MAN OF THE WEST


'''Man of the West''' is a 1958 western film directed by Anthony Mann in his last film in the genre. The screenplay, written by Reginald Rose, is based on the novel ''The Border Jumpers'' by Will C. Brown.
When first released, the film was largely ignored by American critics, though renowned French critic Jean-Luc Godard regarded the film as the best released that year. In the decades since the film's release, it has garnered a cult following as well as considerably greater acclaim from professional critics. Some, such as ''The Guardian's Derek Malcolm consider the film Mann's best[1] and a landmark in the western genre canon. Malcolm included the film in his 2000 list ''The Century of Film''.

Contents
Plot
Cast
External links

Plot


Heading east to Fort Worth to hire a schoolteacher for his frontier town home, Link Jones (Gary Cooper) is stranded with saloon singer Billie Ellis (Julie London) and gambler Sam Beasley (Arthur O'Connell) when the train they are riding is held up. For shelter, Jones leads the group to his nearby former home, where he was brought up an outlaw. Finding the gang still living in the shack--they were in fact the train robbers--Jones pretends to having "come back" to a life of crime. Only the gang's crazed leader, "Uncle" Dock Tobin (Lee J. Cobb), accepts Jones's story, and he decides to revive a long-planned robbery scheme. As Jones plays for time, he struggles with his background as a criminal, and the outlaws begin to lose patience.

Cast


Actor Role
Gary Cooper Link Jones
Julie London Billie Ellis
Lee J. Cobb Dock Tobin
Arthur O'Connell Sam Beasley
Jack Lord Coaley
Royal Dano Trout
John Dehner Claude
Robert J. Wilke Ponch
J. Williams Alcutt
Chief Tahachee Pio

External links



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