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Red River

Red River

  • Status: Released
  • 17-09-1948
  • Runtime: 133 min
  • Score: 7.344
  • Vote count: 551

Following the Civil War, headstrong rancher Thomas Dunson decides to lead a perilous cattle drive from Texas to Missouri. During the exhausting journey, his persistence becomes tyrannical in the eyes of Matthew Garth, his adopted son and protégé.

John Wayne

Thomas Dunson

Montgomery Clift

Matthew Garth

Joanne Dru

Tess Millay

Walter Brennan

'Groot' Nadine

Coleen Gray

Fen

Harry Carey

Mr. Melville

John Ireland

Cherry Valance

Noah Beery Jr.

Buster McGee

Harry Carey, Jr.

Dan Latimer

Chief Yowlachie

Quo

Paul Fix

Teeler Yacey

Hank Worden

Simms Reeves

Mickey Kuhn

Matt, as a Boy

Ray Hyke

Walt Jergens

Hal Taliaferro

Old Leather

John Bose

Dunston Rider (uncredited)

Buck Bucko

Cowhand (uncredited)

Roy Bucko

Cowhand (uncredited)

Lane Chandler

Colonel (uncredited)

Davison Clark

Mr. Meeker (uncredited)

Tex Cooper

Wagon Train Member (uncredited)

Harry Cording

Gambler (uncredited)

Victor Cox

Cowhand (uncredited)

Richard Farnsworth

Dunston Rider (uncredited)

Paul Fierro

Fernandez (uncredited)

Carol Henry

Cowhand (uncredited)

George Lloyd

Rider with Melville (uncredited)

Pierce Lyden

Colonel's Trail Boss (uncredited)

Frank Meredith

Train Engineer (uncredited)

John Merton

Settler (uncredited) (uncredited)

Jack Montgomery

Drover at Meeting (uncredited)

Ivan Parry

Bunk Kenneally (uncredited)

Lee Phelps

Gambler (uncredited)

Harry 'Snub' Pollard

Wagon Train Member (uncredited)

John Rice

Drover at Meeting (uncredited)

Danny Sands

Dunston Rider (uncredited)

William Self

Sutter (uncredited)

Carl Sepulveda

Cowhand (uncredited)

Ray Spiker

Wagon Train Member (uncredited)

Glenn Strange

Naylor (uncredited)

Tom Tyler

Quitter (uncredited)

Dan White

Laredo (uncredited)

Guy Wilkerson

Pete (uncredited)

Shelley Winters

Wagon Train Member (uncredited)

John Chard

Bury those quitters! Tom Dunson is a self made cattle baron, he will do what ever it takes to protect the life he has made for himself. The constant fall in the value of livestock means that Tom, and his adopted son Matthew, must drive the gathered herd through the perilous Chisholm Trail, and then hope to get good value for the beef. With their assembled group of hands they head off North, but many problems will come their way, not least, a fallout due to Dunson's tyrannical ways, meaning there could well be mutiny on the range. Without a shadow of doubt, Red River is one of the greatest Westerns ever made, boasting incredible performances from the cast, directed with sumptuous skill by Howard Hawks and photographed as good as any film in the genre. Based on the novel The Chisholm Trail written by Borden Chase (also co writing duties for the film), Red River is a sweeping spectacle that doesn't have a frame that's wasted. Hawks (this his first Western) frames his wonderfully vivid characters in lush expansive landscapes, fleshing them out amongst the constant stream of drama and action. Though Chase would be annoyed at the changes Hawks made to the story, he surely would have marvelled at the finished product, with Harlan's photography in and around the Arizona's locales capturing a cowboys terrain expertly, while Dimitri Tiomkin's score stirs the blood and pumps the viewer with Cowboy adrenaline. If anyone doubts John Wayne as an actor of note then they need look no further than his performance here as Dunson. Tough and durable in essence the character is for sure, but Wayne manages to fuse those traits with a believable earthy determination that layers the character perfectly. With Wayne all the way, matching him stride for stride is Montgomery Clift as Matthew Garth, sensitive without being overly so, it's the perfect foil to Wayne's machismo barnstorming. Walter Brennan and John Ireland also shine bright in support, while a special mention has to go to a wonderful turn from Joanne Dru as Tess Millay, for Howard Hawks' CV shows a ream of strong female characters, and here Dru firmly puts herself in amongst the best of them - check out her first appearance alongside Clift, it's precious. Red River made a fortune upon its release, it was revered by the critics back then, and it's still being revered today. Rightly so, because it is quite simply magic cinema, a case where everything comes together perfectly, it's in short, a film that even none Western fans should be able to marvel at as entertainment. Or? at the very least give credit to the Tech accomplishments on offer. 10/10

CinemaSerf

Perhaps not a film you'd expect to work given the stars, but John Wayne and Monty Clift do manage to convey a sense of a repectful, but loving relationship - something I don't recall ever seeing before (or since) in a Wayne film towards another man. Hawks takes us on a dirty, unrelenting cattle drive and we can almost feel the strains and tension build as the younger man rails against the almost brutal control of his father-figure. Walter Brennan, as ever, is superb but in this has a little more nuanced a role treading a fine line between his old friend and their younger protégé. The photography really does demonstrate just how tough the whole enterprise would have been for the real cattle drivers and the denouement is superbly staged. A truly epic example of the Western genre that is as good as it gets.