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IMDbPro

Lonesome Dove: Le crépuscule

Original title: Streets of Laredo
  • TV Mini Series
  • 1995
  • TV-14
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
2.5K
YOUR RATING
Sissy Spacek, James Garner, and Sam Shepard in Lonesome Dove: Le crépuscule (1995)
Streets Of Laredo
Play trailer2:38
1 Video
18 Photos
EpicPeriod DramaWestern EpicDramaWestern

Captain Woodrow Call, now retired from the Rangers, is a bounty hunter. He is hired by an eastern railroad baron to track down Joey Garza, a new breed of killer.Captain Woodrow Call, now retired from the Rangers, is a bounty hunter. He is hired by an eastern railroad baron to track down Joey Garza, a new breed of killer.Captain Woodrow Call, now retired from the Rangers, is a bounty hunter. He is hired by an eastern railroad baron to track down Joey Garza, a new breed of killer.

  • Stars
    • James Garner
    • Sissy Spacek
    • Sam Shepard
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    2.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • James Garner
      • Sissy Spacek
      • Sam Shepard
    • 35User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 2 Primetime Emmys
      • 4 wins & 4 nominations total

    Episodes3

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated1 season1995

    Videos1

    Streets Of Laredo
    Trailer 2:38
    Streets Of Laredo

    Photos18

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    Top cast64

    Edit
    James Garner
    James Garner
    • Captain Woodrow Call
    • 1995
    Sissy Spacek
    Sissy Spacek
    • Lorena
    • 1995
    Sam Shepard
    Sam Shepard
    • Pea Eye…
    • 1995
    Ned Beatty
    Ned Beatty
    • Judge Roy Bean
    • 1995
    Randy Quaid
    Randy Quaid
    • John Wesley Hardin
    • 1995
    Wes Studi
    Wes Studi
    • Famous Shoes
    • 1995
    Charles Martin Smith
    Charles Martin Smith
    • Ned Brookshire…
    • 1995
    George Carlin
    George Carlin
    • Billy Williams
    • 1995
    Alexis Cruz
    Alexis Cruz
    • Joey Garza
    • 1995
    Kevin Conway
    Kevin Conway
    • Mox Mox
    • 1995
    James Gammon
    James Gammon
    • Charles Goodnight
    • 1995
    Tristan Tait
    Tristan Tait
    • Deputy Ted Plunkert
    • 1995
    Miriam Colon
    Miriam Colon
    • Estrella
    • 1995
    James Victor
    James Victor
    • Gordo
    • 1995
    Sonia Braga
    Sonia Braga
    • Maria Garza
    • 1995
    Julio Carreon-Reyes
    • Rafael Garza
    • 1995
    Vanessa Martinez
    Vanessa Martinez
    • Teresa Garza…
    • 1995
    Anjanette Comer
    Anjanette Comer
    • Beaulah…
    • 1995
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews35

    7.22.5K
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    Featured reviews

    9jmcody

    A solid,if downbeat chapter in the magnificent series

    Granted, both the original Lonesome Dove novel and film are unique works of extremely fascinating classic story telling. Streets of Laredo obviously has a great deal to live up to and, when viewed or read in conjunction with Dove, it does suffer in the sense that our familiarity is slightly snubbed. Of course not much can measure up to the original, and so obviously this is something that cannot be helped. This sequel is far more brutal and violent that its predecessor. Violent death or at least the threat of it is an ever present character awash on Laredo's landscape much more than Dove.That said, Streets of Laredo as a film stands firmly upon its own merits which are quite impressive.Firstly, the cast is sublime. James Garner, always a vastly underrated actor, creates a stoic yet tragic Call. His final scene is at once heart breaking and resonating with strong quiet hope. His performance is all about what film acting aspires to become: he moves mountains without words.The rest of the cast is on equal footing with Garner. Playwrite Sam Shepard's Pea Eye, although losing much of Tim Scott's original Bentonesque forlorn rube, is filled with earthy heroism and and poetry. Sissy Spacek, as the whore re-incarnated as a schoolmarm Lorena produces the tough backbone needed to survive the Texas prarie. Comedian George Carlin's finely drawn panhandle scamp solidifies the theory that the border between comedy and tragedy is narrow at best. These are just a few of the excellent standouts in the sound ensemble.Secondly, there is the very narrative itself. It plays like a Sunday funeral dirge-ever aware of the passing of an era, yet peering into a glimmer future of simple optimism and hope. In McMurtry's frequently brutal world, everyone has a shot at redemption. Grace isn't free but it is availble to all willing to run the gauntlet, as long as they have a pure heart. In this film, pure of heart may not necessarily mean pure of deed, but at least evil is evil and good is good.This film bravely balances the aformentioned violence with scenes of wry humour and gentleness. In that regard, Laredo comes the closest anyone has come to honoring Peckinpah's greater works.The film, because it was produced for television is already mostly forotten by the minnions, but richly deserving of an audience. Enjoy and Savor.
    austinpeale

    An old Western with ideas!

    Streets of Laredo - The sequel to Lonesome Dove

    Streets of Laredo has much to offer - a long tale of famous Texas legends - some fictional, like Captain Woodrow F. Call, others real - John Wesley Hardin (played by Randy Quaid) and Judge Roy Bean (played by Ned Beatty).

    If you're looking for a film to take you back to the wild, wild West, this one will do. It's a quiet story though, not full of action, as some shoot-em-ups are. Like Lonesome Dove it has heartbreak and pain, and some very quiet humor. Roy Bean and Call have a particularly great scene together, as do the young killer Call is after and John Wesley Hardin.

    The story is also full of great ideas, something sorely lacking in most films. Family. Loyalty. Old Age. Change. Eastern values. Western traditions.

    And while Sam Shephard has always been a respected actor, he MAKES this movie as he is at the center of one of the oldest conflicts on Earth - what makes a man a man, family or duty. He is so quiet! And so powerful when he does speak. His wife Lorena, played by Sissy Spacek, speaks for him most eloquently. Is she, or is she not THE greatest actor Texas ever produced? Who knew George Carlin could act?

    James Garner is genuine, and authentic, as he always is.

    The story is full of great characters - who fall away until the principles are left to resolve, or not resolve their conflicts.

    The score is haunting, the cinematography is especially beautiful, the story is timeless, which is what one expects from Larry McMurtry.

    Enjoy!
    unreconstructed

    Can't hold a candle to Lonesome Dove

    Streets of Laredo is a fine western. It's just that Lonesome Dove set too high a standard to compare any other western with. Maybe the problem lies with the story itself....can anyone who saw LD imagine Lorena marrying Pea Eye and having a passel of kids???? Recall that Lorena wouldn't have anything to do with Lippy and yet she marries Pea Eye. Diane Lane and Tim Scott, together!?! No way! Streets of Laredo simply inverts the visuals embedded in our brains from LD: now Pea Eye(Sam Shepherd) is actually better looking than Lorena(Sissy Spacek). That's just too much of a stretch. I never thought I'd criticize Sissy Spacek but she just doesn't have any of Diane Lane's elegance and sensuousness. Ms. Lane was charming and endearing but Spacek's Lorena just grates on the nerves. Also for a sequel we are left mystifyingly in the dark as to why the main characters are back in Texas. Newt, who was the actual "lonesome dove" in LD, is never mentioned. What happened to Call's cattle ranch in Montana??? No clue. I realize the novel probably answers these questions but hell, this was a miniseries! The screenwriters should have had time to develop what happened since the end of LD. I also don't like the introduction of historical figures Roy Bean and John Wesley Hardin who are used as stage props to prove how fearsome Joey Garza is. Garza was so tough even the Apaches grew to fear him. Give me a break! The character Joey Garza merely strikes me as a punk who can shoot well. As a rule I don't like villains with pencil necks, no upper body strength, and who don't shave yet; it's just too hard to take them seriously. He doesn't inspire fear, but rather seems a nuisance we wish someone would eliminate. On the positive side, James Garner is marvelous as Woodrow Call. He won't replace Tommy Lee Jones in my mind as Call but then again, who could? Garner seems more stoic, more matter-of-fact than Jones was. Jones' portrayal had a lot of quiet emotion churning beneath the surface, unfortunately Garner has no Gus to play off of. Still he shines brighter in this movie than anyone else. I guess the main test that ranks Streets of Laredo unfavorably with LD is the affect it produces with time. It doesn't stay with one like LD. Scenes are not memorable and unforgettable as they were with LD. The bittersweet irony is missing. I don't have the sense it will involuntarily become part of one's psyche with time.
    jbraptor

    The least good of the four movies

    If you haven't seen any of the other "Lonesome Dove" movies, "Streets of Laredo" is a strong drama with an excellent cast. James Garner is arguably America's least appreciated actor because he was always so handsome and charismatic. News flash: He's a terrific actor, not just a movie/TV star. Sissy Spacek is always wonderful. And all supporting parts filled with fine actors.

    Problem is, for those of us who've seen the others in this saga, much of this one doesn't make sense. We have no idea of the year. "Lonesome Dove" was set in 1877, a year after "Custer's Last Stand." Gus, Woodrow and Pea Eye were "old men" about 50 years old who'd been together for 30 years. Lorena was in her early 20s, shy and illiterate. Now Woodrow is perhaps ten years older, Lorena is much older, and is a strong, worldly schoolteacher married to a Pea Eye who's at least ten years younger than the original Pea Eye. They've been married for at least 15 years, and have five children. And Woodrow and Pea Eye have STILL known each other only 30 years.

    We wonder why Woodrow is in Laredo instead of at his thriving ranch in Montana. We wonder how and where Lorena and Pea Eye got together, given she went to San Francisco while Pea Eye stayed at the Montana ranch.

    The novel doubtless fills in lots of these gaps, but the movie shouldn't require reading the novel. Perhaps McMurtry, a true American literary treasure, just threw this screenplay together.

    But even those of us who know and love "Lonesome Dove," still one of the three best things ever made for television (with "Gettysburg" and "Band of Brothers"), can detach "Streets of Laredo" from the other three, ignore its many flaws, and just watch it on its own. When we do that, we enjoy a lot of wonderful acting in a very good drama.
    8mobotobo

    A good western mini-series

    Is this better than Lonesome Dove? Depends on who you ask. I think that viewed objectively it is indeed a better mini-series. Two things complicate this in many people's minds. First, when it comes to the books I think most people think Lonesome Dove is a better book. Second, the first mini-series was so one of a kind that it really left an impression with people. Really got in their heads. By the time this came out people didn't find a western mini-series as groundbreaking. But if you watch them back to back now I think this one comes out on top. It features some great performances and, as others have commented, is a bit darker in tone and feel than the previous mini-series. If you liked Lonesome Dove this is a slam dunk for you to like.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      James Garner had been offered the roles of both Gus and Call in Lonesome Dove (1989), but had to decline for health reasons.
    • Goofs
      Judge Roy Bean is killed in this film, and John Wesley Hardin survives. The manner of Bean's death does not conform to historical fact--Bean actually drank himself to death--but his reputation as a "hanging judge" who was hanged outside his own courthouse is a popular legend. However, John Wesley Hardin died in 1895. Judge Roy Bean died eight years later in 1903.
    • Quotes

      Lorena Parker: Whose funeral?

      Tinkersley: Why, it's Doobie Plunkert's. She was well liked in the town. I like her myself even though I only met her once. That's why I let my whores sing at her funeral. Now, I kept two back for business. They had scratchy voices anyhow.

    • Connections
      Followed by Dead Man's Walk (1996)

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    FAQ18

    • How many seasons does Streets of Laredo have?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 12, 1995 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Streets of Laredo
    • Filming locations
      • Lajitas, Texas, USA
    • Production companies
      • De Passe Entertainment
      • Levinson Productions
      • RHI Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 40 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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    Sissy Spacek, James Garner, and Sam Shepard in Lonesome Dove: Le crépuscule (1995)
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