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Man of the West Poster

Man of the West

IN THE ROLE THAT FITS HIM LIKE A GUN FITS A HOLSTER! GARY COOPER as the MAN OF THE WEST
1958 | 100m | English

(10483 votes)

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Popularity: 2 (history)

Details

Heading east to Fort Worth to hire a schoolteacher for his frontier town home, Link Jones is stranded with singer Billie Ellis and gambler Sam Beasley when their train is held up. For shelter, Jones leads them to his nearby former home, where he was brought up an outlaw. Finding the gang still living in the shack, Jones pretends to be ready to return to a life crime.
Release Date: Jun 20, 1958
Director: Anthony Mann
Writer: Will C. Brown, Reginald Rose
Genres: Western
Keywords train robbery, grave digging, former outlaw
Production Companies United Artists, Ashton Productions
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

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Full Credits

Name Character
Gary Cooper Link Jones
Julie London Billie Ellis
Lee J. Cobb Dock Tobin
Arthur O'Connell Sam Beasley
Jack Lord Coaley
John Dehner Claude Tobin
Royal Dano Trout
Robert J. Wilke Ponch
Joe Dominguez Mexican Man (uncredited)
Dick Elliott Willie (uncredited)
Frank Ferguson Crosscut Marshal (uncredited)
Herman Hack Train Passenger (uncredited)
Signe Hack Train Passenger (uncredited)
Ann Kunde Train Passenger (uncredited)
Tom London Tom (uncredited)
Tina Menard Juanita (uncredited)
Emory Parnell Henry (uncredited)
Chuck Roberson Rifleman-Guard on Train (uncredited)
Glen Walters Train Passenger (uncredited)
Guy Wilkerson Conductor (uncredited)
Jack Williams Alcutt (uncredited)
Name Job
Will C. Brown Novel
Hilyard M. Brown Art Direction
Emile LaVigne Makeup Artist
Robert A. Reich Sound Editor
Yvonne Wood Costume Design
Jack Solomon Sound
Edward G. Boyle Set Decoration
Allen K. Wood Production Manager
Dick Moder Assistant Director
Jack Erickson Special Effects
Bert Henrikson Wardrobe Master
Richard V. Heermance Supervising Editor
Eve Newman Music Editor
Sam Freedle Continuity
Jack N. Young Stunts
Jack Williams Stunts
Anthony Mann Director
Reginald Rose Screenplay
Leigh Harline Original Music Composer
Ernest Haller Director of Photography
Chuck Roberson Stunts
Name Title
Walter Mirisch Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 16 22 11
2024 5 18 32 10
2024 6 14 27 8
2024 7 19 39 10
2024 8 15 25 8
2024 9 14 27 7
2024 10 12 23 6
2024 11 14 27 6
2024 12 12 26 7
2025 1 11 21 8
2025 2 9 14 3
2025 3 6 19 1
2025 4 1 2 1
2025 5 1 3 1
2025 6 2 4 1
2025 7 2 5 1
2025 8 2 4 1
2025 9 2 3 1
2025 10 2 2 1

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Reviews

John Chard
8.0

Another Intelligent Western from Anthony Mann. Link Jones is on his way to Fort Worth to hire a schoolteacher, having left his wife and children behind, Link appears to be the epitome of the simple honest man. However, the train he is on is robbed by outlaws, thus meaning that Link's past and his ... dubious family ties are all careering towards a day of reckoning. This was Anthony Mann's second to last foray into the Western genre, and perhaps his most clinical as regards a structured tale of men as complicated as they are conflicted? I always find with Mann's Westerns that a sense of doom hangs heavy, there are very few directors in Western cinema history who have this knack of filling the viewer with such a pervading feeling of unease. Here we have Gary Cooper as Link, on the surface an amiable man, but the sequence of events see him thrust back into a life he thought had long since gone. The term that a leopard never changes its spots sits rather well, but here we find Mann fleshing out his lead character with an acknowledgement that a former life has passed, with Cooper perfectly transcending this well scripted arc. The striking thing about it though, is that Mann's characters are not the quintessential good versus bad characters, these are just men with their own individual hang ups, they all are fallible human beings, which is something that surely we all can identity with. The acting across the board here is top notch, Cooper is excellent, replacing Mann's stock Western muse, James Stewart, he cements his earthy and identifiable worth wholesale. Lee J. Cobb actually is the glue that holds the film together, his portrayal of Dock Tobin perfectly plays alongside Cooper's emotive showing of Link Jones's confliction. Negatively though, we are asked to believe that Gary Cooper is Lee J. Cobb's nephew, with a difference of just ten years between the two men that has to be a casting error one feels. Still, the film comes highly recommended, the intelligence and dark atmosphere of the piece marks it out for worthwhile emotional investment, whilst Cooper's two main fights (both different) are seriously great cinema. 8.5/10

May 16, 2024
Geronimo1967
6.0

This is a much grittier western than I am used to from Anthony Mann; giving Gary Cooper much more to get his teeth into than the usual, simple, gun-slinging fayre. He plays a reformed outlaw who is caught up in a train ambush. "Link" escapes with two other passengers and makes his way to an old home ... stead - only to find it occupied by the men who attacked the train; and that they are his former gang. His uncle "Dock" - Lee J. Cobb - is determined to lead him back down the path of violence. The psychological nature of this gives it a little more depth - sadly, though, neither Cobb, Cooper nor Julie London as "Billie" really gel together or engage convincingly, the dialogue is a bit stodgy and the ending, though quite violent, is poorly predictable. The photography is suitably grand and it's quite excitingly scored, but this is still not the best.

Dec 04, 2024