As westerns go, it doesn’t get more western than a movie directed by John Ford starring Henry Fonda (!) as Wyatt Earp (!!) in Tombstone (!!!).
Shirley, I must have seen this movie before, but I really can’t remember anything about it…
This Criterion restoration of the film is almost … too much? The blacks are #000 and the greys are very dramatic and beautiful, but in some of the scenes things definitely are too dark. And has it been de-grained? Perhaps not; Ford used beautiful film stock for most his movies…
It’s (unsurprisingly) very good. The plot twists and turns in ways I didn’t expect, and while some of the performances are a bit hokey (Cathy Downs, for instance), it really works.
The bluray has two versions of the movie: Zanuck took the movie over and cut a whole bunch of footage (and added some new bits). A nitrate that contains many of these scenes was discovered at a university in the 90s, so we get that one too, as well as a comparison between the two versions.
My Darling Clementine. John Ford. 1946.
Popular movies in October 1946 according to IMDB:
Poster | Votes | Rating | Movie |
---|---|---|---|
17032 | 7.8 | My Darling Clementine | |
1250 | 7.4 | The Jolson Story | |
621 | 7.4 | Margie | |
2157 | 7.3 | Deception | |
817 | 7.1 | Dangerous Money | |
2795 | 7.1 | The Dark Mirror | |
267 | 7.1 | The Crimson Ghost | |
1013 | 6.6 | Blue Skies | |
1084 | 6.6 | The Strange Woman | |
418 | 6.4 | So Dark the Night |
This blog post is part of the Decade series.