Morg to stay in their towns hotel and he has to find lodgings with a pretty young gal by the name of Kip Mayfield and her young son. This story has many twists and turns and is not like any other Western story. Great entertainment and outstanding acting by all the actors and Neville Brand, (Bart Bogardus) gave a great supporting role.
When the experienced bounty-hunter and former sheriff Morg Hickman (Henry Fonda) arrives in a town to claim his bounty for killing a wanted outlaw, he meets the rookie temporary sheriff Ben Owens (Anthony Perkins). Hickman befriends the boy Kip (Michel Ray) and is lodged by his widow mother Nona Mayfield (Betsy Palmer) at home. Meanwhile, Ben asks Hickman to teach him to be a sheriff since he wants to be assigned by the residents to the position. Ben faces a problem with the scum troublemaker Bart Bogardus (Neville Brand) and when a prominent dweller is murdered by two criminals, Bogardus organizes a posse to hunt them down. But Ben has decided to capture the killers alive and give a fair trial to them.
"The Tin Star" is a great western directed by Antony Mann, with the 52 year-old Henry Fonda in excellent shape and Anthony Perkins in one of his first features. The bitter Hickman has a sad past that has certainly affected his behavior, and Anthony Perkins is perfect in the role of the insecure Ben Owens. The happy ending is a counterpoint to "Shane" that has similar situation of a stranger involved with a boy and a widow. My vote is eight.
Title (Brazil): "O Homem dos Olhos Frios" ("The Man of the Cold Eyes")
Note: On 03 February 2025, I saw this film again.
"The Tin Star" is a great western directed by Antony Mann, with the 52 year-old Henry Fonda in excellent shape and Anthony Perkins in one of his first features. The bitter Hickman has a sad past that has certainly affected his behavior, and Anthony Perkins is perfect in the role of the insecure Ben Owens. The happy ending is a counterpoint to "Shane" that has similar situation of a stranger involved with a boy and a widow. My vote is eight.
Title (Brazil): "O Homem dos Olhos Frios" ("The Man of the Cold Eyes")
Note: On 03 February 2025, I saw this film again.
This is a western that its makers claimed was "adult", implying many others were not. What they had in mind is that it dealt with prejudices expressed openly that elsewhere , in adventures set in the West, were mostly the subjects of hints. It is a decently-assembled dramatic western, whose theme is "do no run away from what you want the most". Everyone in town is doing just that when Morg Hickman, played ably by laconic Henry Fonda, rides into town with a dead man over his packhorse's saddle. He is a bounty hunter, and no one asks his side of the tale. The young temporary sheriff, Anthony Perkins, shares the attitude of contempt until he starts to observe the man. Hickman can ignore men, go his own way. And when he learns Hickman has been a long-time sheriff, against advice he asks him for lessons. He wants to be a lawman and a good one...and Hickman sees himself in the boy and agrees, while he is waiting for his money. He finds a room in the meanwhile with Betsy Palmer and her boy, who is half-Indian. Her husband was an educated and fine man; but the townsfolk do not deal with her socially. He is kind to the boy, and assures her he does not mind spending some time with him. There is also a crusty old doctor, John Mcintire, who does not approve of Hickman for reasons he will not give; a girl in love with Perkins, pretty Mary Webster, and a town bully, Bart Bogardis, powerfully portrayed by Neville Brand, who the young sheriff knows he will someday have to challenge. The major part of the film shows us the young man unlearning misassumptions under Fonda's tutelage. They meet the McGaffey brothers, while out doing shooting practice, played by Lee Van Cleef and Peter Baldwin. Then on the way into town for a big celebration the elderly Doctor is being given, he is murdered. The rest of the film is in three parts. One is tracking down the men who did it. The second is the young sheriff dealing with Bogardis. And the last is the leave-taking, as Hickman takes Palmer and the boy off with him, and opines that he is going to take up the badge again; he has just remembered why he wore the 'tin star" so long in the first place.The film's music by Elmer Bernstein is subtle and good. The very fine B/W cinematography was by Loyal Griggs, with art direction by J. MacMillan Johnson and Hal Pereira. Joel Kane, Barney Slater and Dudley Nichols provided the script with much above-average dialogue; the period set decorations were done by Sam Comer and Frank R. McKelvy; costumes were designed by Edith Head and they are very fitting additions to a realistically mounted production. In the cast along with the principals were fine actor Howard Petrie as the Mayor, James Bell, Russell Simpson, and Michael Ray as Palmer's son. Director Anthony Mann has little to work with here; this is a claustrophobic town-based western. But by using shots through a large plate-glass corner window and staging the blocking of scenes cleverly, he gives the film variety in its scenes and a consistent style that seems to come from the dust and the board buildings of the town. This is by my standards quietly a very-good western.
...and that's saying a lot when you consider that he was in Fort Apache, My Darling Clementine, and The Ox-Box Incident. But this western, directed by the always dependable Anthony Mann, is a good example of a good story told without a lot of smoke and mirrors. The acting is dead-on, enough to convey character and emotion, but not too much to cheapen or overwhelm the story.
Great performances by Fonda as the grizzled veteran lawman/bounty hunter, Tony Perkins as the green, inexperienced town sheriff, John McIntyre as the town's doctor, and Neville Brand as the town bully. It is thoughtful and powerful, and displays a sense of right and wrong that is strong and uncompromising.
Great performances by Fonda as the grizzled veteran lawman/bounty hunter, Tony Perkins as the green, inexperienced town sheriff, John McIntyre as the town's doctor, and Neville Brand as the town bully. It is thoughtful and powerful, and displays a sense of right and wrong that is strong and uncompromising.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaJames Stewart was originally supposed to play Morgan Hickman.
- ErroresWhen Morg climbs up to the cave chasing the McGaffey brothers, there's a full camera shadow across him.
- Citas
Sheriff Ben Owens: I wouldn't expect no bounty hunter to appreciate this badge.
Morg Hickman: I wore one a lot longer than you ever will.
- ConexionesEdited into Gli ultimi giorni dell'umanità (2022)
- Bandas sonorasFor He's a Jolly Good Fellow
(uncredited)
Melody: "Marlbrough s'en va-t-en guerre"
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 33 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was Venganza mortal (1957) officially released in India in English?
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