DVD - 2 Disc Set - Special Edition / Wide Screen / Digi-Pak / Subtitled Learn more
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| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - Special Edition / Wide Screen / Subtitled / Dubbed | $12.99 |
| Blu-ray | $23.19 |
Disc 1: ; Newly restored picture and audio; Commentary by director John Carpenter and historian/critic Richard Schickel; John Wayne Westerns trailer gallery; Subtitles: English, Français, Português & Korean (feature film only); ; Disc 2: ; Career profile The Men Who Made the Movies: HOward Hawks; 2 all-new featurettes: ; Commemoration: Howard Hawks' Rio Bravo; Old Tuscon: Where the Legends Walked
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Rio Bravo: Feature Presentation
1. Credits [1:25]
2. A Life for a Drink [2:34]
3. Besting Burdette [1:22]
4. Wheeler's Wagon Train [4:30]
5. Bull by the Tail [2:12]
6. Wasted Beer [2:35]
7. Hotel Delivery [3:18]
8. Nighttime Jitters [5:19]
9. Dude's Story [3:35]
10. Colorado's Good Sense [1:47]
11. Who's the Card Cheat? [3:54]
12. That Kind of Girl [2:20]
13. Shot in the Back [1:34]
14. Tracking a Killer [3:03]
15. Blood Spilled [5:54]
16. Smart for a Change [3:02]
17. Drink With Feathers [4:20]
18. Wakeup Call [3:32]
19. Nathan Burdette and Gang [4:01]
20. Dislikes and Grudges [4:40]
21. Staying Put [4:02]
22. What Deguello Means [1:01]
23. Dude Gets His Guns Back [2:14]
24. Trigger-Happy Stumpy [4:42]
25. An Open Door [5:49]
26. A Kiss for Stumpy [2:29]
27. Three Gunmen [3:52]
28. Sorry Don't Get It Done [3:18]
29. One Thing or Another [3:06]
30. Colorado's In [3:02]
31. Another Shot [2:11]
32. My Rifle, My Pony and Me [3:46]
33. Cindy [2:14]
34. Overpowered [2:35]
35. Stumpy's Welcome [4:20]
36. Dude for Joe [3:24]
37. Time to Trade [4:24]
38. Under Fire [2:59]
39. Dynamite Calling Cards [4:16]
40. Pressure Off [3:44]
41. Chance's Girl [3:31]
1. The Big Stampede (1932) [2:27]
1. Haunted Gold (1932) [1:45]
1. Somewhere in Sonora (1933) [1:33]
1. The Man From Monterey (1933) [1:25]
1. Rio Bravo (1959) [2:45]
Disc #2 -- Rio Bravo: Special Features
1. Introduction [2:24]
2. The Dawn Patrol, the Crowd Roars [3:01]
3. Scarface [2:19]
4. Twentieth Century [2:03]
5. Bringing up Baby [4:01]
6. His Girl Friday [6:47]
7. Only Angels Have Wings [3:45]
8. Sergeant York [1:44]
9. Air Force [4:19]
10. To Have and Have Not [3:40]
11. The Big Sleep [4:02]
12. I Was a Male War Bride [3:51]
13. Monkey Business [2:05]
14. Red River [4:11]
15. Rio Bravo [5:59]
16. End Credits [:41]
To some cineastes, this 1959 western is a collaboration between star John Wayne and director Howard Hawks that's second only to the classic Red River. The film turned western-movie conventions in on themselves; instead of unfolding across broad expanses of land, it takes place mostly in the confines of a small jail in a dusty border town. The action doesn't include lengthy chases, cattle stampedes, or massive Indian attacks; it flashes across the screen in short, violent bursts. And the main characters are not larger-than-life archetypes; they're demonstrably flawed and continually struggling to overcome weaknesses of various sorts. Wayne plays a rugged, stubborn Sheriff John T. Chance, who comes to town and arrests Joe Burdette (Claude Akins), the brother of the area's most prominent cattleman (John Russell). He enlists the aid of his former deputy (Dean Martin), now a hopeless drunk who fears the cattleman's inevitable retribution. Holed up in the jail with a crippled deputy (Walter Brennan) and an adventure-seeking young man (Ricky Nelson), Wayne and Martin reluctantly participate in a protracted battle of wills that both sides know must culminate in a fight to the finish. Like many of Hawks's films, Rio Bravo is about camaraderie, courage under fire, and the determination to overcome weakness -- even if it means contemplating failure. Wayne's near-mythic stature is not as obvious here as elsewhere, mainly because Hawks surrounds him with a talented ensemble cast. Martin, cast against type as the downtrodden lawman forced to confront his worst fears, gives what may be his best screen performance. Brennan's garrulous sidekick is a delight, and teen idol Nelson -- included solely to give the picture "youth appeal" -- handles himself surprisingly well. Angie Dickinson had limited screen time, but she makes a strong impression as the leggy saloon girl who fitfully romances Wayne's character. Even people who don't like westerns enjoy Rio Bravo, and for diehard horse-opera addicts it's a must-have movie that holds up well under repeated viewings. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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