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Standard version; Dolby Digital: English 2.0; French mono; English subtitles; Interactive menus; Scene selection; Theatrical trailer; Commentary with George Stevens Jr., production assistant and son of the late director/producer George Stevens, and Ivan Moffat, associate producer
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
0. Scene Selections
1. Call Me Shane. [:06]
2. An Elegant Dinner. [1:27]
3. Store-Bought Clothes. [5:47]
4. A New Sodbuster. [6:59]
5. Homesteaders. [7:33]
6. Fists Fly At Grafton's. [:47]
7. Slick Wilson. [2:32]
8. A Gun Is A Tool. [3:44]
9. Independence Day. [6:21]
10. I'm A Fair Man. [1:35]
11. Stonewall. [6:59]
12. Cemetery Hill. [4:14]
13. Stacked Deck. [1:52]
14. No Match For Wilson. [2:16]
15. A Lowdown Yankee Liar. [5:43]
16. Come Back Shane. [2:24]
Often described as the "perfect" western, Shane simultaneously reaffirms and transcends genre conventions. This 1953 film's basic premise -- the violent struggle between greedy cattlemen and intrepid homesteaders -- is as old as the horse opera itself and is depicted by director George Stevens in stark, unambiguous fashion. The characters, too, are familiar types: the courageous farmer (played by Van Heflin), the dutiful wife (Jean Arthur), the hired killer (Jack Palance), and so on. Shane himself, played with admirable understatement by Alan Ladd, is positively archetypal. A former gunfighter, he seeks his redemption by helping the homesteaders, only to find them in desperate need of his "professional" skills -- the use of which, he realizes, will make him an outcast. Under Stevens's masterful direction, and bolstered by the Oscar-winning cinematography of Loyal Griggs and Victor Young's evocative musical scoring, every cliché seems fresh and every emotion rings true -- an achievement that ensures Shane a permanent place in the pantheon of great westerns. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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