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You Know My Name
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Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: VHS Tape
EAN: 9780780627741
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, NTSC
ISBN: 0780627741
Label: Turner Home Ent
Languages: English (Original Language), Analog
Manufacturer: Turner Home Ent
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Turner Home Ent
Release Date: May 16, 2000
Running Time: 94 minutes
Studio: Turner Home Ent
Theatrical Release Date: August 22, 1999
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Editorial Review: Cromwell, Oklahoma, 1924: an oil boomtown full of saloons, cathouses, mud-and-crude-oil streets, bootleg whisky, and gun-toting roughnecks. Technology had overpassed the Old West, in the form of Model T's and oil rigs, but the mentality had stayed much the same. Add to that a population that's a bit tweaky from a combination of cocaine and morphine that had been going around, and you have a recipe for trouble. Enter Marshall Bill Tilghman, a contemporary of Wyatt Earp. Tilghman had made a silent film, The Passing of the Oklahoma Outlaws, and on the strength of his reputation had been called into service as chief of police in the hopes of restoring order to a lawless community. In this fact-based story, Sam Elliott plays Tilghman, a larger-than-life character who was one of the last of a dying era. Many Prohibition agents became renegades in the '20s; Tilghman's nemesis was Wiley (Arliss Howard), a rogue agent strung out on drugs and dealing in bootleg liquor himself. Howard's performance is as overwrought as Elliott's is restrained; together the two offset each other well. The flinty Elliott brings a measure of warmth to his role, especially in his relationship to his wife and kids; he's perfectly cast as the man on the cusp of a new age. As a modern-era Western, You Know My Name rises well above its made-for-cable roots to stand as a good character study and action picture. --Jerry Renshaw
Customer Reviews
Average Rating: 
Rating: - You know my name
Sam Elliott never made a bad movie that I've seen. Love his eyes and the way he cocks his head.
Rating: - The Real Cowboy
Sam Elliot is the quinessential cowboy and the movie was excellent about a real-life quinessential cowboy.
Rating: - The Last of the Great Frontier Lawmen
Bill Tilghman was the last of the old frontier lawmen still working as a peace officer in the 1920's. At a time when Bat Masterson was a sportswriter for a New York newspaper and Wyatt Earp was a movie consultant in Hollywood, Tilghman was working as a special agent for the Governor of Oklahoma. This story picks up as he is talked into leaving that post to tackle the taming of Cromwell, Oklahoma, a wild oil boom town. It details that last few months in the life of the man Bat Masterson called "The ... Read More
Rating: - You know my name??
Not Sam's best movie. It was entertaining enough, just seemed over the edge with the guy chasing the bootleggers. You would think someone would inform Washington about a drug addict agent and a murderer! I would have put a bullet in the guy's head first thing and threw him down a well and got on with the movie on a different note.
Its worth the money for some, I am a big Elliot fan, but not to excited about this one.
Rating: - Good movie but sad.
A very good movie about a real lawman but a very sad ending. Sam Elliott does a very good job acting, but he's good in almost all of his movies.
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