My Darling Clementine with Henry Fonda: DVD Cover
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My Darling Clementine Director: John Ford Cast: Henry Fonda, Linda Darnell, Victor Mature, Jane Darwell

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  • DVD Release Date: 01/06/2004
  • Original Release: 1946
  • Rating: Not Rated
  • Sales Rank: 13,775

Viewer Rating: (2 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Performances" See All

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DVD - Black & White$19.99
 
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Features

Commentary by Wyatt Earp III; Alternate pre-release version of movie; Behind-the-scenes featurette about alternate version

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Scene Index

Side #1 -- My Darling Clementine: Pre-Release Version
1. Main Titles [2:14]
2. Rough-Looking Country [2:52]
3. The Earp Brothers [1:42]
4. Tombstone [2:36]
5. The Man From Dodge City [2:24]
6. Death in the Family [:38]
7. The New Marshal [:27]
8. Only 18 Years Old [1:58]
9. Ten Thousand Cattle Straying [3:20]
10. Eight-Handed Poker [2:43]
11. Doc Holliday [1:46]
12. Shakespeare in Tombstone [:28]
13. The Absent Actor [5:47]
14. Soliloquies for the Clantons [1:26]
15. Miss Carter [3:21]
16. Reunion [1:02]
17. A Troubled Man [4:01]
18. Sunday Morning [6:18]
19. Doc's Girl [:57]
20. If You Ask Me... [3:38]
21. The Marshal's Lady [5:21]
22. Good Advice [4:41]
23. The Pendant [2:19]
24. Going After Doc [2:03]
25. Chihuahua's Other Man [1:51]
26. The Operation [3:03]
27. The Clanton's Revenge [1:07]
28. Doctor Holiday [2:52]
29. A Family Affair [3:59]
30. Serving a Warrant [:42]
31. Gunfight at the O.K. Corral [2:13]
32. I Sure Like That Name [2:46]
Side #2 -- My Darling Clementine
1. Main Titles [2:14]
2. Rough-Looking Country [2:52]
3. The Earp Brothers [1:42]
4. Tombstone [2:36]
5. The Man From Dodge City [2:24]
6. Death in the Family [:38]
7. The New Marshal [:27]
8. Only 18 Years Old [1:58]
9. Ten Thousand Cattle Straying [3:20]
10. Eight-Handed Poker [2:43]
11. Doc Holliday [1:46]
12. Shakespeare in Tombstone [:28]
13. The Absent Actor [5:47]
14. Soliloquies for the Clantons [1:26]
15. Miss Carter [3:21]
16. Reunion [1:02]
17. A Troubled Man [4:01]
18. Sunday Morning [6:18]
19. Doc's Girl [:57]
20. If You Ask Me... [3:38]
21. The Marshal's Lady [5:21]
22. Good Advice [4:41]
23. The Pendant [2:19]
24. Going After Doc [2:03]
25. Chihuahua's Other Man [1:51]
26. The Operation [3:03]
27. The Clanton's Revenge [1:07]
28. Doctor Holiday [2:52]
29. A Family Affair [3:59]
30. Serving a Warrant [:42]
31. Gunfight at the O.K. Corral [2:13]
32. I Sure Like That Name [2:46]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

John Ford was to westerns what Alfred Hitchcock was to thrillers, and his matchless directorial ability has seldom been displayed more effectively (and less ostentatiously) than in My Darling Clementine, a highly fictionalized but dramatically satisfying re-creation of the Wild West’s most famous feud. Ford all but threw out the historical accounts in preparing his version of the notorious gunfight at Tombstone’s O.K. Corral, which pitted mild-mannered lawman Wyatt Earp (Henry Fonda) and deadly gambler Doc Holliday (Victor Mature) against brutal rustlers led by shifty Old Man Clanton (Walter Brennan) and his dull-witted son Ike (Grant Withers). In realizing his own vision of the places and events -- which included building a replica of Tombstone in the middle of his favorite location, Monument Valley -- Ford successfully conveyed a sense of authenticity that belied recorded facts and eyewitness recollections. Fonda’s Wyatt Earp is honest, taciturn, and diffident, unlike the morally ambiguous character his real-life counterpart apparently was; Mature’s Doc Holliday similarly romanticizes the drunken, murderous psychopath who eventually died of tuberculosis. But Ford’s liberties are easily forgiven in recognition of his peerless skill in dramatizing the arduous lives and violent deaths of the hardy pioneers who settled America’s southwestern deserts. Exquisite cinematography, faultless performances, and archetypal situations are woven together seamlessly to make Clementine a masterwork among movie westerns. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble

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Customer Reviews

  • Viewer Rating:
  • Ratings: 2Reviews: 2

Poor history, but entertaining on its ownby rickr44318

Reader Rating:
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May 02, 2009: If you don't think too deeply about the history of the Earps, the Clantons and the Gunfight at the OK Corral, this is a great John Ford Western; Fonda and Brennan in particular are marvellous to watch. But if you're looking for an accurate rendering of the Earp-Clanton-Behan factions and what really happened in 1881, check out the "Unsolved History" documentary or the Kurt Russell/Val Kilmer film "Tombstone."

Outstanding restoration & DVD! *************!by Anonymous

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January 16, 2004: Not only is the DVD outstanding, but the restoration of John Ford's classic western is phenominal. The documentary telling what all had to be done is outstanding, & one of the most interesting featurettes I've seen on a DVD. Regretfully, not everything Zanuck cut was restored, due to the fact Fox destroyed the first reel, but the restoration team did their best to restore this film to Ford's intentions, & to view the film closer to his view is fascinating. It's like taking a great work of art, & realizing that it was even intended to be even better.