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IMDbPro

Le grand McLintock

Original title: McLintock!
  • 1963
  • Approved
  • 2h 6m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
18K
YOUR RATING
Maureen O'Hara and John Wayne in Le grand McLintock (1963)
lbx
Play trailer2:46
1 Video
99+ Photos
SlapstickComedyWestern

Wealthy rancher G. W. McLintock uses his power and influence in the territory to keep the peace between farmers, ranchers, land-grabbers, Indians and corrupt government officials.Wealthy rancher G. W. McLintock uses his power and influence in the territory to keep the peace between farmers, ranchers, land-grabbers, Indians and corrupt government officials.Wealthy rancher G. W. McLintock uses his power and influence in the territory to keep the peace between farmers, ranchers, land-grabbers, Indians and corrupt government officials.

  • Director
    • Andrew V. McLaglen
  • Writer
    • James Edward Grant
  • Stars
    • John Wayne
    • Maureen O'Hara
    • Patrick Wayne
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    18K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Andrew V. McLaglen
    • Writer
      • James Edward Grant
    • Stars
      • John Wayne
      • Maureen O'Hara
      • Patrick Wayne
    • 128User reviews
    • 48Critic reviews
    • 62Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins total

    Videos1

    McLintock!
    Trailer 2:46
    McLintock!

    Photos160

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    Top cast45

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    John Wayne
    John Wayne
    • George Washington 'G.W.' McLintock
    Maureen O'Hara
    Maureen O'Hara
    • Katherine Gilhooley McLintock
    Patrick Wayne
    Patrick Wayne
    • Devlin Warren
    Stefanie Powers
    Stefanie Powers
    • Rebecca 'Becky' McLintock
    Jack Kruschen
    Jack Kruschen
    • Jake Birnbaum
    Chill Wills
    Chill Wills
    • Drago
    Yvonne De Carlo
    Yvonne De Carlo
    • Louise Warren
    Jerry Van Dyke
    Jerry Van Dyke
    • Matt Douglas Jr.
    Edgar Buchanan
    Edgar Buchanan
    • Bunny Dull
    Bruce Cabot
    Bruce Cabot
    • Ben Sage
    Perry Lopez
    Perry Lopez
    • Davey Elk
    Strother Martin
    Strother Martin
    • Agard
    Gordon Jones
    Gordon Jones
    • Matt Douglas
    Robert Lowery
    Robert Lowery
    • Gov. Cuthbert H. Humphrey
    Hank Worden
    Hank Worden
    • Curly Fletcher
    Michael Pate
    Michael Pate
    • Puma
    Edward Faulkner
    Edward Faulkner
    • Young Ben Sage
    Mari Blanchard
    Mari Blanchard
    • Camille Reedbottom
    • Director
      • Andrew V. McLaglen
    • Writer
      • James Edward Grant
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews128

    7.117.6K
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    Featured reviews

    amvaquer

    Yes, Mrs. McLintock! Indeed, Mrs. McLintock! Of course, Mrs. McLintock!

    I've always been a John Wayne fan and a fan of this movie in particular. When it came out in 1963, there was a television special on the making of "McLintock!" that showed the filming of the famous muddy fight sequence. That got me wanting to see this film even more.

    In today's "politically correct" atmosphere, the spanking scenes would seem to some as barbarian. But it was played as broad comedy and remains broad comedy. Maureen O'Hara gave (verbally) as she got.

    40 years ago, during the telecast of JFK's funeral, the flag-draped casket and caisson were shown passing by a movie theater. On the marquee: "McLintock!"
    9bkoganbing

    The Duke's Most Personal Film

    Whatever you think of John Wayne's politics, they were never better expressed more convincingly or with more entertainment than they are in McLintock. At first glance this film is a rough house western version of The Taming of the Shrew. But it is far more than that, it is the closest thing we have to a film manifesto of the world as John Wayne saw it.

    As G.W. McLintock, the Duke is the American dream personified. The man who came west and by dint of his own sweat and labor built a cattle empire. He did it without the government's help and note how he tells the settlers the government doesn't 'give' anything away. One of the three people identified as villains in his world view is land agent Gordon Jones. He's a liberal in McLintock, peddling the view that government help is the answer to all of our problems.

    McLintock rather broadly satirizes other people who Wayne considers liberals. The know-it-all college kid Jerry Van Dyke, the tanglefooted bureaucrat Indian agent Strother Martin, the oily politician Robert Lowery these people get quite a going over.

    Wayne doesn't 'give' anybody anything. As he says to son Patrick Wayne in my favorite line in all John Wayne movies, "I don't give jobs, I hire men." That's a creed he followed in real life as well.

    Sad to say though the world isn't as simple as McLintock would have us believe. McLintock takes place in the age of the robber barons and those folks were not as noble in character as G.W. McLintock. Maybe the world ought to be like it is in McLintock, but it ain't.

    McLintock is one grand piece of entertainment though. The comedy is as broad and unsophisticated as you would find in any John Ford film and with good reason as Wayne and Director Andrew McLaglen learned the movie trade from him.

    In addition to dealing with the assorted 'liberals' mentioned above, the Duke has some domestic concerns. Wife Maureen O'Hara has left him, but is back over where their daughter Stefanie Powers will reside. Maureen is playing the same role she did in Rio Grande and later on in Big Jake, the estranged wife who circumstances force her back with Wayne. In the case of McLintock though these are circumstances that Wayne makes on his own with some inspiration from The Taming of the Shrew.

    The cast is populated with a grand cast of regulars from previous Wayne films like Chill Wills, Edgar Buchanan, Hank Worden, Leo Gordon, Michael Pate, and some already mentioned.

    Jack Kruschen makes his one and only film appearance in a Wayne film here. He does very well as the kindly, benevolent and obviously Jewish storekeeper. He's got an important function also here, as another self made American success story in the same film.

    Yvonne DeCarlo got cast in this film after her husband who was a stunt man was injured badly on another film. She had heavy duty medical expenses and Wayne was not about charity. But he was legendary for taking care of fellow performers giving them a pay day in his films if they needed it. He didn't give jobs, he hired men and women. Yvonne is Pat Wayne's mother in the film who Maureen suspects of being Wayne's mistress when she's hired as a housekeeper.

    We also get an economics lecture from the Duke as well. He works for "every man who goes to a butcher shop and wants a T-Bone steak." And Pat Wayne works for him. It's what makes the capitalist system go.

    If you take some of the politics expressed with a critical eye, McLintock is fabulous entertainment, one of the Duke's best films.
    7didi-5

    typical Big John Wayne

    Directed by Andrew MacLaglan, this rip-roaring John Wayne-Maureen O'Hara comedy lets them do what they did best.

    Wayne plays George Washington McLintock, a brawler and he-man in typical Western setting. O'Hara plays his feisty wife and Stefanie Powers their bratty daughter, Becky. Patrick Wayne, son of Big John, plays Becky's intended, a young man who looks like he'll wind up just like her pa.

    'McLintock' is fast, furious, and funny. About as far from PC as you can get, this Western take on The Taming of the Shrew is bawdy and boisterous, and the casting is perfect. John Wayne was a man's man in the 'gotta do what he has to do' mould and this role was perfect. O'Hara - his best co-star - is also superb.
    7bsmith5552

    "The Taming of the Shrew "Goes West!

    "McClintock" is loosely based on William Skakespesre's "The Taming of the Shrew". It is not your usual John Wayne western (in fact he doesn't draw his six shooter even once), but is more of a broad comedy with a tip of the hat to John Ford.

    This film was the first to be produced by Wayne's son Michael who had basically taken over the running of Wayne's production company Batjac. It also was the first major feature to be directed by Andrew V. McLaglen who had learned his trade as an assistant on previous Wayne features and on TV. He is also the son of former Wayne co-star Victor McLaglan.

    The story is simple. G.W. McClintock (Wayne) is rough and tumble hard drinking rancher whose estranged wife of two years, Katherine (Maureen O'Hara) has returned to try to gain custody of their daughter Becky (Stephanie Powers). The conflict between the two forms the basis for the rest of the picture. Into the mix comes a widowed settler Mrs. Warren (Yvonne DeCarlo) and her son Devlin (Patrick Wayne) who becomes enamored of Becky. The chemistry between Wayne and O'Hara makes this film go. The big gruff Wayne vs. the fiery Irish redhead provides much of the humor of the piece.

    The scene for which this film is probably best remembered is the fight at the top of a mud slide Most of the combatants, including the two stars wind up going down the slide into a pool of mud below. And then there's the climatic chase through the streets.

    The film features most of the members of the John Wayne stock company. Chill Wills plays Wayne's foreman Drago, Bruce Cabot as a rival rancher, Hank Worden as "Curley", Ed Faulkner as Cabot's son, Chuck Roberson as the Sheriff and Bob Steele as a train engineer.

    Other familiar faces include Jack Kruschen as storekeeper Jake Birnbaum, Jerry Van Dyke as Junior a rival suitor for Becky, Perry Lopez as Davey Elk an educated Indian, Strother Martin as Agard the Indian agent, Gordon Jones as Douglas, McClintock's longtime nemesis, Robert Lowery as the governor, Michael Pate as Puma the Commanche chief, Marie Blanchard as saloon girl Camille and Leo Gordon as the settler who is the first to go down the famous mud slide.

    A little devoid of action (there are no gunfights or saloon brawls), McClintock remains one of Wayne's most popular films.

    The Paramount DVD release is billed as the "Authentic" Collector's Edition. Some years ago, the film somehow fell into the public domain and an inferior version of the film has been floating about the bargain bins as a result. This release however, restores the film to its widescreen aspect ratio as well as, showing its rich and vibrant colors. There is also interviews with the ageless Maureen O'Hara (still looking as beautiful as ever in her 80s) and Stephanie Powers who looks better now than she did in the film. Leonard Maltin hosts the various segments and provides a feature length commentary along with film historian Frank Thompson, O'Hara, Powers and Michael Pate.

    Great fun.
    7Bunuel1976

    McLINTOCK! (Andrew V. McLaglen, 1963) ***

    Lively star Western vehicle in comedy vein, patterned after NORTH TO ALASKA (1960) and with a "Taming Of The Shrew"-like plot that recalls THE QUIET MAN (1952; with the same leads) – both of which, incidentally, I haven't watched in a long time!

    As John Wayne grew older, his films settled into being safe and unassuming family fare – which this one certainly is, making it undeniably the least of the Batjac films released on DVD so far! Through all these films, he managed to surround himself with reliable talent on both sides of the camera – many of whom were already a part of "The John Wayne Stock Company". The script by James Edward Grant, Wayne's favorite writer, provides plenty of amusing situations which are gleefully met by the cast (particularly Chill Wills, Jack Kruschen and Strother Martin) – including a free-for-all in the mud, a fist-fight during a town celebration, a drunken encounter with a flight of stairs and the come-uppance of both female members (Maureen O' Hara and Stefanie Powers) of the McLintock family at the hands of the Waynes (father John and son Patrick respectively) – though the ponderous subplot involving the Comanches' last stand (headed by Michael Pate) feels somewhat incongruous alongside the brawling and the slapstick and should, perhaps, have been dropped altogether.

    The supplements are of a similarly high quality as the rest of the Paramount "Batjac" releases: the Audio Commentary here is especially engaging for the way it places the film in the context of both Wayne's career and the revisionist attitude the Western genre would go through immediately afterwards; interestingly, as was the case with HONDO (1953), it's also mentioned that John Ford was asked to direct some sequences when the films' respective director became indisposed! Incidentally, I'll be watching the similarly boisterous DONOVAN'S REEF (1963) soon – a film that has eluded me all these years despite being a perennial on Italian TV! – and which proved to be the last of the innumerable collaborations between Wayne and Ford...

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      John Wayne once remarked that, try as he might, he couldn't get Big John Hamilton to react properly in the scene where McLintock was "explaining" the rules for the fight between Fauntleroy and Dev at the party. Finally, Wayne resorted to actually stomping on Hamilton's foot and kicking him.
    • Goofs
      In the mud fight scene, when John Wayne climbs out of the pit, a man is seen in the background wearing a modern grey business suit. In the same shot, there's also a person wearing sunglasses.
    • Quotes

      George Washington McLintock: Becky! Come here. There's somethin' I ought to tell you. Guess now's as good a time as any. You're gonna have every young buck west of the Missouri around here tryin' to marry you - mostly because you're a handsome filly, but partly because I own everything in this country from here to there. They'll think you're gonna inherit it. Well, you're not. I'm gonna leave most of it to... well, to the nation really, for a park where no lumbermen'll cut down all the trees for houses with leaky roofs. Nobody'll kill all the beaver for hats for dudes nor murder the buffalo for robes. What I'm gonna give you is a 500-cow spread on the Upper Green River. Now that may not seem like much, but it's more than we had, your mother and I. Some folks are gonna say I'm doin' all this so I can sit up in the hereafter and look down on a park named after me, or that I was disappointed in you -- didn't want you to get all that money -- but the real reason, Becky, is because I love you, and I want you and some young man to have what I had, 'cause all the gold in the United States Treasury and all the harp music in Heaven can't equal what happens between a man and a woman with all that growin' together. I can't explain it any better than that.

    • Crazy credits
      There are no end credits at the end of the movie.
    • Alternate versions
      Available in a 128 minutes version (by Goodtimes Entertainment) and in a shorter 122 minute version by Gemstone Entertainment. This is an edited version with all the original music and background music replaced with an all new soundtrack. Some musical scenes have been deleted and some dialogue dubbed.
    • Connections
      Featured in Hollywood: The Great Stars (1963)
    • Soundtracks
      Love in the Country
      Sung by The Limeliters

      Music Coordinator "By' Dunham'

      Words & Music by "By' Dunham' and Frank De Vol

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 31, 1964 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Chinese
      • Navajo
    • Also known as
      • McLintock
    • Filming locations
      • Old Tucson - 201 S. Kinney Road, Tucson, Arizona, USA
    • Production company
      • Batjac Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $2,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      2 hours 6 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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