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The Desperadoes
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Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Binding: DVD
Brand: Sony
EAN: 9781404971370
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Full Screen, Subtitled, NTSC
ISBN: 1404971378
Item Dimensions: 25
Label: Sony Pictures
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), Japanese (Subtitled),
Manufacturer: Sony Pictures
MPN: 09457
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Sony Pictures
Region Code: 99
Release Date: April 05, 2005
Running Time: 86 minutes
Studio: Sony Pictures
Theatrical Release Date: May 25, 1943
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Editorial Review: When Cheyenne Rogers (Glenn Ford) a hunted gunman rides into Red Valley he meets and falls in love with Allison MacLeod (Evelyn Keyes). Trying to go straight Cheyenne is enmeshed in a web of intrigue and killing that leads him to the brink of a lynching. Escaping with Sheriff Upton s (Randolph Scott) help he returns to Red Valley long enough to learn about the underhanded dealings of some of the town s supposedly respectable citizens. With the sheriff jailed for his part in Cheyenne s escape the gunman returns amid the thunderings of a wild horse stampede to free him and clean up the lawlessness of Red Valley. The Deperadoes was Columbia Pictures first technicolor feature film.System Requirements:Running Time: 86 Min.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: WESTERN/MISC. Rating: NR UPC: 043396094574 Manufacturer No: 09457
Customer Reviews
Average Rating: 
Rating: - Third billed Glenn Ford gets the build-up treatment but Edgar Buchanan steals the show
This oater is standard issue with a clever setup. It's 1863 in the small ranching community of Red Valley, Utah. Robbers bust into the Clanton Bank but find no money. They kill a couple of townsmen during their getaway. Then we find out -- this is no spoiler -- it was a clever plot engineered by the respectable Stanley Clanton (Porter Hall), the banker, and the well-liked Uncle Willie McLeod (Edgar Buchanan), the feed and livery owner. Clanton had taken the money first. The bank robbery was for show. ... Read More
Rating: - A GREAT TRIO: TREVOR, FORD AND SCOTT.
If anyone out there doesn't enjoy this western, then I'm fairly sure he or she really doesn't enjoy old westerns. Having grown up in the late 1940's and early 1950's, many Saturday mornings were spent at the local bijou, in my case The Sigma or Ranger theaters in Ohio, where most of the day was spent scrunched down in a seat riding the range with our western heroes.
This film doesn't really fit into that category, being released prior to WWII to a more exclusive audience, while ... Read More
Rating: - "The Desperadoes (1943) ... Randolph Scott ... Columbia Pictures "
Columbia Pictures presents "THE DESPERADOES" (1943) (86 mins/Cinecolor) (Dolby digitally remastered) --- Starring Randolph Scott, Claire Trevor, Glenn Ford, Evelyn Keyes & Edgar Buchanan --- Directed by Charles Vidor and released in May 5, 1943, our story line and film, Into Sheriff Steve Upton's peaceful Utah town rides outlaw Cheyenne Rodgers with trouble right behind him. When he finds romance with a local woman, and renews an old friendship with the sheriff, he is determined to turn his back on his ... Read More
Rating: - Worth watching but not great...
Maybe the other reviewers are right about the historical significance of "The Desperadoes," but I'm in it for the entertainment and this film was only three-stars-worth. Except it was fun seeing Glenn Ford so VERY young and I could watch Randolph Scott jumping off his horse at the well over and over and not get at all bored. When men were men and all that jazz...
Rating: - Not a "B" Western
"The Desperadoes" (1943) is a genuine classic, not for its story (which is fairly routine), but for its technical production elements. This was a landmark western, the biggest ever at the time of its release and all the more unique because it was a Columbia production-a lightweight studio with a bottom feeding reputation. Only Fox's "Jessie James" (also starring Randolph Scott) from a few years earlier gave anywhere near this lavish a treatment to the genre. Although it would be eclipsed in a few years by "The ... Read More
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