The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1962) Movie REACTION!

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  • Опубликовано: 2 фев 2023
  • For Film Friday #62, Madison watches The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance for the first time.
    #themanwhoshotlibertyvalance #jimmystewart #johnwayne
    Preorder GONE OUTLAW: www.amazon.com/dp/B0BRQVVQX9?...
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    Edited by @creativeoliverx
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Комментарии • 451

  • @BillO964
    @BillO964 Год назад +83

    Madison, as a 70 ish year old, watching old westerns with you is a joy.

    • @Robert-un7br
      @Robert-un7br Год назад +7

      I just hit 60 and I couldn’t agree with you more. It seems most of the reactors out there are young and haven’t watched any westerns! The ones I enjoy, like Madison, are just starting to get into them. They overwhelmingly like them for the most part but it hasn’t been a part of their childhood, like it was for us. 🤠

    • @purpleclaws202
      @purpleclaws202 Год назад

      @@Robert-un7br OK boomer

    • @_Common_Logic_
      @_Common_Logic_ Год назад

      @@purpleclaws202 Have you looked at your generation?... Is anyone even taking "boomer" as an insult anymore?😆

    • @purpleclaws202
      @purpleclaws202 Год назад

      @@_Common_Logic_ common logic doesn't seem to be so common. Bro chill out it was a joke

    • @Robert-un7br
      @Robert-un7br Год назад +1

      @@purpleclaws202 i’m only a boomer officially by two years. I’ve always felt more like a Gen Xer. But my parents were older. They lived through depression and my dad fought in World War II and in Korea. So I have a lot of that knowledge too.

  • @chetcarman3530
    @chetcarman3530 Год назад +72

    Lee Marvin ranks with Jack Palance in Shane as iconic Bad Guy in Westerns here. His stagger & fall off the boardwalk is my favorite death scene ever!

    • @waterbeauty85
      @waterbeauty85 Год назад +2

      I remember in a retrospective documentary, James Stewart said he looked down the street at Lee Marvin in their face off scene, and he said he never saw anybody look meaner or scarier.

    • @deadwood75
      @deadwood75 Год назад +4

      @@waterbeauty85 They were both WWII combat veterans, Stewart as a B 17 pilot over Germany, and Marvin as a Marine in the Pacific. I don't think they had to dig too deep to find some rage.

    • @chetcarman3530
      @chetcarman3530 Год назад

      @@deadwood75 Marvin had been shot in the hip & groin.

    • @chetcarman3530
      @chetcarman3530 Год назад +5

      @@waterbeauty85 Marvin brought a dark, psychological element & sadism to the character. More than just a bad guy, he was like a constant presence even when he wasn't there & on the edge of exploding when he was. Robert Mitchum in Cape Fear & Night Of The Hunter was another.

    • @philipstoddard1502
      @philipstoddard1502 Год назад +1

      So far, I don't have any grandsons named Rance, but at least my boys all shoot for themselves!

  • @NPCRR
    @NPCRR Год назад +31

    As another 70 ish year old, I agree with Bill O. This particular western is one of my all-time favorites!! Great story, great cast, and great moral lesson. I'm so glad you got around to watching it Madison, and even more glad that you really enjoyed it!!! Congrats on your book!!!

  • @JeffreyCantelope
    @JeffreyCantelope Год назад +24

    Liberty Valance was played by Lee Marvin. Another great actor

  • @cuerpo869
    @cuerpo869 Год назад +10

    The Gunfighter 1950 with Gregory Peck, Hondo 1953 with John Wayne, and The Fastest Gun Alive 1956 with Glenn Ford are three very good westerns...

  • @katwithattitude5062
    @katwithattitude5062 Год назад +23

    Andy Devine was not Piglet, although he was in a lot of movies and did a lot of voice acting. Piglet was originally voiced by John Fiedler.
    "When the legend becomes fact, print the legend." One of the all-time great movie quotes.

    • @BeeWhistler
      @BeeWhistler Год назад +5

      He played Friar Tuck, though.

    • @glennwisniewski9536
      @glennwisniewski9536 Год назад +1

      And John Fiedler was Juror #2 in 12 Angry Men.

    • @Robert-un7br
      @Robert-un7br Год назад

      @@glennwisniewski9536 he also played in a Star Trek TOS episode as the spirit of Jack the ripper.

    • @gawainethefirst
      @gawainethefirst Год назад +1

      Andy Devine did the voice for Friar Tuck in Disney’s Robin Hood.

  • @michaelm6948
    @michaelm6948 Год назад +29

    Orson Welles was asked what directors he looked to for inspiration, he paused and said "the old masters", specifically, "John Ford, John Ford and John Ford". As an artist, you'd be interested in Ford's skills at composition with a camera. Ford witnessed the artist Winslow Homer for an entire summer, who was painting at the seaside of Maine, where Ford grew up. Ford took with him these lessons of composition from the rugged seascapes of Maine and applied them to western landscapes. You'll have to watch other Ford films, like the Searchers, to get a taste of his powers of landscape composition with a camera. Liberty Valance was almost exclusively filmed on sets.

    • @benforshay
      @benforshay Год назад +1

      Wow any books you could reccomend on Ford? specifically regarding these W. Homer connections? thanks in advance ..

    • @michaelm6948
      @michaelm6948 Год назад +2

      @@benforshay I saw the references to Winslow Homer in Joseph McBride's "In Search of John Ford". McBride goes on to discuss the influence on Ford's visual sense of the seaside of St. Elizabeth Maine, his hometown, and McBride argues most importantly, his early trips to his parents' village in Connemara, Ireland. My parents both came from the same region in Ireland, and I was struck by the strange similarity of the desolate beauty of the craggy landscapes and seascapes of Connemara, Ireland and the same sense of desolate beauty of Ford's Monument Valley shots in his westerns.

    • @cheeseburger12
      @cheeseburger12 Год назад

      I can't believe he forgot John Ford, who was no doubt inspiring his final role as Unicron in Transformers the Movie. But perhaps he hadn't discovered him by that interview.

    • @snootybaronet
      @snootybaronet Год назад

      @@michaelm6948 Interesting info, I'll have to get that book. Thanks...

    • @steelers6titles
      @steelers6titles Год назад +1

      Ford was fond of Monument Valley.

  • @mkl21bis
    @mkl21bis Год назад +7

    Jimmy Stewart, highest ranking actor serving in military.

    • @garytiptin6479
      @garytiptin6479 3 месяца назад +1

      John Wayne didn't! Ironic, yes?

  • @BlueShadow777
    @BlueShadow777 Год назад +20

    Gene Pitney recorded the title song “The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance” in 1962. The film was released before the song was finished recording and so it missed being included in the film. Great song. Worth listening to.

    • @georgecoventry8441
      @georgecoventry8441 8 месяцев назад

      It was on the radio all the time back then.

    • @lindajohnson4204
      @lindajohnson4204 5 месяцев назад

      It's a fine popular somg, but Ford did not want it for his movie! It would have diluted the points he was making in the film. The tender/tough score was adequate for that.

  • @Gothondra
    @Gothondra Год назад +11

    when I was 15 I went to see this movie in a theatre in Buffalo with my sister, I always remembered that day because it was such an impactful movie western, a great story. Not too many westerns tell such a good story.

  • @rossdillon982
    @rossdillon982 Год назад +15

    Lee Marvin won his best actor Oscar for his role in Kat Ballou. You might consider that movie for one of your westerns.

    • @luvlgs1
      @luvlgs1 Год назад +2

      Hilarious. Saw it at the movies. Also starring the young and scrumptious Jane Fonda

    • @jeannoah2018
      @jeannoah2018 Год назад +1

      Look for it as Cat Ballou. I totally agree on the recommendation - great, fun Western. Lee Marvin SO earned his Best Actor Oscar!

    • @georgecoventry8441
      @georgecoventry8441 8 месяцев назад +1

      Cat Ballou is a lot of fun! And it's quite unique among westerns.

  • @gravitypronepart2201
    @gravitypronepart2201 Год назад +6

    Lee Marvin was a WWII Marine, And Jimmy Stewart was a B-24 pilot in the 8th Air Force, also WWII. My favorite in this was Edmond OBrian as Dutton Peabody. His line; "Courage can be purchased in yon tavern. Was classic.

  • @danielguy3528
    @danielguy3528 Год назад +16

    I'm glad you reacted to this, it is in my opinion one of the most underrated westerns.

    • @jnagarya519
      @jnagarya519 Год назад

      It is actually very highly rated, and always has been.

    • @jnagarya519
      @jnagarya519 Год назад

      It isn't at all underrated
      GAD, I wish people would learn to THINK instead of glomming on to wrong words.

  • @greenporker
    @greenporker Год назад +26

    So glad to see you watching these great films Madison. You may want to check out the great westerns that James Stewart made with director Anthony Mann..."Winchester 73"..."Bend of The River"...and "The Naked Spur". As well as Duke Wayne in his Oscar winning "True Grit" as well as his last film "The Shootist" (once more with James Stewart). Congratulations on your book! You are the best!

    • @babybanchie7607
      @babybanchie7607 Год назад +1

      I need to add “Destry Rides Again” to this list.

    • @joelake7986
      @joelake7986 Год назад +3

      Another vote for "The Naked Spur", my favourite Jimmy Stewart western, but all your suggestions are great films.

    • @gregghelmberger
      @gregghelmberger Год назад +1

      I was just coming to suggest "Winchester '73." It's a genuinely great movie. But really any Anthony Mann western and you can't go wrong.

    • @Rzo139
      @Rzo139 Год назад +1

      Don't forget "Night Passage" and "The Rare Breed".

  • @Gutslinger
    @Gutslinger 10 месяцев назад +3

    John Wayne and Jimmy Stewart were in another movie together 14 years later, called "The Shootist". Also staring Ron Howard.
    John Wayne knowingly had cancer while filming the movie, and it was his last movie.

  • @jimearnest4342
    @jimearnest4342 Год назад +14

    Lee Marvin was perfect in the roll of liberty valance,and Strother Martin is great in any roll,another really good Jimmy Stewart western that you may like is called "the naked spur" I enjoy your channel Madison, you have great reactions.

    • @gawainethefirst
      @gawainethefirst Год назад +1

      Shenandoah, another good Jimmy Stewart western

    • @jeffreyjeziorski1480
      @jeffreyjeziorski1480 Год назад

      Winchester 73....get to see the anger of Stewart, and horse riding skill.

  • @OcotilloTom
    @OcotilloTom Год назад +6

    The first date I ever had with a girl was to go see this movie in 1962. I'm 77 now. Great movie with some of the best Western actors ever. Thanks for reacting to it Madison.
    El Mirage, Arizona

  • @nonagrey3422
    @nonagrey3422 Год назад +8

    I absolutely LOVE your book being in the background! I'm so happy for you!

  • @gregorywilson1960
    @gregorywilson1960 Год назад +4

    Madison if you enjoyed the pairing of Jimmy Stewart and the Duke Jimmy is also in the Duke's last movie "THE SHOOTIST"

  • @deanjarva1373
    @deanjarva1373 Год назад +3

    A few westerns that I like that you might consider:
    The Westerner (1940)
    The Wild Bunch (1969)
    The Cheyenne Social Club (1970)
    Little Big Man (1970)
    The Shootist (1976)
    Thank you for sharing your reactions with us.

  • @flerbus
    @flerbus Год назад +4

    piglet was mostly played by John Fielder also threw off the emperors groove
    "beware the groove"

  • @jollyjakelovell4787
    @jollyjakelovell4787 Год назад +3

    Andy Divine our rotund City Marshal was not the voice of Piglet. You will however find the voice of Piglet in 1969's True Grit as Lawyer Daggett, the actor John Fielder.

  • @BlueShadow777
    @BlueShadow777 Год назад +6

    Here are some of MY favourite westerns (I highly recommend my first section for watching):
    • High Noon (1952)
    • Red River (1948)
    • The Shootist (1976)
    • The Searchers (1956)
    • Last Train From Gun Hill (1959)
    And…
    • The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1962)
    • Destry Rides Again (1939)
    • Wyatt Earp (1994)
    • Stagecoach (1939)

    • @bugvswindshield
      @bugvswindshield Год назад +1

      Unforgiven and Tombstone must be on the list. While more modern, the greatness is undeniable.
      Also, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid , the Wild Bunch. Both really good, but they had 70's , just missed the mark due to the direction style of the time.
      oh, by the way....i own ever single one of the movies you listed!!!! Great Westerns one and all!

    • @BlueShadow777
      @BlueShadow777 Год назад +1

      @@bugvswindshield
      I’m afraid I don’t rate Tombstone highly at all. Everyone seems to rave about it, but I think it’s *grossly* overrated. In my opinion Costner’s “Wyatt Earp” (1994) is vastly superior. More gritty, down to earth, raw and realistic.

    • @bugvswindshield
      @bugvswindshield Год назад

      @@BlueShadow777 meh

    • @georgecoventry8441
      @georgecoventry8441 8 месяцев назад

      @@BlueShadow777 - I agree. Tombstone is flashy and exaggerated as well as highly entertaining if you suspend your judgement as to its accuracy, and went over great with audiences because of that...but Costner's Wyatt Earp is a far more realistic take on the life of Wyatt Earp. "Tombstone" is like the legend, perfectly made for mass consumption. "Wyatt Earp" is like the real thing. So Tombstone naturally did better at the box office.

  • @robertjewell9727
    @robertjewell9727 Год назад +10

    John Ford's earlier Western FORT APACHE you should see as well also starring John Wayne with Henry Fonda has similar themes and is kind of a seedbed for how Ford looked at the Western mythology. Great reaction. My friends Joseph McBride and Tag Gallagher both wrote critical biographies about John Ford you might enjoy reading. Best wishes. Looking forward big time to getting the hard copy of GONE OUTLAW.

  • @jackndew2
    @jackndew2 Год назад +2

    John Wayne and Lee Marvin team up briefly in another western called 'The Comancheros', with Lee again playing a ruthless bad guy.

  • @michaelm6948
    @michaelm6948 Год назад +3

    The last scene where the conducter says "nothing is too good for the man who shot Liberty Valance", brings the tragic personal themes of the film out fully in the open. Rance's political career has been made possible by Tom. Rance's marriage has been made possible by Tom. It's clear that Allie had the passionate love of Tom and Rance realizes she loved Tom. Tom Doniphon gave up everything he loved to help create the new west, someplace he didn't even belong. John Ford had the makings of a tragic poet.

  • @jamesrobertson2361
    @jamesrobertson2361 Год назад +2

    Madison, The Reivers, 1969,William Faulkner story, 2 academy award nominations, John Williams, Steve McQueen and there's a 🐎.

  • @Catbytes
    @Catbytes Год назад +2

    While listening to your summery, I suddenly got a hankerin to watch Have Gun Will Travel.

  • @singlechristiancowboy
    @singlechristiancowboy Год назад +1

    A great western movie and an AMAZIN and rare young lady......heck of a good day!

  • @chetcarman3530
    @chetcarman3530 Год назад +1

    The "Print the legend" quote is from William Randolph Hearst (Citizen Kane) newspaper magnate/power broker in the 1920s & 30s.

  • @steelers6titles
    @steelers6titles Год назад +5

    ‘Cause the point of a gun was the only law that Liberty understood…

  • @bghoody5665
    @bghoody5665 Год назад +7

    Great reaction, Madison - I especially enjoy the commentaries you give at the end. I've said this before but I really think you should get into giving straight up reviews and/or recommendations (even of movies you've already seen). Your writer's ability to discern why a story, character etc. works or doesn't gives you better insight than most. Congratulations on 19K subs.

  • @Gothondra
    @Gothondra 2 месяца назад

    I was 14 when I saw this movie in a threater in Buffalo, and I thought then as I do now that it was a brilliant story made into a movie. The Duke made westerns famous.

  • @tomfrankiewicz4030
    @tomfrankiewicz4030 Год назад +1

    Thank you so much for just watching a older black and white movie. My Dad and older brothers watched movies like this

  • @Mountain_Mutt
    @Mountain_Mutt Год назад +8

    Man I’m glad you enjoyed this one. It’s one of my favorites. As you talked about truth versus legend, it reminded me of Wyatt Earp and the stories about him. Late in his life, he worked as a consultant for one of the movie studios. He would often eat lunch in the commissary and was often joined by a very young John Wayne who was just doing odd jobs for the same studio. It is said that Wayne based his ‘style’ on Earp’s personality and the stories told to him by Earp.

    • @paintedjaguar
      @paintedjaguar Год назад

      There's a fun little movie called "Sunset" (1988) set in 1929 Hollywood, in which Wyatt Earp (James Garner) and Tom Mix (Bruce Willis) team up to solve a murder.

  • @danlucas8706
    @danlucas8706 Год назад +6

    Great watching old movies with you. Maybe try John Wayne in his only Oscar winning perfomance, True Grit.

  • @kjw1886
    @kjw1886 Год назад +2

    Here in TEXAS we have a saying "never let the truth get in the way of a good story.

    • @Stogie2112
      @Stogie2112 Год назад

      Like the Alamo? 😉😉

  • @StereoSpace
    @StereoSpace Год назад +2

    "When the legend becomes fact, print the legend." I recently read the memoirs of John Fremont (1813-1890) an explorer, military officer and later Senator of California. I also read Six Years With the Texas Rangers: 1875-1881 by James Gillett, along with several similar books. I wanted to hear the story of the opening of the West from the people who were there. I was actually surprised - not by the difference - by the similarities of the stories they told and these early Western films. They got a lot right.

  • @CassandrashadowcassMorrison
    @CassandrashadowcassMorrison Год назад +2

    One of myy all-time favorites. I too am in my 70s. Love the theme song, even/
    James Stewart westerns? Try TWO RODE TOGETHER with Stewart and Richard Widmark
    Andy Devine co-starred with Guy Madison (such a hunk) on WILD BILL HICKOCK a popular TV western when I was young. He played "Jingles"

  • @jaylong3581
    @jaylong3581 Год назад +1

    One of my favorite western is Jimmy Stewart and Henry Fonda in the Cheyenne Social Club, It's hilarious!

  • @snootybaronet
    @snootybaronet Год назад +9

    Thanks for the great reaction. Enjoyed your discussion of Western themes. When John Ford worked on silent westerns in the 19teens...Wyatt Earp was a consultant on the studio lot.

    • @Carandini
      @Carandini Год назад +1

      And John Wayne was an extra at the time. He claimed he based his swaggering walk after observing Wyatt Earp at the studio.

    • @BDogg2023
      @BDogg2023 Год назад

      A large portion of the Earp extended family settled in and are buried in Colton, about an hour drive east of LA.

  • @bigbow62
    @bigbow62 Год назад +2

    Red River ( 1948 )
    Voted one of the 10 best Westerns of all-time !
    John Wayne,Montgomery Clift, Joanne Dru, Walter Brennan, Harry Carey Jr
    A movie about the first cattle drive up the Chisholm Trail
    Speaking of dark realism..this movie has it all, John Wayne is amazing

  • @thedealer777
    @thedealer777 Год назад +1

    There aren't many actors that can stand with legends like Wayne and Stewart, " toe-to-toe," and practically steal the scenes with his own talent, while helping make a film a classic. Marvin was a HELL of an actor! (P.S. May I recommend 3 other John Wayne Western classics: Red River, Stagecoach, Rio Bravo)

  • @mikecaetano
    @mikecaetano Год назад +1

    When you ready for more classic Westerns, check out John Wayne in Stagecoach (1939) and Red River (1948), check out James Stewart in Winchester '73 (1950) and The Naked Spur (1953) -- where Stewart plays against type -- and also check out Joel McCrea in Colorado Territory (1949) and Ride the High Country (1962).

  • @raymeedc
    @raymeedc Год назад +2

    Vera Miles (Halle) plays Laurie in The Searchers, by the way.

  • @richardromney9205
    @richardromney9205 Год назад +1

    in our lives and in our times we all have known our liberty valance.

  • @gregzaffuto4507
    @gregzaffuto4507 Год назад +1

    John Wayne made a lot of westerns... here are some of note other than this one and the Searchers: John Wayne and Jimmy Stewart again in "The Shootist"... Wayne's last film playing a dying of cancer gunfighter and Stewart playing a town doctor. "McClintock... a western rom-com with Wayne and Maureen O'Hara.... "Stagecoach" and "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon" were other classic John Ford directed movies. Other genres he made were war movies like "Sands of Iwo Jima" .... and a post war rom-com starring again with Lee Marvin in "Donovan's Reef".

  • @christopherbaldwin2005
    @christopherbaldwin2005 Год назад +1

    By chance, there is a western to add to an understanding of the "West". The film is "The Shootist", and stars John Wayne, with co-star's Jimmy Stewart; Ron Howard; Lauren BaCall; Richard Boone;John Carradine; Hugh O'Brien and Harry Morgan. It was the last film by Wayne; Stewart and Carradin. It is set in 1901 Carson City, Nevada. So, the dying day's of the "Old West.
    A modern western of note is "3:10 to Yuma". Or, "Unforgiven", if you have not seen it. It's one of Clint Eastwood's more modern (1992) western's. I love that these are getting some new fan's of the genre, and reacting. My Grandpa brought me to my first western to watch on the big screen at "Shines Theater" .It was the "Spaghetti Western" "For a Few Dollar's More", starring Eastwood and Van Cleef. Thank you and sorry for rambling!

  • @lnwolf41
    @lnwolf41 Год назад +2

    There are 2 movies you should consider.
    "The Big Country" 1958 starring Gregory Peck, Charlton Heston, Burl Ives, Chuck Connors, Jean Simmons,
    second movie
    "Silverado" 1985 starring Kevin Kline, Scott Glenn, Kevin Costner, Danny Glover, Brian Dennehy, Rosanna Arquette, Jeff Goldblum,
    Linda Hunt.
    Both movies show the pendulum about halfway point, there is civilization, but it is still ruled by the gun to a degree.

    • @georgecoventry8441
      @georgecoventry8441 8 месяцев назад

      Agreed. Burl Ives does an amazing bit of acting as "rough around the edges" patriarch Rufus Hannassey in "The Big Country", and he won Best Supporting Actor for it. Gregory Peck, as usual, portrayed a man of great depth of character, and did it very well. And Jean Simmons was just lovely, also showing great depth of character.

  • @mikerobertson4041
    @mikerobertson4041 Год назад +3

    John Wayne, Jimmy Stewart, Lee Marvin, Vera Miles, Andy Devine, Woody Strode...WOW!
    Not sure if you corrected this, but Liberty Valance was played by Lee Marvin, not Lee Van Cleef.

  • @sonnypeek6418
    @sonnypeek6418 Год назад

    One of the Great Pictures. That man talking at the State meeting was John Carradine- father of the Carradine Brothers - and a great character actor

  • @billbabcock1833
    @billbabcock1833 Год назад +2

    You've seen John Wayne's best western, The Searchers. Now onto Jimmy's Stewart.
    He has a long list of very good movies, which includes some outstanding westerns. The Far Country being the best IMHO. BTW Jimmy Stewart rode the same horse, named Pie, in 17 westerns.
    Oh, and at the beginning of WW2 Jimmy Stewart left Hollywood and enlisted in the Army Air Corp, flew bomber missions over Europe, retired from the Air Force as a General AND made a ton of movies.
    Yeah, I like Jimmy Stewart.

  • @abramsalinas1004
    @abramsalinas1004 Год назад +1

    I'd have to say the westerns made in the 30's and 40's and 50s and 60s are the best. They were closer to the time of the west and more accurate and are not as focused on the gun effects to "western" the movie as todays films are. John Wayne, Randolph Scott, Robert Mitchum, Audie Murphy, Joel McCrea, Stewart Granger, Henry Fonda, Glenn Ford and Burt Lancaster are in some great ones. Thanks for watching these.

  • @jorluo
    @jorluo Год назад +2

    A classic. Great choice M.

  • @alias9025
    @alias9025 2 месяца назад

    The transition of Tincup from a rough frontier town where Wayne belonged to a civilized area where law and order were established is the real theme of this old movie. Wayne was a necessary part of the transition though it meant he belonged to the earlier time.

  • @stupidsmart-phone6911
    @stupidsmart-phone6911 Год назад

    Andy Devine (the Marshall) was the voice of Friar Tuck in Disney's Robin Hood. John Fiedler was the voice of Piglet, but he also was a church mouse in Robin Hood, and Juror #2 in 12 Angry Men. Both had great film and TV careers. Andy Devine was a prominent character on Flipper. I think he also did radio and a lot of B westerns. I read somewhere something caused him throat damage which is why his voice was so distinct that way.

  • @michaelstach5744
    @michaelstach5744 Год назад +1

    Frederick Jackson Turner published his frontier thesis in 1893. There are a lot of ideas in this, one of the most important papers ever, about American history. We’ll only dig a little bit into this. The idea was that America started as a wilderness and slowly civilization started building on the East coast. As America moved west there was a sort of buffer zone between civilization and wilderness, the frontier.
    The frontier was the area that was moving toward civilization but wasn’t there yet. The wilderness had trappers and mountain men, cattle ranchers and outlaws. But settlers, farmers came with families. Settlers wanted things like schools, law and order. The rough elements resisted this. Farmers wanted fences to protect their crops. Cattlemen wanted their cattle to roam free. This forms the basis for conflict in 100s of Western movies.
    So the idea in this and so many movies, Shane, The Magnificent Seven, … is that the settlers are too civilized to fight against the outlaws so they need to find someone as violent, as ruthless, to fight back.
    So here Rance represents law, school, civilization but he is powerless against the unbridled evil of Liberty. Liberty can’t be defeated by law books. Tom is just as violent as Liberty but he wants some of the benefits civilization brings, like a wife. Tom demonstrates his power more with threats rather than actual violence. Note that Liberty is also a contradiction. He can read the newspaper but rejects law. So civilization comes but what a price.

  • @walterfechter8080
    @walterfechter8080 11 месяцев назад

    "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance" is my favorite John Wayne film. To me, there are scenes which hearken back to Wayne's films from the 1930s. Director John Ford captured the "feel" the nuances of Wayne's earlier films, notably, "Stagecoach.' James Stewart and John Wayne were brilliant. Lee Marvin was like a rattlesnake -- coiled and ready to strike. The ancillary characters were truly great - the kind of folks who helped settle the American West. Paramount studios were hesitant to film "westerns", but they struck gold with this gem. Oh yeah, I first saw this movie on NBC's Saturday Night at the Movies. It was first run on TV back then. I recommend, "Hombre," with Paul Newman. Many thanks, Madison K. Thames!

  • @bradvalentine1564
    @bradvalentine1564 Год назад +1

    Winchester 73' is another great Jimmy Stewart film and imo has the best marksman scene in any western.

  • @randallshuck2976
    @randallshuck2976 Год назад

    There were very few one-on-one shoot outs in the mid 1800s west. Most of the settlers had been in the army on one side or the other of the Civil War and all of them could shoot. If a bad guy had the guts or bad judgment to threaten the town often, he was shot from a lot of directions from cover. It's like the Ken McElroy shooting in Skidmore, Mo in 1981. He, a career criminal and local bully ended up dead from wounds from several different guns and to this day no one will say who shot him. although he was shot in, broad daylight, sitting in his truck next to his wife. Good reaction, glad you enjoy westerns.

  • @raymeedc
    @raymeedc 7 месяцев назад

    Jimmy Stewart made a half dozen iconic westerns with director Anthony Mann throughout the 50s, beginning with “Winchester 73”. He made only one western in his early career, a nifty comedy with Marlena Dietrich, “Destry Rides Again” ✅

  • @mojomegaman
    @mojomegaman Год назад +2

    I wish SOMEONE would react to the Searchers on RUclips. Such an amazing story and non-traditional role for John Wayne. For it's time, it exposed and challenged prejudices against Native Americans.

  • @robertmaez6706
    @robertmaez6706 Год назад +1

    Just another 70ish adding my vote to watch "The Treasure of Sierra Madre". Action, greed, Banditos(We don't need no stinkin' badges") and a great ending. Love great westerns.

  • @nealhoffman7518
    @nealhoffman7518 Год назад +1

    You would love the Sons of Katie Elder for classic John Wayne.
    For Jimmy Stewart, Harvey and Philadelphia Story.
    For both of them together again... The Shootist

  • @avidavid9237
    @avidavid9237 Год назад +1

    Lee Marvin played such as bad guy in this movie that I would recommend you watch The Professionals, he redeems himself as a good guy. He is lead with Burt Lancaster and Jack Palance. Woody Strode, who played Pompe in this movie has a much larger part in The Professionals, is always good on the screen.

  • @waterbeauty85
    @waterbeauty85 Год назад +1

    I love this movie. It's one of my favorites. Here are three more westerns I highly recommend: Sergeant Rutledge (1960) - action, courtroom drama, social commentary against bigotry; Fort Apache (1948) - colorful, likable protagonists at odds with a complex, humanly relatable antagonist who is fatally flawed by pride, ambition, dogmatism, and prejudices about class and race; High Noon (1952) - a favorite of many American presidents who related to its theme of standing firm on what you believe in even when the people who said they'd stand by you abandon you.

  • @jimspetdragons3737
    @jimspetdragons3737 Год назад +1

    John Wayne also did many war films. My fav is In Harms Way (naval film).
    The Shootist (western also w/ Ron Howard) is the only other Wayne/Stewart film they did together. Wayne's final film. True Grit is a true classic western.
    Andy Devine did voice Friar Tuck in Disney's animated movie Robin Hood, but not piglet. (I thought he might have been Pooh, but not him either).

  • @mazza4190
    @mazza4190 Год назад +1

    You will be hard pressed not to find this western in any top 10 greatest list presented by fans of the genre. Classic Western. One of the best.

  • @toodlescae
    @toodlescae Год назад

    John Wayne is my favorite westerns actor. He does funny to heartbreaking and everything in between in the same genre. *McLintock* is hilarious but *The Cowboys* is a tearjerker.

  • @MrGpschmidt
    @MrGpschmidt Год назад +1

    Deep Cut Mads; solid oater. FYI: Andy Devine (the marshall) voiced Friar Tuck in Disney's animated ROBIN HOOD; oddly enough - today is John Fiedler's birthday (and he voiced Piglet!)

  • @vovindequasahi
    @vovindequasahi Год назад +1

    Look at this! Here you go! Someone said women weren't treated right back then, well it certainly seems that in Hollywood they were strong women.

  • @singlechristiancowboy
    @singlechristiancowboy Год назад

    Nora also played a leadin lady on the western series High Chaparral and "Dirty" Sally Ferguson on the long runnin series Gunsmoke. Lee Marvin "Liberty" also played an awesome character in a World War 2 war movie called The Dirty Dozen.

  • @gitchegumee
    @gitchegumee Год назад +3

    If you want to continue with B&W classics, try "Stagecoach", "Red River", "My Darling Clementine" or "High Noon"

    • @michaelstach5744
      @michaelstach5744 Год назад +1

      Great list

    • @gitchegumee
      @gitchegumee Год назад

      @@michaelstach5744 Our love affair with westerns gives us so many possibilities. I could rattle off dozens more. You could literally have a channel that is nothing but westerns.

  • @ironman20740
    @ironman20740 Год назад +1

    One of my favorite movies. Jimmy Stewart and John Wayne can't beat that. Watch Rio Bravo

  • @jlmain5777
    @jlmain5777 Год назад

    My favorite western and probably my favorite movie. I’m with the newspaper publisher “Beer’s not drinking!”

  • @carlanderson7618
    @carlanderson7618 Год назад +1

    IMHO the best John Wayne Westerns are this, She Wore a Yellow Ribbon, Rio Grande and The Shootist. Oteh Westerns you might consider are The Magnificent Seven (1960), How the West Was Won (1962)

  • @Britcarjunkie
    @Britcarjunkie Год назад

    One of my favorite Jimmy Stewart westerns, is "Bandolero!".

  • @floorticket
    @floorticket Год назад +1

    John Wayne appeared as himself in season 5, episode 2 of I Love Lucy. The episode: "Lucy and John Wayne" aired October 10th, 1955.

    • @CoastalNomad
      @CoastalNomad Год назад

      Actually John Wayne was on "Lucy" more than once......

  • @vovindequasahi
    @vovindequasahi Год назад +1

    Great actors in this one!

  • @tduffy5
    @tduffy5 Год назад

    What John did to Van Cleef in the saloon is what he learned from Wyatt Earp on the silent western movie sets.

  • @ericj166
    @ericj166 Год назад

    James Stewart was superb in " Flight Of The Phoenix " and also loved Lee Marvin as a hilarious drunken gunslinger in " Cat Ballou "

  • @Hapsard
    @Hapsard Год назад +1

    Hmmm ... Only 60, so that may explain why my favorite western is Hombre (from an Elmore Leonard story back when he used to write westerns rather than crime type stories). I think my favorite John Wayne is Rio Bravo, though the Cowboys was fun.

  • @CarolinaCharles777
    @CarolinaCharles777 Год назад +1

    Hey Madison, if you like westerns and you like James Stewart, THE NAKED SPUR is a must-watch!

  • @justgladimhere9281
    @justgladimhere9281 Год назад +3

    Things are more realistic now that the people who were there are gone LOL

  • @GaryLBlakeley
    @GaryLBlakeley Год назад

    Great reaction to one of the greatest westerns.
    John Wayne born as Marion Robert Morrison is a national treasure.
    He was also known as The Duke.
    I’m glad you have decided to go down this path. Too bad we have to wait another month for a new western.

  • @stephenmonk8787
    @stephenmonk8787 Год назад +2

    Great choice. You HAVE to check out "The Big Country". Gregory Peck, Charlton Heston and Burl Ives. Somebody back me up here.

  • @ecclesrice9789
    @ecclesrice9789 Год назад

    This was one of dad's favorite westerns. His (and mine) others were the mini series Lonesome Dove and Open Range

  • @dougjohnson4066
    @dougjohnson4066 Год назад +1

    Andy Devine played the Sheriff, another Great Character Actor. 👍😍🥰🤔🥴😆

  • @geniusjohn8280
    @geniusjohn8280 Год назад +3

    Madison looks great in a that type of hat. I said it before and its true.

  • @BlueShadow777
    @BlueShadow777 Год назад +2

    You may recognise Vera Miles from Psycho (1960). Here she plays Hallie, Tom’s girlfriend.

  • @robwealer5416
    @robwealer5416 Год назад +4

    Liberty Valance... I think the name is not something random... like he's the unfortunate bastard son of Manifest Destiny that must be dealt with. "Valance" means "a length of decorative drapery hung above a window to screen the curtain fittings." There was a huge body of modern myth study coming out of academia in the 1950s, questioning iconic imagery. To me, this movie is a critique of simplistic western myths... and a brilliant one at that.

  • @jmweed1861
    @jmweed1861 Год назад

    One of John Wayne best Western. When Legond becomes fact, Print the Legond. Greatest line in movie history...

  • @MrRizzo1961
    @MrRizzo1961 Год назад +1

    One of many favorite John Wayne movies. And James Stewart movies. Do their last movie together " the Shootest" 2 all time GOATS ✌️❤️

  • @subitman
    @subitman Год назад

    Lee Marvin (Liberty Valance) was in a good WW2 movie: The Dirty Dozen. It was about a group of convicted soldiers who were recruited to do a dangerous mission based on their skills. There was a whole training montage and then the mission itself.

  • @kennethrussell1158
    @kennethrussell1158 Год назад +1

    66 year old grandfather. My wife and I grew up watching classic films like this when we born in the late 50's and grew up in the early to mid 1960's. Enjoy 👍🙏 "Ken And Brenda Russell"

  • @rossjohnson5114
    @rossjohnson5114 Год назад +3

    You should check out Rio Bravo and True Grit, both with John Wayne.

  • @oldgeezer3324
    @oldgeezer3324 Год назад +2

    Henry Fonda and James Stewart were best friends, they started out together as roommates in Tinseltown. You haven't see James Stewart shine until you see him and Henry in Cheyenne Social club His best western Thanks!

    • @MadisonKThames
      @MadisonKThames  Год назад

      Thank you!!💖

    • @philipstoddard1502
      @philipstoddard1502 Год назад +1

      It figures one Old Geezer would beat another old geezer to the punch. I was going to recommend Cheyenne Social Club. It was directed by Gene Kelly.

    • @oldgeezer3324
      @oldgeezer3324 Год назад

      @@philipstoddard1502 hehe There are others, I thought that was the best one

  • @bossfan49
    @bossfan49 Год назад +1

    Andy Devine who plays the pathetic Marshal Appleyard also starred in "Stagecoach", John Ford's landmark 1939 western, which was John Wayne's breakout film. It also stars legendary actor John Carradine (father of actors David, Keith and Robert), who appeared in over 200 films (not including tv appearances).
    *Edit- Robert Carradine's first film role was at the age of 18 in The Cowboys (1972) with John Wayne. A definite "must watch" in the John Wayne catalog. It also stars a creepy/evil Bruce Dern, Slim Pickens and the unmistakable Roscoe Lee Browne.

  • @luvlgs1
    @luvlgs1 Год назад +1

    Check out Hombre, starring Paul Newman. And The Cowboys, again with John Wayne. And don't forget Lonesome Dove, starring Robert Duvall and Tommy Lee Jones. All are great Westerns you're sure to enjoy.

  • @djgrant8761
    @djgrant8761 Год назад +1

    John Fiedler who starred in the 1957 film 12 Angry Men voiced Piglet in Winnie the Pooh. Andy Devine who played Marshal Link Appleyard in The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance voiced Friar Tuck in Walt Disney’s 1973 animated film Robin Hood.