Lawman (1971)
Facts
| Directed by | Michael Winner |
| Cast | Burt Lancaster, Robert Ryan, Lee J. Cobb, Robert Duvall, Sheree North, Walter Brooke, Lee J Cobb, Robert Emhardt, John Hillerman, Richard Jordan, John McGiver, Albert Salmi, Ralph Waite and Joseph Wiseman |
| Theatrical Release | August 4, 1971 |
| DVD Release | September 4, 2001 |
| Running Time | 99 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | PG (Parental Guidance Suggested) |
| UPC Code | 027616865809 |
| Buy this item | $12.99 at Amazon.com As of Aug 31 14:01 EDT (details) 1 DVD, MGM (Video & DVD), Usually ships in 24 hours, Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono), French (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono), French (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), Spanish (Dubbed - Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono) Or 39 new from $6.71, 18 used from $3.71 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Among his Best! |
| You buy the man above him |
| A great Western but a criminal DVD transfer |
At times Gerald Wilson's script is perhaps a tad overwritten - everyone gets their big scene explaining their worldview, with no-one truly bad, merely weak - but it's a forgivable weakness. Winner's not quite as overly reliant on crash zooms as usual, though his characteristic laziness does manifest itself in one scene that has characters ride up to Cobb's house in darkness and come into the room in daylight, but for someone like Winner that's almost verging on the competent by his standards. Sadly MGM/UA's Region 1 DVD is a stinker of a transfer, looking like it was shot through a dirty window. The trailer is the only extra. March 5, 2007
| The other side of the showdown... |
Burt Lancaster is cast as a merciless avenger, unmoved by love or pity, determined to one end: Exterminate the opposition...
The criminals here are, in fact, some law breakers, drunken cowboys - who by bad luck - have killed an old man during a rough enthusiastic drinking bout...
Lancaster - blind to his faults, unwilling to judge or to be less severe, and with no intention to arrest - hunts his prey down, one by one, until the last man...
There is no poetic eloquence here, no tension as the two protagonists walk slowly towards their duel, no feeling that right is victorious, no good has conquered evil, no decisive clash to capture the audience's imagination... This is pure brutality: Gratuitous graphic sequences - sickening and revolting - of destroyed shoulders and collapsed faces... Uncalled details of death that may damage the sonorous knell of the 'classic Western' with its ideal behavior and precise rules traditionally observed...
The Western showdown is strictly ritual, quick, clean and purely emotional... The outcome predictable... The moment of suspense exciting as anything the cinema has ever produced...
The showdown in "The Lawman" is disturbing in the way of vision... It follows on in the tradition of Palance/Elisha Cook Jr. ultimate confrontation in "Shane," and excels Sam Peckinpah's commitment to an ideal of self-expression through violent death... It may well mean that a film like "Shane," "High Noon," "Vera Cruz," or "The Fastest Gun Alive," can never be made again...
November 9, 2006
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