Règlements de comptes à O.K. Corral
Titre original : Gunfight at the O.K. Corral
- 1957
- Tous publics
- 2h 2min
NOTE IMDb
7,1/10
18 k
MA NOTE
Le shérif Wyatt Earp et le hors-la-loi Doc Holliday forment une alliance improbable qui culmine dans leur participation au légendaire duel de O.K. Corral.Le shérif Wyatt Earp et le hors-la-loi Doc Holliday forment une alliance improbable qui culmine dans leur participation au légendaire duel de O.K. Corral.Le shérif Wyatt Earp et le hors-la-loi Doc Holliday forment une alliance improbable qui culmine dans leur participation au légendaire duel de O.K. Corral.
- Nommé pour 2 Oscars
- 3 victoires et 4 nominations au total
Ted de Corsia
- Shanghai Pierce
- (as Ted DeCorsia)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe legendary gunfight took place on October 26, 1881 and lasted thirty seconds, resulting in three dead men after an exchange of thirty-four bullets. The fictionalized gunfight in this movie took four days to film, and produced an on-screen bloodbath that lasted five minutes.
- GaffesWhen the OK corral fight commences, one of the Earp brothers fires a shotgun at the wagon the Clanton gang is in. Ike yells "shotgun" and they duck. The pellets from the shotgun blast are clearly seen hitting the canvas on the wagon, forming a large circle with the many different pellet holes. Two scenes later when they return to the same canvas, all the pellet holes are gone.
- Citations
Wyatt Earp: All gunfighters are lonely. They live in fear. They die without a dime, a woman or a friend.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Entertainment This Week Salutes Paramount's 75th Anniversary (1987)
- Bandes originalesGunfight at the O.K. Corral
(1957)
by Ned Washington and Dimitri Tiomkin
Sung by Frankie Laine
A Columbia Recording Artist
Commentaire à la une
Gunfight at the OK Corral (1957)
This has the makings of a classic, and of course the story is one of the great ture legends of the Wild West. Burt Lancaster as the tough and unbending lawman and Kirk Douglas as the unpredictable semi-lawless cad are both great, and the best scenes are probably those with the two of them. The rest of the cast is reasonable, some of them really good, though maybe the all important bad guys lacked some kind of wild evil they might have needed (a Lee Marvin intensity). One of the bad guys, Johnny Ringo, is played by a nice guy actor, John Ireland, even though Ringo was never part of thie OK Corral story. It does have a young Dennis Hopper, which is fun to see (and Hopper hailed from Dodge City itself in real life).
Still, it looked like it would really be equivalent to "Rio Bravo" and others from the same time period.
Not so, not for me. And it's simply because of that whole range of different things that add up in a great movie and slip and slither in a decent one. For example, there are a number of interludes with horses walking through the big landscape and the corny theme song is sung through a new verse. I can't believe this was effective even at the time (music from 1957 in general wasn't so corny and fakey, including country music), but now it deadened the flow. Likewise the series of events didn't always seem to lead one to the next in a compelling way, as the interludes allowed a shift in location and sometimes a whole new situation to develop.
One problem (if this is a problem) is that it's based on facts. I think this made the movie makers add information and keep switching towns simply because it was the way it was and they thought they must. Maybe they did. Oddly, they got lots of the essentials wrong that might actually make a better movie if someone wants to take another crack at it (quick details at wikipedia). The final famous shootout is fun and well done but way too obvious with the good guys always getting their target and the bad guys missing, or hitting a leg.
So why the reputation? It isn't bad, and it is always compelling to see Douglas in particular in almost any film. The filming (by Charles Lang, one of the greats) is first rate, and so just watching, whatever the scene, is enjoyable.
This has the makings of a classic, and of course the story is one of the great ture legends of the Wild West. Burt Lancaster as the tough and unbending lawman and Kirk Douglas as the unpredictable semi-lawless cad are both great, and the best scenes are probably those with the two of them. The rest of the cast is reasonable, some of them really good, though maybe the all important bad guys lacked some kind of wild evil they might have needed (a Lee Marvin intensity). One of the bad guys, Johnny Ringo, is played by a nice guy actor, John Ireland, even though Ringo was never part of thie OK Corral story. It does have a young Dennis Hopper, which is fun to see (and Hopper hailed from Dodge City itself in real life).
Still, it looked like it would really be equivalent to "Rio Bravo" and others from the same time period.
Not so, not for me. And it's simply because of that whole range of different things that add up in a great movie and slip and slither in a decent one. For example, there are a number of interludes with horses walking through the big landscape and the corny theme song is sung through a new verse. I can't believe this was effective even at the time (music from 1957 in general wasn't so corny and fakey, including country music), but now it deadened the flow. Likewise the series of events didn't always seem to lead one to the next in a compelling way, as the interludes allowed a shift in location and sometimes a whole new situation to develop.
One problem (if this is a problem) is that it's based on facts. I think this made the movie makers add information and keep switching towns simply because it was the way it was and they thought they must. Maybe they did. Oddly, they got lots of the essentials wrong that might actually make a better movie if someone wants to take another crack at it (quick details at wikipedia). The final famous shootout is fun and well done but way too obvious with the good guys always getting their target and the bad guys missing, or hitting a leg.
So why the reputation? It isn't bad, and it is always compelling to see Douglas in particular in almost any film. The filming (by Charles Lang, one of the greats) is first rate, and so just watching, whatever the scene, is enjoyable.
- secondtake
- 9 févr. 2013
- Permalien
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- How long is Gunfight at the O.K. Corral?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Règlement de comptes à O.K. Corral
- Lieux de tournage
- Old Tucson - 201 S. Kinney Road, Tucson, Arizona, États-Unis(Tombstone in the opening scene is the same bridge and town as "Rio Bravo" w/John Wayne and was filmed in "Old Tucson".)
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 2 000 000 $US (estimé)
- Durée2 heures 2 minutes
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1
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By what name was Règlements de comptes à O.K. Corral (1957) officially released in India in English?
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