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Interactive menus; Production notes; Scene access; Seven theatrical trailers; Subtitles: English, Français, Español
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
0. Jump To A Scene
1. Trouble/Lordsburg. [2:45]
2. Tonto. [3:01]
3. "Social" victims. [3:16]
4. All aboard. [5:08]
5. Wide-open spaces. [3:51]
6. The Ringo Kid. [5:11]
7. At Dry Fork. [12:06]
8. Water for ladies. [4:32]
9. Apache Wells. [7:40]
10. The baby arrives. [2:37]
11. Strays in night. [3:38]
12. Recover/romancing. [5:58]
13. Man/run away from. [2:32]
14. Smoke signals. [3:39]
15. Crossing the river. [3:11]
16. Watchful Apaches. [:28]
17. The attack. [2:36]
18. Surrounded. [3:40]
19. Cavalry charge. [2:19]
20. Dead man's hand. [3:35]
21. Curley's promise. [8:42]
22. Brace for showdown. [1:21]
23. Gunfire. [1:25]
24. Saved/civilization. [2:48]
Often lionized (affectionately but incorrectly) as the first "adult" western, Stagecoach certainly represents a milestone in movie history: In addition to plucking John Wayne from Poverty Row studios and setting him on the path to superstardom, it revitalized the genre by encouraging other filmmakers to craft big-budget westerns with more ambitious story lines and less stereotypical characters. Stagecoach is, first and foremost, a character study of nine disparate people riding a coach across trackless wastelands, where they’re victimized by the elements and menaced by marauding Indians. As the Ringo Kid, Wayne isn’t significantly different from the white-hatted heroes he previously played in dozens of cheap quickies -- but this time he’s surrounded by veteran players of major-film quality, including Claire Trevor (particularly affecting as a tenderhearted woman of ill repute), Thomas Mitchell (who won an Oscar for his portrayal of a garrulous, drunken doctor), George Bancroft, John Carradine, Berton Churchill, Donald Meek, Andy Devine, and Louise Platt. Director John Ford (The Searchers) trains his camera on starkly beautiful Monument Valley, which makes a picturesque backdrop for a vigorous battle with Indians on horseback -- a bravura sequence employing expert cinematography, stunt work, editing, and scoring. But it’s the interplay of finely drawn characters that really distinguishes Stagecoach, a landmark in the maturation of movie westerns and a timeless classic of cinema. The DVD provides notes on the film's production and includes seven different trailers. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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