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Shane [DVD] [1953]
 
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Shane [DVD] [1953]

DVD ~ Alan Ladd
5.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (17 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Actors: Alan Ladd, Jean Arthur, Van Heflin, Brandon De Wilde, Jack Palance
  • Directors: George Stevens
  • Writers: A.B. Guthrie Jr., Jack Schaefer, Jack Sher
  • Producers: George Stevens, Ivan Moffat
  • Format: PAL
  • Language English
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Classification: PG
  • Studio: Paramount Home Entertainment
  • DVD Release Date: 6 Oct 2003
  • Run Time: 113 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (17 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B0000A5BSW
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 2,121 in DVD (See Bestsellers in DVD)

    Popular in these categories:

    #18 in  DVD > Action & Adventure > Westerns
    #30 in  DVD > Classics > War and Westerns
    #49 in  DVD > Classics > Drama

Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
Consciously crafted by director George Stevens as a piece of American myth making, Shane is on nearly everyone's shortlist of great movie Westerns. A buckskin knight, Shane (Alan Ladd) rides into the middle of a range war between farmers and cattlemen, quickly siding with the "sod-busters". While helping a kindly farmer (Van Heflin), Shane falls platonically in love with the man's wife (Jean Arthur, in the last screen performance of a marvellous career). Though the showdowns are exciting, and the story simple but involving, what most people will remember about this movie is the friendship between the stoical Shane and the young son of the farmers. The kid is played by Brandon De Wilde, an amazing child performer; his parting scene with Shane is guaranteed to draw tears from even the most stony-hearted moviegoer. And speaking of stony hearts, Jack Palance made a sensational impression as the evil gunslinger sent to clean house--he has fewer lines of dialogue than he has lines in his magnificently craggy face, but he makes them count. The photography, highlighting the landscape near Jackson Hole, Wyoming, won an Oscar. --Robert Horton

Synopsis
George Stevens' classic Western, adaptated from the Jack Schaefer novel, stars Alan Ladd in the title role. Riding the ranges of Wyoming's Grand Tetons, Shane stops at the farm of homesteader Joe Starrett (Van Heflin) just before Ryker (Emile Meyer), a powerful and predatory cattleman, arrives with his hired muscle to make the farmer a threatening offer for land that he intends to get by any means necessary. When Shane lets the cattle baron know that his gun will back Starrett if there's any trouble, the grateful homesteader offers the stranger a job as a hired hand, which he accepts. Joe's young son Joey (Brandon de Wilde) is drawn to the quiet stranger, whose difference from the men he knows is confirmed by the accidental revelation of a gunfighter's lightning reflexes. Shane becomes a valuable asset to the farm, but is slowly drawn into the continuing hostilities between the two opposing groups. To complicate matters, Shane feels an unspoken, and unwanted, attraction to Starrett's wife Marian (Jean Arthur). This creates a sense of ambivalence in Joe, whose son already idolizes the gunslinger. Stevens' meticulous artistry imbues the simple Western with the mythic aura of an Arthurian legend, as Loyal Griggs' beautifully composed images provide the canvas for career performances by Ladd, Heflin, Arthur, and de Wilde, in what many regard as the finest western ever made.

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Customer Reviews

17 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (17 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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41 of 41 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars We need you, Shane!, 26 Jul 2005
By Manco (Helsinki, Finland) - See all my reviews
Shane is a masterpiece, irrespective of genre. Naturally, most discussion of the film comes up in the context of 'great Western' debates but this is a little unfortunate since Shane is a great film which happens to also be a great Western.

From the opening scene to the immortal closing shot Shane captures the imagination and the emotions. It is not that Shane offers anything particularly new in terms of storyline: the mysterious drifter wandering into a town where a struggle between homesteaders and cattlemen is going on was and has been a staple of Western story-telling from the beginning of the genre's popularity. Rather, Shane manages to encapsulate everything that we dream the West to be about - the good and the bad.

Each scene, character, line of dialogue, moment of action is so deliberately crafted and delivered that it borders on the extreme. Take for example Shane's arrival at the home of the Starrets, he is seen riding into view through the antlers of a grazing deer. Or the symbolic importance of Shane and Joe finally uprooting the tree stump which Joe states has been a burden for nearly five years - surely the fact that the stump is finally uprooted on the day of Shane's arrival and with his assistance holds serious implications for the meaning of Shane's presence in the valley. These are but two examples in a film which makes a point in every scene.

Such an approach to telling this tale has lead to the claim that Shane is film dedicated to the myth of the American West, that through the characters and the words they speak we see the West as we imagine it to have been, not what it was or will ever be. However, more than that the myth that pervades Shane is one that is true for all people in all places at all times: the hope for a new start, a life of peace and prosperity earned through hard work and self sacrifice, the renunciation of violence in favour of dialogue and compromise, integrity and principle instead of meaness and greed, chivalry, fidelity, friendship and love. The list is not complete, but you get the idea.

Shane was made more than 50 years ago. It is still as beautiful to watch today as it was back then when it won an Oscar for photography. As for the story, that too is as relevant today as then - by its own admission Shane is a fairy tale of sorts and as such is eternal.

One final point. In my book Once Upon a Time in the West is the ultimate Western fairy tale. Sergio Leone set out to deliberately tell a Western tale which drew on all the earlier great Westerns and present them in a romanticised fashion. The fact that Shane figures heavily as a point of reference in Leone's film is of no surprise. What precisely those references are I'll leave to you to discover for yourself!

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26 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Western Painting, 12 Jul 2005
By "starlighthotel" - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: Shane [VHS] [1953] (VHS Tape)
Alan Ladd starred in one of the most spare and beautiful westerns ever captured on film in George Stevens' portrait of a lonely gunfighter and the bond he forms with a family of homesteaders under seige out west. Jack Schaefer's very good western novella was lofted to greatness by Ladd's quiet performance as the gunfighter Shane, who gets a glimpse of the life he would have preferred rather than the hand he was dealt.

A story and film which sounds simple, and is often described as such, is really anything but, its complexity hidden by its scope and the subtle manner in which it is told. Shane is the mythic figure, riding in on the horizon and staying to help a family fend off a rancher trying to drive the farmers off their land. It is a story of changing times and complex relationships.

Shane forms a bond with farmer Van Heflin and becomes his friend because of his decency and acceptance of Shane, even though Shane's gun and his readiness to draw at the slightest sound reveals a past and a way of life Shane would like to live down. Shane knows he is on the way out as the west changes and it is ironic that he chooses to help the family trying to build a town and a community, the very things that will be his demise.

Brandon De Wilde is excellent as the young boy who needs a larger than life hero to look up to and finds him in Shane. As he and Shane form a bond, an inevitable confrontation between a deadly gunfighter hired to get rid of the homesteaders will force him to put on his gun and live up to everything the young boy feels in his heart for Shane.

Jean Arthur gives a wonderful and often overlooked performance as the wife who loves her husband and son dearly, but can not deny the feelings she has for Shane. There is a point in the film where she tells her husband to just hold her and not ask any questions; everyone who has been watching knows why she does this. It is a platonic love for Shane she would never act on but it is still there.

Heflin is also excellent as a solid man trying to hold the other farmers together even as a deadly gunfighter in black, symbolic of the good verses evil of the story, kills one of their own. He is no fool and senses the feelings between his wife and Shane, but knows that neither would ever betray him; Arthur because she loves him and Shane because it is not the kind of man he is.

Shane's feelings for Arthur are not the threatening kind, but more a loneliness when he looks at her, as she represents everything he wanted but knows he will never have because he is a gunfighter. He tells Arthur that a gun is just a tool like an axe or a shovel, no better or worse than the man who carries it. We know Shane is the good man, and Jack Palance the bad man, quick on the draw and evil, but no match for the soft spoken but deadly Shane.

The way the inevitable gunfight comes about and the way this film ends continues the larger than life myth of the American gunfighter. There is a nice score from Victor Young and good support from Edgar Buchanan as a farmer and Ben Johnson as a rancher who changes his spots, won over by the kind of man Shane shows himself to be.

Shane is not only one of the great westerns, but one of the best films of any genre. It is an artistic portrait of a gunfighter and the changing landscape of the American west, as general stores and churches began to replace the lawlessness that had been settled by a fast and accurate draw for so many years.

If you do not own Shane, your film library is incomplete. Every serious film buff has a spot for this masterpiece on their shelf somewhere. Make one on yours.

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23 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Can be watched time and time again..., 7 Jun 2004
By Philip G. Brown (Clevedon, England) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
In the extras, the two old gents speak engagingly of how they went out to make just another western, and how they came back with Shane. This speaks volumes on how a film can have intellectual depth without any pretension.

A beautiful understated study of unrequited love, perfectly acted by Jean Arthur and Alan Ladd, set against a magnificent landscape. Van Heflin being the opposite of Alan Ladd: uncharismatic, stolid, ordinary yet even so managing to convey convincingly a character that Jean Arthur would stick by. Brandon De Wilde growing up before our eyes, culminating in the poignant final scenes where we see the end of his childhood. Jack Palance giving us a great villain and the only hissable baddie in the film. All the supporting characters have light and shade, even the diehard free range cowman is able to explain where he is coming from and gets our understanding if not our support.
Although, technically unsophisticated by today's standards and the studio interiors do let the atmosphere slip sometimes, the DVD shows how superb tripack Technicolor was. I don't think the day-for-night shots have ever been bettered.
George Stevens has created a work of great depth in a simple style.
Oh! And the wood chopping sequence with Victor Young's music is one of my all time favourites.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars A Hero of Homeric Proportions.
Shane is a film I desperately wanted to loathe for a number of reasons. The cinematography that won an oscar captures an almost too perfect oil painting vision of the west. Read more
Published 2 hours ago by Bob Salter

5.0 out of 5 stars Great film at a bargain price.
What can you say about this film -one of the all time classic westerns.This is a good value dvd with just the film and no special features.A must for Western fans.
Published 1 month ago by C. J. Nutt

5.0 out of 5 stars Classic film
Classic western. Brilliant quality on DVD, worth replacing old video recordings as the revealed detail is amazing.
Published 2 months ago by Mrs

5.0 out of 5 stars unsurpassed western
"Shane" is, for people which possibly don't know what's this movie, a 40- 50 years anterior version of the modern well know "Pale Rider" by Clint Eastwood. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Carlos Vazquez Quintana

5.0 out of 5 stars A Classic Western Tale.
This film is right up there with the must see classic westerns of all time. And while it may not be one of the best, it holds a place deep in the heart of all who've seen it... Read more
Published 5 months ago by Thorny Bush

5.0 out of 5 stars the best western EVER
this is by far the best western of all time it has everything you need the good guy standing up to the bullys and also one of the meanist baddie you ever seen as his equal well... Read more
Published 5 months ago by Mr. Nicholas R. Muller

5.0 out of 5 stars The greatest Western - Ever
I shall always remember the thrill as a small boy when my parents took me to a local cinema to watch a western. Read more
Published 13 months ago by Peanuts

5.0 out of 5 stars classic which still compels
I saw this film first in the cinema in the early 50s - I would be about 8. It had a spell for me then and still has now, It's based on an excellent short book by Jack Schaefer,... Read more
Published on 18 Dec 2006 by Mr. Ian A. Macfarlane

5.0 out of 5 stars One of the great westerns.
This is a classic and over the decades since its making has lost none of its charm. It has everything a good old fashioned western should have. Read more
Published on 21 Jun 2004 by Simon

5.0 out of 5 stars Classic Western !!!
In 1953 director George Stevens gave filmaudiences the first modern western. Shane is in fact an interesting revaluation of the role of violence in the West, seen trough the eyes... Read more
Published on 10 April 2004 by websurfer

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