My Darling Clementine
- Starring: Henry Fonda, Linda Darnell, Victor Mature
- Director: John Ford
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Description
One of the greatest movie Westerns, John Ford's My Darling Clementine is hardly the most accurate film version of the Wyatt Earp legend, but it is still one of the most entertaining. Henry Fonda stars as former lawman Wyatt Earp, who, after cleaning up Dodge City, arrives in the outskirts of Tombstone with his brothers Morgan (Ward Bond), Virgil (Tim Holt), and James (Don Garner), planning to sell their cattle and settle down as gentlemen farmers. Yet Wyatt, disgusted by crime and cattle rustling, eventually agrees to take the marshalling job until he can gather enough evidence to bring to justice the scurrilous Clanton clan, headed by smooth-talking but shifty-eyed Old Man Clanton (Walter Brennan). Almost immediately, Wyatt runs afoul of consumptive, self-hating gambling boss Doc Holliday (Victor Mature, in perhaps his best performance). When Doc's erstwhile sweetheart, Clementine (Cathy Downs) comes to town, Earp is immediately smitten. However, Doc himself is now involved with saloon gal Chihauhua (Linda Darnell). The tensions among Wyatt, Doc, Clementine, and Chihauhua wax and wane throughout most of the film, leading to the legendary gunfight at the OK Corral, with Wyatt and Doc fighting side-by-side against the despicable Clantons. Its powerful storyline and full-blooded characterizations aside, My Darling Clementine is most entertaining during those little "humanizing" moments common to Ford's films, notably Wyatt's impromptu "balancing act" while seated on the porch of the Tombstone hotel, and Wyatt's and Clementine's dance on the occasion of the town's church-raising. Based on Stuart N. Lake's novel -Wyatt Earp, Frontier Marshall (previously filmed twice by Fox), the screenplay is full of wonderful dialogue, the best of which is the brief, philosophical exchange about women between Earp and Mac the bartender (J. Farrell MacDonald). The movie also features crisp, evocative black-and-white photography by Joseph MacDonald. Producer (Daryl F. Zanuck) was displeased with Ford's original cut and the film went through several re-shoots and re-edits before its general release in November of 1946. Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Features
- Genre: Western
- Category: Traditional Western
- Theme: Cattle Ranchers, Sheriffs and Outlaws, Taming the West
- Release Date: January 06, 2004
- Studio: 20th Century Fox
- Lead Actors: Henry Fonda, Linda Darnell, Victor Mature, Jane Darwell, Walter Brennan
- Supporting Actors: Jack Pennick, Earl Foxe, Mae Marsh, Frank Conlan, Don Barclay, Danny Borzage, Aleth "Speed" Hansen, Charles Anderson, Duke Lee, Frances Rey, Harry Woods, Charles Stevens, William B. Davidson, Robert Adler, Margaret Martin, Cathy Downs, Ward Bond, Francis Ford, Don Garner, Ben Hall
- Director: John Ford
- Run Time: 1 hr 36 min
- Format: DVD
Additional Information
- DPCI: 246-00-5670
- ASIN: B002HXANDW
- Catalog #: 11332286
- Item can not be gift wrapped.
Shipping & Policies
- You may return this item to any Target store.Opens in New Window
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- Estimated Ship Dimensions : 7.6 inches length x 5.6 inches width x 0.59 inches height
- Estimated Ship Weight: 0.23 pound.
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Considered one of the greatest classical Westerns, John Ford's My Darling Clementine (1946) turns an idealized version of the Earp/Clanton shootout at the OK Corral into a story of how the West was won for the good of civilization. Shot on location in Monument Valley in crisp, deep-focus black-and-white, the film opens as Henry Fonda's upstanding yet slightly (and humorously) awkward Wyatt Earp arrives in Tombstone to settle a family score with the murderous Clantons, staying long enough to make the untamed town safe for the new church and schoolmarm-to-be Clementine and enable corrupt, tubercular Easterner Doc Holliday to find a bit of redemption. Yet even as Ford celebrates the possibilities of the new West, he also engages the post-war tendency for Westerns to examine their own myths: for instance, in the expressionistic photography and in Earp's contradictory place between civilization and the wilderness. He knows the way Tombstone ought to be, but he can't settle there himself; the final shootout begins as an orderly ritual but becomes a chaotic montage of death. The "director's cut" discovered in 1994 contains several minutes of excised footage; the ending was reportedly changed due to the reaction of a 1946 preview audience. Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide