'The Searchers' (1956) | Video Essay

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  • Опубликовано: 2 янв 2016
  • A Video Essay detailing John Ford's Epic Western Masterpiece, 'The Searchers' (1956).
    Made for my Film Art Presentation for the New York Film Academy.
    Researched, Narrated and Produced By Toby Kearton

Комментарии • 210

  • @Harpo.jr70
    @Harpo.jr70 4 месяца назад +9

    When I hear the song " What makes a man to wonder " I think if my Dad and I watching this when i was young , I'm 70 now and my Dad died a long time ago , but i still tear up . I usually watch this every year.

  • @deedeegreen8338
    @deedeegreen8338 3 года назад +31

    The last shot of John Wayne holding his right elbow with his left hand, was a nice tribute to his friend, Harry Carey.

    • @Wilsonrre
      @Wilsonrre 10 месяцев назад +1

      H.C., Sr. whu was J. Ford’s previous, silent era, leading man. H.C., Jr. co-starred in this.

  • @johnwesley8327
    @johnwesley8327 4 года назад +57

    One of the finest movies ever made!

    • @Skabanis
      @Skabanis 3 года назад +10

      Yes nothing like it!

  • @JohnProthero
    @JohnProthero 3 года назад +35

    I have always loved that ending shot, with the door framing Wayne, and the story of why John Wayne grasped his right arm.

    • @mayankgautam186
      @mayankgautam186 9 месяцев назад +1

      why did he grasped his right hand?

    • @JohnProthero
      @JohnProthero 9 месяцев назад +5

      @@mayankgautam186 the actress who played the Mrs. Jorgenson, Olive Carey, was wife to an actor who'd worked with Wayne on other films, Harry Carey (father of Harry Carey, Jr., who played Brad Jorgenson in The Searches). Harry Carey Sr. would grab his arm, so, in this last scene, while Olive Carey was behind the camera, Wayne did her late husband's characteristic mannerism, as a tribute to the actor.

  • @jerrybush3265
    @jerrybush3265 4 года назад +37

    Best western. Ever made in my opinion

  • @USA24541
    @USA24541 2 года назад +13

    Just the best western ever made.

  • @thatspiritualhumane
    @thatspiritualhumane 4 года назад +27

    Seen it atleast 25 times, maybe that's too less to respect such an unbeatable Western masterpiece..

  • @devinhapanovich8428
    @devinhapanovich8428 9 месяцев назад +4

    Ward Bond deserved an Oscar totally believeable

  • @mindyp51a
    @mindyp51a 7 лет назад +31

    Adore this film! Every time I watch it I see something new. And I've watched hundreds of times.

  • @cybrarian9
    @cybrarian9 4 года назад +30

    That pretty much sums up the John Ford "Anti-Hero," he has won the battle, but lost the war. We love him and we need him, but his purpose exceeds normal civil society. A knight that runs into the scene, a fireman to put out the fire, a nurse to cure the pain, and gone like a wisp of smoke once his or her job is over. 13:42 Great analysis. I was a film student ages ago at the University of Maryland, College Park. There are few "iconic films" in this world. This is one that others have tried to copy and respectfully emulate, but will never match.

    • @brunoactis1104
      @brunoactis1104 Год назад +1

      We're all here for some reason assuming he did something good. As far as i see it, he did not.

    • @cybrarian9
      @cybrarian9 Год назад

      @@brunoactis1104 Could you explain who did not do something good?

    • @ToddSauve
      @ToddSauve 3 месяца назад

      @@brunoactis1104 That is a cheap shot since you don't even bother to explain why you said this. Did you stub your toe, or your wife gave you a hard time that day? Come on man! Show some intellect and explain what you mean!

  • @nickgalvez6667
    @nickgalvez6667 4 года назад +15

    my dad and I just finished this last night for the first time and its fucking incredible

  • @YoungReactsChannel005
    @YoungReactsChannel005 Месяц назад

    One of the greatest western movie ever! I loved this movie and every time I watched, it’s getting better and better every time!

  • @bobanderson6080
    @bobanderson6080 4 года назад +26

    They don't make like this anymore, I never get tired watching this great western, would make you cry in some scenes.

    • @rustykilt
      @rustykilt 3 года назад +1

      Gotta say, when Captain Nathan Brittles sent off his company for the last time, not on did Victor Mcgaughlin shed a tear, so did I.

  • @rustykilt
    @rustykilt 3 года назад +17

    ...never fails to move me, a brilliant work that never ages. A fan of John Ford and his partnership with John Wayne. This move broke the mould for Western movies.

  • @charlesdecker9870
    @charlesdecker9870 3 года назад +11

    Definitely the greatest western film,ever made.

    • @STEVEOMEMES
      @STEVEOMEMES 3 года назад +4

      Definitely the greatest western film,ever made PERIOD.

    • @TweakaliciousTV
      @TweakaliciousTV Год назад

      Not even close...

  • @oscarsucre9059
    @oscarsucre9059 29 дней назад

    "With the camera" Legendary!

  • @waynemcauliffe2362
    @waynemcauliffe2362 3 года назад +4

    One of my favorite films for sure my favorite Western.Saw it as a kid and it`s stuck with me.

  • @CulpinKing
    @CulpinKing Год назад +2

    Brilliant! Watching this video after the Fablemans was released is hilarious. Spielberg brought the John Ford scene to life!

  • @JHarder1000
    @JHarder1000 5 лет назад +6

    This essay can only be described as superb.

  • @fredlaughlin6343
    @fredlaughlin6343 2 месяца назад +2

    Very well done review. The book "The Searchers" goes into much greater detail about Ford and Wayne. Ford's Navahos, which played Commanche, Apache, whatever he needed in a film, prospered greatly from his repeated movies made there in Monument Valley.

  • @pushbikeman
    @pushbikeman 4 года назад +17

    The Best Western Ever

  • @kalamere
    @kalamere 6 лет назад +42

    Steven Spielberg steals the opening "door" scene from The Searchers in his movie Saving Private Ryan. The Scene where the mother sees the military and the preacher walking up the driveway to tell her her sons are dead.

    • @jamesdiaz2175
      @jamesdiaz2175 3 года назад +5

      Hardest scene to watch in the whole film. Especially if you have had the duty.

    • @apexxxx10
      @apexxxx10 7 месяцев назад

      *Shaving Private Ryan. Forget it! Here’s a real war movie from Suomi-Finland* ruclips.net/video/OGbr-aAnKTo/видео.htmlsi=6qLbJuNEXEbNtpfY

  • @slomo1562
    @slomo1562 2 года назад +3

    My favorite movie of all time.

  • @michaelengel3407
    @michaelengel3407 2 года назад +3

    Best western movie ever got to audience.

  • @ninaberry7663
    @ninaberry7663 5 лет назад +17

    Excellent analysis. Shot III has an interesting personal side to it as well. John Wayne takes a moment to place his hand on his elbow as he looks through the door. The gesture was characteristic of actor Harry Carey, whose son, Harry Carey Jr., and whose wife, Olive Carey, were both in The Searchers (as Brad and Mrs. Jorgensen). Harry Carey Sr acted in hundreds of Westerns and many other films, and had passed away by the time The Searchers was shot. So Wayne's gesture was his tribute to him. He hadn't told anyone he was going to do it. Olive Carey had just exited the shot herself and was just off camera, watching, when he did it. She reportedly burst into tears.

  • @jonathanswift2251
    @jonathanswift2251 3 года назад +4

    9:23 and 9:27 and 9:42 incredible compositions that most film directors would miss out on....

  • @colinwestwood921
    @colinwestwood921 4 года назад +5

    Brilliantly performed. Outstanding performances. Watched it for the first time with my dad. Had the film on video for years 👍🙋‍♂️

  • @jettpack9168
    @jettpack9168 Год назад +1

    i thought the movie as a whole was rather uneven but the final shot is the greatest and most poignant piece of visual art ever created

  • @SaphyreTree
    @SaphyreTree 7 лет назад +37

    Love this movie so much. Saw it at least 50 times. Since I was a Little Girl of 8.

    • @jodacious46
      @jodacious46 3 года назад +2

      I, too!

    • @STEVEOMEMES
      @STEVEOMEMES 3 года назад +2

      yap every time its on TV gotta watch it.

  • @11e40r8
    @11e40r8 3 года назад +4

    I LOVED, LOVED, LOVED this movie when I was a kid (still do) but when I was a kid I liked that when they shot their guns it sounded like real guns! 😁
    Over the years and still watching this movie, I've come to appreciate other aspects, but one of these has always held my interest. In the opening part of the movie who has noticed that Ethan (John Wayne) has ALOT of body language and looks between Martha (his brothers wife) and himself!!?? ...I think in the story before what is shown in the movie that there may have been a relationship! ...Next time anybody watches this movie watch for these scenes and see what you think?

    • @davedalton1273
      @davedalton1273 2 года назад +4

      I think you are absolutely right. It is clear to me that Martha and Ethan have loved each other for years. Remember the scene where she lovingly folds and strokes Ethan's coat? What I have wondered about for some time is why did they not marry? I think the answer is that Ethan did not want a family of his own. He was the essential loner. He seemed awkward and unsure around others, always separate and apart. It was only when he was in action, tracking and fighting Native Americans, or shooting nefarious white men like Futterman, or teaching Martin about Comanche ways, that he was in his element. And yet, I find it sad that at the end, there is no place for Ethan. Yes, he finds Debbie and overcomes his blind hatred, seeing her as the niece he always loved and then brings her back. But now he is alone again. Where would he go? In the opening scene, we hear the lyrics : "What makes a man to wander"? Yes, what does?

    • @11e40r8
      @11e40r8 2 года назад +1

      @@davedalton1273 ... I always thought their love was a secret love. My guess is Martha and Ethan's brother were already hooked up, they were already married or about two. Ethan's brother in this movie always came off as a mundane man, and we all know girls like the bad boys which was Ethan. And Ethan probably like the relationship but felt some obligation to his brother. Hence the hidden relationship and unfulfilled love! ...😁 And I got that all from a few looks between Ethan and Martha, pretty dramatic!!! **L**

  • @kchambers1220
    @kchambers1220 5 лет назад +25

    perhaps the first scene you show, Ethan's response is horror because his true love (Martha) and her children died in the flames?

    • @danielheartfire614
      @danielheartfire614 3 года назад +5

      It is also made obvious the both the woman and the eldest daughter were raped and defiled.

    • @larryleecarr
      @larryleecarr 2 года назад +4

      @@danielheartfire614 Almost certainly tortured as well.

  • @zacduval1866
    @zacduval1866 3 года назад +12

    In the first scene you missed the most important part in my opinion. When he throws the scabbard off his rifle. It’s such a violent act. He is unsheathing his sword and throwing away the scabbard. Bearing naked steel in a vain attempt to save his loved ones. Like he is begging for an enemy to be there so he can channel his grief into killing that enemy.

    • @caminobop9962
      @caminobop9962 Год назад +1

      I totally agree. Take that gesture away and you're left only with two passive bystanders who are unsure what to do. It's like the armswing in tennis, except that the weapon is reaching so far back that there is no swing left to lend it forward momentum. It's only by the strength of his muscles, driven by pure force of will, that he will bring this weapon forward now to where it must strike. It's the only image in this scene that abides. Brilliant.

  • @Awesomepedia
    @Awesomepedia 6 лет назад +9

    Very well put together, this brings me back to my film school days... Wish they'd given video lectures instead of just lectures.

  • @carlob.7284
    @carlob.7284 7 лет назад +37

    This is a great essay. Thank you very much :-)

  • @migueldecarvalho8012
    @migueldecarvalho8012 3 года назад +2

    I just finished watching The Searchers for the very first time.
    I figured that if new films are rubbish, I'll watch the greatest old films instead.

  • @bubbascoutdog
    @bubbascoutdog 4 года назад +2

    Interesting analogy. I liked Ur perspective. This is ONE of my FAVORITE films of ALL time!!!

  • @MyDadMyMom503
    @MyDadMyMom503 4 года назад +1

    Decided to watch all of his films once I heard him say "WITH THE CAMERA" 😅👍👏👏👏

  • @AdamGradwell
    @AdamGradwell 6 лет назад +5

    Very good. Well done. Thank you.

  • @rorygibbons3310
    @rorygibbons3310 7 лет назад +40

    John Wayne's best role

    • @regularbasis9295
      @regularbasis9295 6 лет назад

      Rory Gibbons or the cowboys

    • @kirkmoore4515
      @kirkmoore4515 5 лет назад +4

      Buddy Holly seen this flick in 1956 After the movie, he started writing "That'll be the Day".
      John Wayne's catchphrase of That'll be the day was his inspiration.

    • @hugh-johnfleming289
      @hugh-johnfleming289 5 лет назад +1

      In Harms Way... The Shootist... there are a few where he really shown.

    • @kybowler6682
      @kybowler6682 5 лет назад

      absolutely

    • @rogueriderhood1862
      @rogueriderhood1862 4 года назад +4

      Should have got an Oscar for this role.

  • @cyrusa6172
    @cyrusa6172 3 года назад +3

    JOHN FORD; the Great.

    • @STEVEOMEMES
      @STEVEOMEMES 3 года назад

      We cant give all the credit to the Duke, John Ford helped a little 😊

  • @paulenterline3107
    @paulenterline3107 Месяц назад +1

    Also in scene 1: At the end, he flings the buckskin cover off his rifle, like a warrior drawing his sword and casting away the scabbard, signifying a fight to the finish.

  • @dennisesplin3285
    @dennisesplin3285 2 года назад +1

    Ethan has a US Sabre. A Confederate. He has a Congressional Medal of Honour. A US Award. He gives the medal to the child. It doesn't amount to much.. he remarks. No explanation is given. Ford introduces little touches. The Texas Ranger Captain Reverend secures his top hat with a handkerchief before fleeing the hostiles. Unnessary but cinematic genius.

    • @dennisesplin3285
      @dennisesplin3285 2 года назад +1

      Thanks. The Searchers has many layers. Ford hero's are flawed. Or anti hero's. Long before it was fashionable. Remember Henry Ford stiff commander in Yellow Ribbon. Ward Bond represents the law and God but is realistic to know Ethan is not a Saint.

  • @carlosirusta1162
    @carlosirusta1162 7 лет назад +10

    A very nice job, amigo, regards from Argentina!

  • @MB-cx2ks
    @MB-cx2ks 2 года назад +1

    Excellent summary/review.

  • @meditationmountainbyrishab919
    @meditationmountainbyrishab919 4 года назад +2

    Beautifully analysed, Thank you! John Ford was a cinema genius and blocking master!

  • @regularbasis9295
    @regularbasis9295 6 лет назад +1

    Thanks you saw today. You made much clearer to me.

  • @MOGGS1942
    @MOGGS1942 6 лет назад +21

    Even those who denigrate Wayne as an actor must surely admit that he was terrific in ' The Searchers '. He deserved an Oscar.
    Not many Westerns bring tears to my eyes, ( Alan Ladd riding off at the end of ' Shane ' also achieves it ), but when Wayne decides not to kill Debbie, I blub. 'The Searchers ' is a very powerful, beautifully made film, wonderfully acted by a stellar cast. In fact, it is a cinematographic masterpiece.
    I really enjoyed your essay Toby. You opened my eyes to things that I saw, but didn't really see, if get my drift. I must now purchase a DVD and add it to my collection.
    Have you produced any more essays ?
    Good luck.

    • @kalamere
      @kalamere 6 лет назад +2

      It is his redemption as a character.

    • @nickmitsialis
      @nickmitsialis 6 лет назад +1

      Yeah well I get a bit of 'dust allergies' at the ending when Ride Away plays & the door closes on Ethan. It's sort of made me sad to know he could never quite 'fit in'.

    • @nickmitsialis
      @nickmitsialis 6 лет назад +1

      I agree Wayne was more talented that he let on: Witness Quiet Man: Sean Thornton ( a man who accidentally killed his friend while sparring) & She Wore A Yellow Ribbon: Captain Brittles the old warhorse, tries to stop a war using his friendship with Pony who walks--the young bucks on both sides want to fight but both old men know what that will lead to so, they do their best to head off the violence.

    • @vasantinamdar2204
      @vasantinamdar2204 5 лет назад +2

      Shane Searchers and High Noon are my top favourite westerns.

    • @ChrisMaxfieldActs
      @ChrisMaxfieldActs 5 лет назад +1

      @@nickmitsialis I love Yellow Ribbon because it may be the only time he truly played against type. Brittles is so much more sensitive and sentimental than his usual characters tend to be.

  • @jackrabbit5047
    @jackrabbit5047 4 года назад +6

    Very interesting presentation. John Wayne's best film by far. This is the one movie where he really showed that he did indeed know how to act! And that last scene, with Ethan standing in the door frame, then turning and walking away with the Wayne stagger always blows my mind. Even get teary-eyed because its such a beautifully composed scene. I still think its the best cinematographic scene ever (though of course, that is a very subjective statement!)

  • @tombrennan6312
    @tombrennan6312 6 лет назад +6

    Keep in mind the intense hatred between the Comanches and the Texans; more of a personal blood feud kind of thing than the usual kind of hostility between invaders and invaded. Both Texans and Comanches were predatory and gleefully violent and their clash had a special bitterness as seen in this picture. That the Comanches had driven the Apaches, a most formidable people, from Comancheria is a testament to the ferocity of the Comanche. And that the Texans were willing to take the Comanches on is a testament to their ferocity. Though in the end it was the United States Regular Army, not the Texans, that defeated the Comanche.

    • @63DW89A
      @63DW89A 6 лет назад +1

      +Tom Brennan Most historians would say it was the near-extermination of the buffalo by the mid 1870's that defeated the Comanche by destroying their way of life, a life dependant on the buffalo herds. Also, European diseases like smallpox and measles, by the mid 1800's, severely reduced Comanche population.

    • @tombrennan6312
      @tombrennan6312 6 лет назад +1

      Yes, all are good points. In the end it was Mackenzie who put paid to the Comanche but that was the end of an involved process.

    • @24OCTUBRE1788
      @24OCTUBRE1788 11 месяцев назад

      Very curious that in the movie they talk about TEXICANS and not TEXANS... Is there a subtlety I miss here...? Could anyone enlighten me on this, please?

  • @AngusStewart01
    @AngusStewart01 5 лет назад +4

    Holy shit Steven spilburg actually mentioned something I’m learning in theatre 🎭 class . With the horizon it’s a huge part of not just film making but acting great video on the western .

    • @kalamere
      @kalamere 5 лет назад +1

      Well he learned that from JOHN FORD

  • @charlescollier9302
    @charlescollier9302 7 лет назад +8

    One of my absolute most favorite movies. I have the laserdisc of the Serachers and it includes quite a backstory of the Searchers. A town was built for the cast and crew on location. There were also rumors that many of the cast and crew died in later years due to radiation exposure from A-Bomb testing.

    • @johnhindsill1933
      @johnhindsill1933 7 лет назад +6

      I believe the film you refer to is "The Conqueror" directed by Dick Powell, starring Wayne an Susan Hayword. All three had Lung Cancer...and were heavy smokers.

    • @davido1953
      @davido1953 6 лет назад +1

      There was never any atomic bomb testing anywhere near Monument Valley.

    • @cb9345
      @cb9345 5 лет назад +1

      John Hindsill, Charles Collier: Maybe getting conflated with uranium mining mills in areas of southern Utah and near Monument Valley--workers there have been granted compensation for radiation effects. archive.sltrib.com/article.php?id=53364026&itype=CMSID (look at the bottom of the page)

    • @lindajohnson4204
      @lindajohnson4204 Год назад

      @@johnhindsill1933 Another was Agnes Morehead, but I think I have read that there were many more who probably contracted their cancer from the fallout. The movie was considered Wayne's most ridiculous, miscast role: Genghis Khan.

    • @johnhindsill1933
      @johnhindsill1933 Год назад +1

      @@lindajohnson4204 He certainly was. I'm proud to say that I passed on it after seeing the trailer.

  • @marcuskaufman5412
    @marcuskaufman5412 Месяц назад

    Nice. Sharing with peeps. If I may be so bold, Ethan’s madness is predicated by the civil war. Having seen horrors unimaginable as a soldier, he returns to the family fold only to have the horrors pursue him there. That is the meaning of scene 1. That is what drives him mad. Also, the Indians are not taking the road less traveled for cinematic effect but to stay out of rifle shot. Finally, “won the battle but not the war” is not applicable to the man.All he does is fight battles. He is a Paladin.

  • @ARCtrooperblueleader
    @ARCtrooperblueleader 4 года назад +3

    Beautiful essay.

  • @ivanboyraz2936
    @ivanboyraz2936 7 лет назад +10

    Thank you Toby - your video essay motivated me to get the movie.

  • @Isleofskye
    @Isleofskye 5 лет назад +2

    Excellent analysis,my friend........

  • @afshina
    @afshina 4 года назад +3

    Excellent job Toby. I have watched this movie numerous times and read the book (The Searchers by Alan Le May) twice, yet had not notices a few details that you point to so well. For example, the "To wonder forever between the winds" was completely lost on me! Well done and thank you :-)

  • @tanteranne466
    @tanteranne466 2 года назад

    Dear Mr Kearton, I came across your video essay doing some research on the net about John Ford's techniques in The Searchers. I wanted to tell you how admiring I am of your work, which I will mention (as well as your name) to my students in class tomorrow. Thank you very much for this highly instructive document.

  • @Ed-uz6em
    @Ed-uz6em 2 года назад

    My favorite movie of all time…had to go see Monument Valley because of this movie!

  • @johns123
    @johns123 Год назад

    Great analysis of the visuals. The visual storytelling is so important to John Ford's films, and the key to what made him such a great filmmaker. You can understand the themes of his films in their complexity even with the audio muted. Good work with this video!

  • @curtismes
    @curtismes 3 года назад +1

    this is a great essay...very well done

  • @67lionsoflisbon37
    @67lionsoflisbon37 3 месяца назад

    The more I find out about this film, the greater it seems. I've read the book by Alan Le May and would highly recommend it. John Fords adaptation is, well words are not good enough. My only regret is that I've never seen it on a cinema screen. Would look great.

  • @nancywood9027
    @nancywood9027 5 лет назад +4

    There may be a day again when we need a "John Wayne". Men of these times stood out. They were memorable and inspiring.

  • @TheInnacity
    @TheInnacity 2 года назад +1

    thank you kindly

    • @GeneRogers-lo1qy
      @GeneRogers-lo1qy 2 года назад

      I think said by Hank Worden who in the Searchers plays the kindly fool.

  • @TheRivrPrncess
    @TheRivrPrncess 7 лет назад +22

    I have a different take on Scene 3. I think Ethan's coming to the door, starting to go in and then walking away symbolized the struggle he still had within himself. He now knows that not all Indians are bad and that it is not wrong to fall in love with one as Laurie and Martin had fallen in love with each other. But he still had the wrong feelings, so he walks away rather than mess up the happiness everyone around him feels since he can't totally feel as they do.

  • @mindyp51a
    @mindyp51a 7 лет назад +6

    Toby, where did you get that clip of Spielberg talking about meeting Ford?

  • @STEVEOMEMES
    @STEVEOMEMES 3 года назад +1

    THE best western ever mad period

  • @terrymassie9796
    @terrymassie9796 5 лет назад +5

    I have watched it ten times hope to see it ten more.

  • @mikeardington8530
    @mikeardington8530 3 года назад +1

    The best ever movie and western

  • @Tobbymano
    @Tobbymano 4 года назад +3

    The final john wayne shot of "the man who killed liberty valance" Can have the same analysis I think, except the fact that it's a shot from outside the house

  • @amaree9732
    @amaree9732 3 года назад +1

    Very insightful review focusing on the story theme and the characters. Good voice over by Toby Kearton. I can always distinguish between Scottish and Irish accent. Irish has a musical, higher-toned, sing-songy cadence. Scottish accents have a more serious and stern quality as though they're quietly trying to convince you of something.

  • @H.pylori
    @H.pylori 6 лет назад +11

    As a long time Searchers fan, I can say that your video is well done and appreciated. I agree with Scene 3, Wayne is a societal outcast. He can't go into the cabin. His life during and after the Civil War has been based on hate and the attempt to resolve the root causes of that hate. Also, what about the scenes suggesting a romantic relationship between Ethan and his brother's wife. Observe their glances and stares, when she interrupted the Rev. Samuel Clayton from further suggesting that Ethan might be a wanted man, andher caressing his coat, and the fact that when he reaches the burning ranch he calls out for Martha. It is likely that he loved her before the War yet because of Ethan's faults, Martha married the brother but still was carrying the torch for Ethan. The hate for Native Americans is clear right from the beginning with that look Ethan gave Martin at the dinner table, and calling his rescue of Martin "nothing."

    • @irenemohan
      @irenemohan 4 года назад

      r g Totally agree and also the look he throws back to the women who were rescued from the Comanches - Wayne should have received an Oscar for his role in The Searchers.

  • @sidhayes6168
    @sidhayes6168 Год назад

    This is a very good review.

  • @stephaniekulaga1808
    @stephaniekulaga1808 Год назад

    Ulubiony actor

  • @anderander5662
    @anderander5662 4 года назад +2

    Was there ever a more beautiful man than Jeffrey Hunter in the Searchers?

  • @coach3155
    @coach3155 3 года назад

    great job on this man

  • @larryleecarr
    @larryleecarr 2 года назад +1

    It is worth noting that in the original screenplay (by Frank S. Nugent) Ethan, in the climatic scene, levels his gun at Debbie and says, "I'm sorry girl. Shut your eyes," pauses, lowers his gun and says, "You sure do favor your mother."

  • @renaissancemarinetv3536
    @renaissancemarinetv3536 4 года назад +1

    very good job!

  • @whatifindinteresting3067
    @whatifindinteresting3067 5 лет назад +2

    Good stuff

  • @dq405
    @dq405 5 лет назад +7

    Don't you find it odd, that in your three analyses, you never spoke about Ford's use of the horizon? Ford was not just kidding when he lectured Spielberg on the meaning of horizon lines within a frame.

  • @gdsandkes
    @gdsandkes Год назад +1

    Mose was the "idiot" but he was right about the folly of leaving the family unprotected, and then put Ethan onto the Mexican who could bring him to Scar, and then finally alerted Martin to the whereabouts of Scar's campsite. At the end, Ethan was alone and adrift, and still had a murder charge over his head.

  • @jeffreyjohnson2203
    @jeffreyjohnson2203 6 лет назад +3

    An interesting and enjoyable essay and thank you Toby. If I may ask for a clarification, given the specific time period and culture (with emphasis), do you use the word "hatred" as synonymous with righteous indignation? Wondering if Ethan's emotion is being a bit reduced and simplified by now more progressive and modern racial mores. It was indeed the era of "manifest destiny", judge that as we wish.

    • @jesusgonzalez6715
      @jesusgonzalez6715 5 лет назад

      Even the people around Ethan in the movie get a bit queasy at times at Ethan's intense dislike of Indians.
      I mean his adoptive nephew nearly loses out on the love of his life just to stop Ethan from murdering somebody through his blinding hatred

  • @malimis7371
    @malimis7371 4 года назад +1

    Meni najbolji western film

  • @Channel-qe6xt
    @Channel-qe6xt 2 года назад

    Dunno if anybody has said this already but John Ford actually won his last best director Oscar for 1952's The Quiet Man - not for 1956's The Searchers :D. George Stevens won the 1956 Best Director Oscar for directing Giant :)

  • @rodrigomiau
    @rodrigomiau 5 лет назад +4

    You should do an essay about Godless (Netflix) and how it borrow from John Ford and others classics.

  • @bonniescott6470
    @bonniescott6470 3 года назад +6

    John Wayne is my HERO 😍🥰
    Don’t make them like him anymore 👍

    • @paillette2010
      @paillette2010 2 года назад

      Funny how he made his career as a war hero, yet unlike Stewart or Gable, he never served.

  • @bryanlint9327
    @bryanlint9327 5 лет назад +3

    I wonder why no one ever figured that horses can not survive very well in the Arizona/Utah desert? I guess mules would not be as romantic for the Duke to ride on.

  • @grahamhill6340
    @grahamhill6340 3 года назад +1

    Good presentation...but if John Ford himself was to critique it, he wouldn't be amused. In fact, Ford hated film scholars and interviewers, he never liked talking about his career or impact on cinema itself. To him it was simply a job and he thought of himself as a shy craftsman.
    If he had his life to do over again, he would rather have exchanged the fame and glory for a career in the Navy!
    Having spent some 40 years in HOLLYWOOD myself as both a writer and studio historian, I was fortunate enough to meet and learn from the old-timers and appreciate their work having spent a childhood growing up watching their movies and TV shows.
    THE SEARCHERS was Ford's masterpiece and Monument Valley was surely John Ford country, and because of that very few westerns were ever shot there by anyone else. The scene II in the above video with that prominent and so majestic rock where the Indians are flanking the Duke and his party, that one rock is the most iconic piece of scenery I have ever seen in any movie.
    Ford had shot two other of his westerns in front of it - FORT APACHE and CHEYENNE AUTUMN, but none as better as the Vista-Vision splendor of this one.
    For anyone interested in searching for what I call "THE SEARCHERS ROCK" -you'll have a hard time finding it, and I only found out by hiring a Navajo guide who works as a part-time location scout. I had a rough idea by using Google Earth, even the folks at the famous Goulding's Lodge didn't know precisely where it was... and the irony is my favorite rock was located on the other side of the canyon behind Goulding's.
    It still looks majestic, but if you're lucky like I was you'll see it best in all it's glory with a sunny blue sky filled with clouds the way it was shot. There's a lot more sand banked up to it, and it's actually smaller than I thought, but again everything on film looks bigger doesn't it...
    THE SEARCHERS is the most iconic movie ever made in Monument Valley, but the cave at the end of the film -well that's located right where I live in Los Angeles, in Griffith Park, some may remember it from the original INVASION OF THE BODYCATCHERS and TV shows like BATMAN.

  • @radhavinodbose8554
    @radhavinodbose8554 3 года назад +1

    One of the most remarkable early days'wild west movie! Kudos to Director, John Ford n John Wayen!Thanks for the outstanding post.Why didn't include,"Butch Cassedy n The Sun Dance Kid",in the select band of classic Western movies?Or Included,only John Ford made Western Movies?

  • @paulazmudzinski9225
    @paulazmudzinski9225 2 года назад

    At a little bit before and after 11:00 we are inadvertently getting a visual lesson on the differences of riding styles of the Comanche (and all plains tribes) and the Texans (or non Indians). The Comanche are riding in a single file, so that it is harder for their enemies to ascertain how many are in the party or group. The Texans are riding side by side (a style also favored by cavalry) making it easier for trackers to figure out how many in the party or group. -mikenotpaula.

    • @24OCTUBRE1788
      @24OCTUBRE1788 11 месяцев назад

      Hence the expression: Indian file ...

  • @AmatureAstronomer
    @AmatureAstronomer 3 года назад +1

    Twas a good picture.

  • @Mr.wednesdayallfather
    @Mr.wednesdayallfather Год назад

    Also I've mentioned this in a couple of other videos that I've watched on this but haven't here the book that this movie is based off of it's a Lewis Lamar book and it goes into so much more detail on the characters it's a really good read if you haven't read it my dad used to read it to me as a bedtime story

  • @sanjursan
    @sanjursan 3 года назад +1

    Maybe Akira Kurosawa gets at least a mention somewhere, lol. Ford did openly credit Kurosawa, no real reason for you to ignore him. (Otherwise a really fine video, thanks!)

  • @silaonthetrack
    @silaonthetrack 2 года назад

    Wouawwww avec les chevaux ils vont trop vite c geniallllll

  • @7beers
    @7beers 4 года назад

    Isn't there a scene in this movie with 2 teen girls who have been captured by the Comanches and have gone mad? Can anyone please help me recall any info about this scene?

    • @ant7936
      @ant7936 4 года назад

      You may find a few scenes have been cut for PC because Wayne's character is "a racist".

    • @7beers
      @7beers 4 года назад +1

      @@ant7936 I actually found the scene a few weeks ago. It's about 1/2-way through the movie. :)

    • @irenemohan
      @irenemohan 4 года назад

      7beers Glad you found it - that particular scene is a testament to the fact that Wayne could act.

  • @larryleecarr
    @larryleecarr 2 года назад

    There is an excellent book by Glenn Frankel on the making of The Searchers.

  • @melissakalloway1916
    @melissakalloway1916 2 года назад

    "He won the battle, but lost the war"? On the contrary, he won both and is now simply taking time to allow the spent bitterness be transformed into the calm this wide landscape affords him. Returning Debbie instead of killing her is the first crack in the shell of hatred and revenge that sustained him all those years. His transformation is visceral and moves slowly to the surface in the company of the family he now realizes he needs, and is needed by.

  • @capdriving
    @capdriving 5 лет назад

    I was born in 1956 and never watch westerns. Jeffrey hunter I only remember him in Star Trek , Vera Miles only when she scream in psycho. Ward Bond -never knew he exist, but John was the duke. Green Beret and some WW2 movies. Now as I watch I can appreciaate these movies, Amazing to see Peter Graves- the professor gilligan island, and other

  • @ipsurvivor
    @ipsurvivor 3 года назад

    👍

  • @JohnJRambo-zs5ve
    @JohnJRambo-zs5ve 7 лет назад +10

    the ending when he walks away into the desert reminds me of Rambo 2 when the hero walks away in the same manner...mabey a John Ford copy eh?

    • @SABINOAZ1975
      @SABINOAZ1975 5 лет назад +3

      Coppola final scene in Godfather had door shutting. Copied The Searchers final scene.

  • @Mr.wednesdayallfather
    @Mr.wednesdayallfather Год назад

    Also he gives his brother a bag with 60 double eagles in it now a single double eagle is a $50 gold piece if I'm remembering correctly he also says later that he has twice that in this other bag that he had so that is 120 $50 gold pieces