Shane with Alan Ladd: DVD Cover

    Shane Director: George Stevens Cast: Alan Ladd, Jean Arthur, Van Heflin, Brandon de Wilde

    DVD - Dolby 5.1 / Mono Learn more

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    • DVD Release Date: 08/15/2000
    • Original Release: 1953
    • Rating: Not Rated
    • Sales Rank: 2,975

    Viewer Rating: (7 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Visuals" See All

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    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Scenes
    • Customer Reviews
    • Cast & Crew
    • Full Product Details

    Scenes

    Features

    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 Details

    Scene Index

    Side #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]

    Scene Index

    Editorial Reviews

    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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    Customer Reviews

    A Perfect Westernby Hugo-Z-Hackenbush

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    June 11, 2009: Pure, great movie making. The protagonist, Alan Ladd, has committed past sins, which he never mentions, yet he behaves with humility and nobility. The family that he befriends, is decent, hardworking and honest. The villians range from weak to Jack Palances: cold reptilian gunfighter. The Direction, cinematography, and script are perfection. This movie would never be made today. There is a decency in the characters, that is foreign to Hollywood today. Shanes interactions with Jean Arthur, the farmers wife, are respectful, though a fondness is apparent.Their son idolizes Shane, yet he is very much a child, not an obnoxious brat. There is plenty of action, but the pacing is perfect. I can say no more except this is how movies should still be made.

    I Also Recommend: Warlock.

    Quiet Gunfighter on Western Rangeby Anonymous

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    August 27, 2005: Based on Jack Schaefer's short novel, Shane is the story of a gunfighter in buckskins who knows his time on the western range is passing. Alan Ladd - in the title role - is a man who seemingly wants to put his past behind him. He hires out to a farming family - doing odd chores - and puts away his buckskins. This is a story of simple people who want to live in peace on the Western range and of the cattlemen who think the land is theirs. The cattlemen make conflict and violence their weapon. The farmers are hard pressed to hold their own. Ladd's Shane is really closer to the violent ways of the ranchers than he is to those of the farmers. At film's end, he returns to the gun and to the life he formerly knew.


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