John
Wayne, James Stewart , Vera Miles , Lee Marvin, Edmond O'Brien,
Andy Devine, Ken Murray
"When the legend becomes fact,
print the legend." That's more than the code of a newspaperman
in The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance; it's practically the operating
credo of director John Ford, the most honored of American filmmakers.
In this late film from a long career, Ford looks at the civilizing
of an Old West town, Shinbone, through the sad memories of settlers
looking back. In the town's wide-open youth, two-fisted Westerner
John Wayne and tenderfoot newcomer James Stewart clash over a woman
(Vera Miles) but ultimately unite against the notorious outlaw Liberty
Valance (Lee Marvin). Ford's nostalgia for the past is tempered
by his stark approach, unusual for the visual poet of Stagecoach
and The Searchers. The two heavyweights, Wayne and Stewart, are
good together, with Wayne the embodiment of rugged individualism
and Stewart the idealistic prophet of the civilization that will
eventually tame the Wild West. This may be the saddest Western ever
made, closer to an elegy than an action movie, and as cleanly beautiful
as its central symbol, the cactus rose.
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