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IMDbPro

Tom Horn

  • 1980
  • R
  • 1h 38min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.8/10
6.4 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Tom Horn (1980)
Official Trailer
Reproducir trailer1:37
1 video
63 fotos
BiografíaCrimenCrimen VerdaderoDramaDrama de ÉpocaRomanceWestern

Los ganaderos contratan a un excazatalentos del ejército para matar a ladrones de ganado, pero se mete en problemas con los funcionarios locales corruptos cuando se sospecha que ha matado a ... Leer todoLos ganaderos contratan a un excazatalentos del ejército para matar a ladrones de ganado, pero se mete en problemas con los funcionarios locales corruptos cuando se sospecha que ha matado a un niño.Los ganaderos contratan a un excazatalentos del ejército para matar a ladrones de ganado, pero se mete en problemas con los funcionarios locales corruptos cuando se sospecha que ha matado a un niño.

  • Dirección
    • William Wiard
  • Guionistas
    • Thomas McGuane
    • Bud Shrake
  • Elenco
    • Steve McQueen
    • Linda Evans
    • Richard Farnsworth
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    6.8/10
    6.4 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    • Dirección
      • William Wiard
    • Guionistas
      • Thomas McGuane
      • Bud Shrake
    • Elenco
      • Steve McQueen
      • Linda Evans
      • Richard Farnsworth
    • 63Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 20Opiniones de los críticos
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Tom Horn
    Trailer 1:37
    Tom Horn

    Fotos63

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    Elenco principal72

    Editar
    Steve McQueen
    Steve McQueen
    • Tom Horn
    Linda Evans
    Linda Evans
    • Glendolene Kimmel
    Richard Farnsworth
    Richard Farnsworth
    • John C. Coble
    Billy Green Bush
    Billy Green Bush
    • U.S. Marshal Joe Belle
    Slim Pickens
    Slim Pickens
    • Sheriff Sam Creedmore
    Peter Canon
    Peter Canon
    • Assistant Prosecutor
    Elisha Cook Jr.
    Elisha Cook Jr.
    • Stablehand
    • (as Elisha Cook)
    Roy Jenson
    Roy Jenson
    • Lee Mendenhour
    James Kline
    • Arlo Chance
    Geoffrey Lewis
    Geoffrey Lewis
    • Walter Stoll
    Harry Northup
    Harry Northup
    • Thomas Burke
    Steve Oliver
    Steve Oliver
    • 'Gentleman' Jim Corbett
    Bill Thurman
    Bill Thurman
    • Ora Haley
    Bert Williams
    Bert Williams
    • Judge
    Bobby Bass
    Bobby Bass
    • Corbett's Bodyguard
    Mickey Jones
    Mickey Jones
    • Brown's Hole Rustler
    B.J. Ward
    • Cattle Baron
    Richard Brewer
    • Corbett's Bodyguard
    • Dirección
      • William Wiard
    • Guionistas
      • Thomas McGuane
      • Bud Shrake
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios63

    6.86.4K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    7Maziun

    Old McQueen is as bad ass like young McQueen

    This is unfairly forgotten western from the decade were western were slowly dying until the 1985. " Tom Horn" deserves more praise , since this is a good western and one of last movies of Steve McQueen. It's his last good movie.

    The movie is full of brilliant dialogues. I don't remember when was the last time I have seen a movie where almost every exchange is intelligent and funny. The movie is worth watching for the dialogues alone.

    The story is a little predictable , but the movie is well directed by William Wiard and grips you from start to finish. I felt sad at the end and that was the whole point.

    The movie made me sad , because it was not only the goodbye to Tom Horn, but also to Steve McQueen ("Papillon") . Both were heroes from the past that were slowly dying in a changing world that didn't need them. McQueen did make one more movie after this one , but for me this is his good bye. A good movie and a great farewell to wonderful actor.

    I give it 7/10.
    6ma-cortes

    McQueen's last film as famous gunfighter who takes the justice on his own hands

    Interesting but boring Western about the last days of a real-life Wyoming gunslinger named Tom Horn with Steve McQueen in the title role. The movie has its moments here and there but results to be a little bit tiring and slow-moving . It's a melancholy chronicle and near bittersweet dealing with the last exploits of Horn who is shown as hired hand to eliminate some rustlers . Good support cast who provides the best moments as Richard Farnsworth as old-timer who hires Horn , Slim Pickens and Billy Green Bush , both of them as Sheriffs , furthermore a beautiful Linda Evans and brief performance by the eternal secondary Elisha Cook Jr . Marvelously filmed by the classic cameraman John A Alonzo and good musical score by Ernest Gold . The motion picture produced by McQueen and Fred Weintraub is professionally -though with no originality- directed by William Wiard.

    The picture is based on true events , the deeds are the following : Although his official title was always "Range Detective", he actually functioned as a killer for hire. In 1900 he was implicated in the murder of two known rustlers and robbery suspects in northwest Colorado. During his involvement in the Wilcox Train Robbery investigation, Horn obtained information from Bill Speck that revealed which of the robbers had killed Sheriff Josiah Hazen, who had been shot and killed during the pursuit of the robbers. He passed this information on to Charlie Siringo, who was working the case by that time for the Pinkerton's. He left that line of work briefly to serve a stint in the Army during the Spanish American War. Before he could steam from Tampa for Cuba, he contracted malaria. When his health recovered he returned to Wyoming. Shortly after his return, in 1901, Horn began working for wealthy cattle baron John C. Coble .Willie Nickell murder, Horn's arrest and trial. On July 18, 1901, Horn was once again working near Iron Mountain when Willie Nickell, the 14-year-old son of a sheepherding rancher, was murdered. Horn was arrested for the murder after a questionable confession to Joe Lefors, an office deputy in the US Marshal's office, in 1902. Horn was convicted and hanged in Cheyenne in 1903 .During Horn's trial, the prosecution introduced a vague confession by Horn to Lefors, taken while he was intoxicated. Only certain parts of Horn's statement were introduced, distorting the significance of the statement. Additionally, testimony by at least two witnesses, including lawman Lefors, was presented by the prosecution, as well as circumstantial evidence that only placed him in the general vicinity of the crime scene.Glendolene M. Kimmell, a school teacher who knew the Miller family, testified on the Millers behalf during the Inquest.It is still debated whether Horn committed the murder. Some historians believe he did not, while others believe that he did, but that he did not realize he was shooting a boy. Whatever the case, the consensus is that regardless of whether he committed that particular murder, he had certainly committed many others. Chip Carlson, who extensively researched the Wyoming v. Tom Horn prosecution, concluded that although Horn could have committed the murder of Willie Nickell, he probably did not. According to Carlson's book Tom Horn: Blood on the Moon, there was no actual evidence that Horn had committed the murder, he was last seen in the area the day before the murder, his alleged confession was valueless as evidence, and no efforts were made to investigate involvement by other possible suspects. In essence, Horn's reputation and history made him an easy target for the prosecution. Execution Tom Horn has the distinction of being one of the few people in the "Wild West" to have been hanged by an automated process. A Cheyenne architect named James P. Julian designed the contraption in 1892, earning the name "The Julian Gallows", which made the condemned man hang himself. The trap door was connected to a lever which pulled the plug out of a barrel of water. This would cause a lever with a counterweight to rise, pulling on the support beam under the gallows. When enough pressure was applied, this would cause the beam to break free, opening the trap and hanging the condemned man. Tom Horn was buried in the Columbia Cemetery in Boulder, Colorado.
    wtbenda

    a fitting tribute

    The film is distinctive in four ways, the first being that Steve McQueen finally returned to the screen after having spent the 1970s elsewhere. He was a bounty hunter in the late 1950s on television, then jumped to prominence in "The Magnificent Seven" about 1960 and spent the next ten years as a dominant force on-screen. So this film was a "comeback." But McQueen came back as an artist, not as a cartoon version of his earlier self. His portrayal of Tom Horn does not use close-ups, quick draws or choreographed violence. The second thing that stands out here is the subject of the film, which is frontier justice on the high plains, a rough subject to be sure. "Tom Horn" (1980) is the first movie since "Shane" (1953) to deal realistically with the subject a part of which treatment is using the countryside itself as a character. There were a lot of movies beginning in the late 1960s with Clint Eastwood's "spaghetti westerns" which focused on the grisly righteousness of law enforcement, but it wasn't until Eastwood's "Unforgiven" (1998) that he finally made a movie that approached the quality of "Shane" and "Tom Horn," and employed some panoramic camera work. Third, the way the story is told is unfamiliar to most modern movie fans because it is so old, traditional and specific to the northern plains. The story is told, by veteran Western director Wiard, in the same way author Albert White Eagle tells stories, as a montage of contrasting fragments often out of chrnonolgical order -- "oh, by the way, I forget to tell you something, let me tack it on now" -- the juxtaposition of which fragments imply the surreal ambience of the times, an ambience which could not be effectively shown using the usual plot devices, cinematic close-ups, narrative summaries and chronological markers. For example, we see Tom in a jail cell looking at the clouds outside the little window, then we see him, with the same clouds in the sky behind him, shooting a young man (uncredited actor Sonny Skyhawk) who tries to kill the school marm as she bathes in the horse trough while talking with Tom. Is this something that really happened before he was locked up, or is it a fantasy or dream born of incarceration? It doesn't matter whether the scene is real or imagined, what matters is the jolt we receive by seeing it out of sequence. Most directors would have either shown Tom going to sleep in the cell, thus implying the scene was a dream, or would have had some narrative dialogue which indicated that Tom was remembering something that had really transpired. But Wiard, throughout the film, uses that northern technique. Another example is when we are visually escorted out of a scene in which Tom kills a rustler, with beautiful mountains in the background, into one where he is breaking a horse for the schoolmarm to eventually ride -- the same mountains are in the background, unchanged. A final thing about this movie was actor Richard Farnsworth. This was the first movie in which he had considerable dialogue, and was given a chance to demonstrate his skill at characterization. He plays John Coble, Tom Horn's employer. At the end of the movie is a 1904 quote from Coble, saying that that Tom was not guilty of the crime of which he was accused and convicted. This quotation, as Western researchers know, is from Coble's suicide note. And it foreshadowed Farnsworth's sucide twenty-two years later, a few months after being nominated, finally, for an Academy Award for his brilliant portrayal in "The Straight Story." McQueen, on-screen, and Farnsworth, on-screen and off, epitomized that quality of the Westerner least understood by people in the rest of the nation. The real Tom Horn said, "The people in the Northeast hire us to protect them from the people in the South," and, "We find the thing, whatever it is, then somebody else gets the glory for bringing it down, and somebody else makes the money for taking it back to the folks in town," but "You can either laugh or cry at your fate, and that's not much of a choice, is it, pardner?" The droll stocism and sardonic wit of the cowboy, and the western tracker whether white or Indian, has always enchanted and mystified the rest of the nation, and never really been understood. The movie, "Tom Horn," is a fitting tribute to the history and people of the northern plains, to Steve McQueen's artistry, to the memory of Richard Farnsworth, and to stories that are not easy to tell.

    w. t. benda
    7mm-39

    Good western

    My wife thinks this movie is a dirty portrayal of the West. Historians will argue about Horn and the events that happen in this film, but I like it. Do not watch the edited tv version, to get the real brutal feel of this film rent it. It is a good portrayal of how dirty and nasty the frontier really was. The end suits this film very well, and if my wife can watch an entire Western the film is well done.
    7Nazi_Fighter_David

    "I am afraid of losing my ability to be able to come and go as I please."

    Directed by William Wiard and based on a true story, "Tom Horn" opens in 1901, in Wyoming, where McQueen meets John C. Coble (Richard Farnsworth) who offered him to ease up at his place for a while… Tom accepted, but he said I'd to earn my keep…

    Seeing Horn with great ability with a rifle, and after speaking with the Association, John asks him to eliminate the rustlers who have completely wiped out their herd profits not to mention what the buzzards and the predators have done to their cash crops…

    But after one incident has disturbed the Association in town, and the rustling has stopped, they determined to get rid of Horn forgetting he was only doing what they hired him to do… Mc Queen plays well the Indian tracker "scared to death of lobster, the man of the West "afraid to lose his freedom and not be able to get back up in those hills again."

    Linda Evans is appealing as the school teacher from Hawaii who saw a man of the Old West trying to live in the New…

    Richard Farnsworth is the loyal friend John C. Coble who was quite sure that Tom never killed that kid… John advices him not to try to break out of the jail… He knows he can do it, but it's just admitting his guilt if he tries…

    Billy Green Bush is the U.S. Marshal Joe Belle who asks the newspaperman to sit behind the door and write lying down what he hears real good…

    Slims Pickens is the old Sheriff Sam Creed who arrested Tom…

    With a legendary hero, great photography and good direction "Tom Horn" is very good Western to watch

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    Argumento

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    • Trivia
      Filmed at the beginning of 1979, Steve McQueen was already very ill with cancer. He had difficulty breathing, and began coughing up blood towards the end of filming, but assumed he had pneumonia.
    • Errores
      In the opening sequence, the wording says, "In 1901 he drifted into Wyoming 'Territory'". Wyoming had been a state since 1890.
    • Citas

      U.S. Marshal Joe Belle: Do you know who I am?

      Tom Horn: No.

      U.S. Marshal Joe Belle: What you were in the Southwest, I was in the Northwest.

      Tom Horn: I was mostly out of work.

    • Versiones alternativas
      UK cinema and video versions were cut by 39 secs by the BBFC to remove a horse-fall and to edit a scene of a man's head being blasted during a gunfight. The 2006 DVD release restores some cuts and is only missing 6 secs of the horse-fall.
    • Conexiones
      Featured in Steve McQueen: The Essence of Cool (2005)

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    • How long is Tom Horn?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

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    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 28 de marzo de 1980 (Estados Unidos)
    • País de origen
      • Estados Unidos
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • I, Tom Horn
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Sonoita, Arizona, Estados Unidos
    • Productoras
      • First Artists
      • Solar Productions
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

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    • Presupuesto
      • USD 3,000,000 (estimado)
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

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    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 1h 38min(98 min)
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Mono
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 2.39 : 1

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