Posted on 01/10/2010 11:19:14 AM PST by JoeProBono
1 The Searchers
This John Ford Western chronicles the efforts of a Confederate veteran (Wayne) to track down the daughter of his murdered brother.
2 Rio Bravo
The Duke and Dean Martin are the pair of old friends at the heart of this Howard Hawks hit, in which the pair tussles with a local lawbreaker.
3 The Quiet Man
Wayne shows his softer side with this drama about the tempestuous affair between an Irish-American expat and an Irish woman.
4 The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance
In this John Ford Western, Wayne stars as a rancher who pairs up with a law school grad (James Stewart) to take down the bad guy.
5 The Shootist
The actor's last movie ever finds Wayne starring opposite Lauren Bacall and James Stewart as a gunslinger dying of cancer.
6 True Grit
Wayne's Oscar-winning turn as aging sheriff Rooster Cogburn finds him trekking into Indian territory to avenge a man's death.
7 Stagecoach
For Wayne's breakout performance, he plays good-at-heart outlaw Ringo, who wins over a group of lawmen defending an east-bound train.
8 She Wore a Yellow Ribbon
This vivid, meditative Western finds Wayne portraying an aging war hero struggling with his impending retirement.
9 Red River
This early Howard Hawks Western stars Wayne as a rancher who battles mutiny among his men as he drives his cattle up the Chisholm Trail.
10 Sands of Iwo Jima
This 1949 war flick finds Wayne starring as John Stryker, a marine sergeant charged with leading his men to war.
I saw part of that movie once in the eighties. It was so bad I couldn’t even watch it.
In chronological order.
They Were Expendable
Red River
The Ford Cavalry Trilogy
Sands of Iwo Jima
The Quiet Man
The Searchers
Rio Bravo
The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance
The Sons of Katie Elder
The Shootist
Man, I screwed it up. First line should be, “Give me a whiskey”
Rio bravo is ranked way too high in that list. Iwo jima, true grit, and the shootist are ranked too low.
Director Dick Powell, many of the actors (John Wayne, Susan Hayward, Pedro Armendariz, Thomas Gomez, Agnes Moorehead), and several of the crew members later fell victim to cancer, allegedly the result of producer Howard Hughes' decision to lens the film on location near the atomic testing grounds in the Utah desert. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Very sad, Armendariz has several bouts with cancer before he committed sucide. I loved him in The Three Godfathers.
57 posts and you are the first mention of “the Sons of Katie Elder”...
Wasn’t Hondo played by Alan Ladd? (or I am thinking of another Louis Lamore book)
The exterior scenes were shot on location near St. George, Utah, 137 miles downwind of the United States government’s Nevada Test Site, Operation Upshot-Knothole, where extensive above-ground nuclear weapons testing occurred during the 1950s. The cast and crew spent many difficult weeks on the site. In addition, Hughes later shipped 60 tons of dirt back to Hollywood for re-shoots. The cast and crew knew about the nuclear teststhere are pictures of Wayne holding a Geiger counter during productionbut the link between exposure to radioactive fallout and cancer was poorly understood then.
Powell died of cancer in January 1963, only a few years after the picture’s completion. Hayward, Wayne, and Moorehead all died of cancer in the mid to late 1970s. Cast member actor John Hoyt died of lung cancer in 1991. Pedro Armendáriz was diagnosed with kidney cancer in 1960 and committed suicide after he learned it was terminal. Skeptics point to other factors such as the wide use of tobaccoWayne and Moorehead in particular were heavy smokersand the notion that cancer resulting from radiation exposure does not have such a long incubation period. The cast and crew totaled 220. 91 developed some form of cancer by 1981 and 46 had died of it by then.[1] Dr. Robert Pendleton, professor of biology at the University of Utah, stated, “With these numbers, this case could qualify as an epidemic. The connection between fallout radiation and cancer in individual cases has been practically impossible to prove conclusively. But in a group this size you’d expect only 30 some cancers to develop...I think the tie-in to their exposure on the set of The Conqueror would hold up in a court of law.”[
“Two of the very best westerns ever made; Red River and The Searchers.”
One of my wife’s favorite comments, “You’re watching The Searchers AGAIN?”.
12 cents for a comic book. Boy those where the days.
My favorite line “Yer’ beautiful in yer’ wrath”. An absolutely terrible movie.
Great movie. I have the dvd.Best naval battle on film,Battleships(Jap)heavy cruisers (ours) slugging it out. Our ships got wacked,but it is still good.
In the historical epic The Conqueror, John Wayne stars as Temujin, better known as Genghis Khan. Red-haired Susan Hayward costars as Bortai, the Tartar princess whom Temujin claims as the spoils of battle. Eventually, Bortai’s hatred for her captor metamorphoses into love, while Temujin’s hordes lay claim to the entire Gobi Desert. Director Dick Powell, many of the actors (John Wayne, Susan Hayward, Pedro Armendariz, Thomas Gomez, Agnes Moorehead), and several of the crew members later fell victim to cancer, allegedly the result of producer Howard Hughes’ decision to lens the film on location near the atomic testing grounds in the Utah desert. ~ Hal Erickson
goat granny was wrong, googled Hondo, it was J.Wayne. I should know better than to question Freepers.....me bad
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