The Man from Laramie

The Man from Laramie

By

  • Genre: Drama, Western
  • Release Date: 1955-08-19
  • Runtime: 103 minutes
  • : 7.2
  • Production Company: William Goetz Productions
  • Production Country: United States of America
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7.2/10
7.2
From 250 Ratings

Description

Will Lockhart arrives in Coronado, an isolated town in New Mexico, in search of someone who sells rifles to the Apache tribe, finding himself unwillingly drawn into the convoluted life of a local ranching family whose members seem to have a lot to hide.

Trailer

Reviews

  • Wuchak

    7
    By Wuchak
    **_Mid-50's Anthony Mann Western with Jimmy Stewart and Arthur Kennedy_** Jimmy Stewart stars as the titular man who meets a storekeeper (Cathy O'Donnell) while delivering supplies to a Southwestern town in Apache territory. It doesn't take long for him to clash with the rash son of domineering rancher (Alex Nicol and Donald Crisp). Despite the mounting tensions, he stays in town perhaps because he's sweet on the woman, but so is the rancher's formidable foreman (Arthur Kennedy). More importantly, he's searching for the mystery man who's been selling rifles to the Apaches. Disregarding the hopelessly hokey title song during the opening & ending credits, Anthony Mann's "The Man from Laramie" (1955) is a winning mid-50's Western, the last of five Westerns Mann did with Stewart and easily the best of the latter four. The vast New Mexican landscapes in gorgeous color are magnificent. The compelling story is a little complicated, but not overly so. O'Donnell is winsome as the proverbial girl-next-door. It runs 1 hour, 43 minutes, and was shot in Taos & Santa Fe, New Mexico. GRADE: B+
  • CinemaSerf

    7
    By CinemaSerf
    When freight-man “Lockhart” (James Stewart) tries to take some salt from the local flats to trade, he falls foul of “Dave” (Alex Nicol) who just happens to be the wayward son of local boss “Alec” (Donald Crisp). It’s only the intervention of ranch foreman “Vic” (Arthur Kennedy) that enables him to escape with his life, but now bereft of his wagons and his mules, he vows to stick around long enough to set matters straight. “Alec” is a firm but reasonable man, and when he hears of what happened offers restitution, but by now “Lockhart” and the loose-cannon that is “Dave” are at a loggerheads that is going to make the former man’s life, and his friendship with his original employer “Barbara” (Cathy O’Donnell) - who is engaged to “Vic” - pretty hairy. Gradually, as this scenario smoulders away we also begin to discover that the visitor has an ulterior motive, that someone is running guns to the Apache and that “Dave” and “Vic” might know more than they are letting on to either “Lockhart” or the rapidly going blind “Alec”. As you’d expect from a Stewart western, though there’s still plenty of action there isn’t a great deal of killing. This is a more cerebral exercise with a solid story and characterisations from himself, Kennedy and from Crisp that go some way to showcasing an American west that isn’t so wild as it might have been a generation earlier. The cinematography stylishly sets the scene, the dialogue is sometimes quite witty and though I can’t say I loved the conclusion, this is still a characterful story that tells us of a nation maturing into a more law-abiding society.

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