Winchester '73 (1950)

Winchester '73 (1950)
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Lin McAdam (James Stewart) and his friend High-Spade (Millard Mitchell) arrive in Dodge City for a shooting contest, in which the prize is a perfectly manufactured Winchester repeating rifle, referred to as "One of a Thousand" -- a gun so fine that Winchester won't sell it. Lin runs across Dutch Henry Brown (Stephen McNally) in a saloon and the two would kill each other right there but for the fact that town marshal Wyatt Earp (Will Geer) has everyone's guns. Lin wins the rifle in an extraordinary marksmanship match-up with Brown, but the latter steals the prize from him and sets out across the desert. Thus begins a battle of wits and nerves, and a pursuit to the death. The roots and raw psychological dimensions of that chase are only exposed gradually, across a story arc that includes references to Custer's Last Stand, run-ins with marauding Indians, a heroic stand with a a shady but well-intentioned grifter (Charles Drake), and a meeting with murderous sociopath named Waco Johnny Dean (Dan Duryea), plus a romantic encounter with a young, golden-hearted frontier woman (Shelley Winters). All of these story lines eventually get drawn together neatly and gracefully by director Anthony Mann, who balances the violence of the events with a lyrical, almost poetic visual language. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi

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Starring:
James StewartShelley Winters, (more)
Director(s):
Anthony Mann
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Winchester '73

Lin McAdam (James Stewart) and his friend High-Spade (Millard Mitchell) arrive in Dodge City for a shooting contest, in which the prize is a perfectly manufactured Winchester repeating rifle, referred to as "One of a Thousand" -- a gun so fine that Winchester won't sell it. Lin runs across Dutch Henry Brown (Stephen McNally) in a saloon and the two would kill each other right there but for the fact that town marshal Wyatt Earp (Will Geer) has everyone's guns. Lin wins the rifle in an extraordinary marksmanship match-up with Brown, but the latter steals the prize from him and sets out across the desert. Thus begins a battle of wits and nerves, and a pursuit to the death. The roots and raw psychological dimensions of that chase are only exposed gradually, across a story arc that includes references to Custer's Last Stand, run-ins with marauding Indians, a heroic stand with a a shady but well-intentioned grifter (Charles Drake), and a meeting with murderous sociopath named Waco Johnny Dean (Dan Duryea), plus a romantic encounter with a young, golden-hearted frontier woman (Shelley Winters). All of these story lines eventually get drawn together neatly and gracefully by director Anthony Mann, who balances the violence of the events with a lyrical, almost poetic visual language. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
99 mins

Complete Cast of Winchester '73


Director(s):
Anthony Mann
Writer(s):
Robert L. RichardsBorden Chase
Producer(s):
Aaron Rosenberg
Categories:
Westerns
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    D C B.

    I was surprised to find an old Western that I had not seen, and pleased that it turned out to be as good as it was - even after all these years. Jimmy Stewart gets most of the credit for that; he is a natural for this part. But, the other actors turn in performances far better than is usually found in films from the Fifties.

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    Thomas P.

    I could not watch Winchester '73, because it was cracked in two place when received it. I would like for you to send another one. Thanks

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    Gonzalo C.

    An outstanding Western drama with lots of action and suspense. There is a constant sense of danger, with bad guys and Indians lurking everywhere, and yet the love story comes bubbling up from time to time. I had a problem understanding James Stewart's motivation in what he does, it is revealed a bit late in the movie. But the big payoffs more than make up for that. Each character is wonderful. Perhaps Shelley Winters gets the short end of the stick script-wise, but that is common for women in movies.

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