The searchers

USA Color 119 minutes

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Ward Bond + John Wayne + Dorothy Jordan

John WayneJeffrey Hunter + Vera MilesVera Miles

The searchers

John Wayne

Beulah Archuletta + Jeffrey HunterJeffrey Hunter + John WayneJeffrey Hunter + John Wayne

John Wayne

 

Comanches

News

John Wayne

Within 9 days it would have been John Wayne`s (Ethan Edwards) 101th birthday.
* May 26, 1907
† June 11, 1979

Within 22 days it would have been Henry Brandon`s (Scar) 96th birthday.
* June 8, 1912
† February 15, 1990

Trivia

Release date: March 13, 1956

A young Marxist critic of the movie magazine Cahiers du Cinema and director named Jean-Luc Godard: “ How can I hate John Wayne [] and yet love him tenderly [] in the last reel of The Searchers?” Source / More (Book)

Lana Wood played young Debbie Edwards and Natalie Wood, who was Lana’s older sister, played teenaged Debbie Edwards.

Buddy Holly stole That'll be the day from this movie::“Martin Pawley: I hope you die. Ethan Edwards: That'll be the day”

Legend has it that there are three films Steven Spielberg always watches before he launches into his next shoot: A Guy Named Joe, It's a Wonderful Life, and The Searchers.

The novel was written by Alan Le May. Source / More (Book)

The movie has been selected for preservation in the National Film Registry (U.S.A.)




Bio

John Ford

John Ford
It is easier to get an actor to be a cowboy than to get a cowboy to be an actor

Remarkable:

John Wayne called Ford by the nickname Coach or Pappy

Born:

February 1, 1895

Born as:

John Martin Feeney (He claimed his real Gaelic name was Sean Aloysius O'Feeney / Ó Fidhne, but research has shown his given name)

Died:

August 31, 1973

John's brother Francis took Ford as a stage name and entered pictures in 1907. In 1914 Feeney went to Hollywood, where he worked as stunt man, actor, and assistant director at the Universal Studios.

He changed his name and was assigned to work on shorts and westerns.

Ford shot to the top rank with The Iron Horse (1924), the story of the first transcontinental railroad, filmed on location.

The 1930s found Johns further developing a distinctive style cumulating in the high-budget movie The Informer (1935) which established Ford's critical reputation.

1939 was a great year for Ford. In a twelve month period, he achieved the astonishing task of directing Stagecoach , Young Mr. Lincoln, Drums along the Mohawk and The Grapes of Wrath (1940).

In the late 1940s Ford directed the Cavalry trilogy: Fort Apache (1948), She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (1949), and Rio Grande (1950).

Selected Movies

Books:

Andrew Sinclair -> John Ford (1979/1984); and
J.A. Place -> The Western Films of John Ford (1973).
S. Eyman -> (1999)
J. McBride -> (2001)
More John Ford