Directed by:
Nicholas RayCinematography:
Harry Stradling Sr.Composer:
Victor YoungCast:
Joan Crawford, Sterling Hayden, Mercedes McCambridge, Scott Brady, Ward Bond, Ben Cooper, Ernest Borgnine, John Carradine, Royal Dano, Paul Fix, Denver Pyle (more)VOD (1)
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Joan Crawford plays Vienna, a saloon owner with a sordid past. Persecuted by the townspeople, Vienna must protect her life and her property when a lynch mob led by her sexually repressed rival, Emma Small (Mercedes McCambridge), attempts to frame her for a string of robberies she did not commit. Enter Johnny Guitar (Sterling Hayden), a guitar-strumming ex-gunfighter who has a history with Vienna. Mis-understood by US audiences upon release, the film was embraced by European cineastes and is now regarded as one of the greatest western pictures of all time. (Eureka Entertainment)
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Reviews (3)
A western movie named after a typical dandy who thought that he was the king of the wild west but who was easily overtaken by two usurping dominatrices. One glance at them is enough to see who the true ruler is. Certainly an interesting piece within its genre where the only memorable thing are the two girls. They’re not something you get to see everyday. ()
Johnny Guitar is a western from another world occupying the allegorical space between reality and a bad dream (or do we find ourselves squarely in the characters’ subconscious?). It is at times a tense psycho-thriller (the opening scene with a spinning roulette wheel and the wind howling outside), at other times a satanic horror flick (a night-time lynching, obviously reflecting McCarthy’s witch hunt), and at its core a heavy melodrama, but one in which it is not entirely clear until the climax who longs for whom. The cynical and mentally unstable protagonists (as in most of Ray’s films) are a representative sample of post-war American society, with Vienna as an emancipated woman to whom a man, ignorant of the new conditions, returns from the war. The crucial motif of the circle (roulette wheel, chandelier), the colour symbolism emphasised at the boundary of camp (Crawford constantly changes costumes), the formalistic virtuosity and the riveting pace of the narrative. This is a film in which so much happens and that can be "read" in so many different ways that the first viewing will be just the beginning of a beautiful friendship for any lover of the dark side of classic Hollywood. 85% ()
This is exactly the type of film that makes me love Joan Crawford so much. She’s strong, confident, and in her own way, extremely beautiful. Plus, you have the intriguing presence of Sterling Hayden and the story about the cruelty of people and how life can be unjust even in the Wild West. A great western with fantastic colors that's definitely worth watching. ()
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