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High Noon (1952) [2-Disc Ultimate Collector's Edition]

Posted By: Someonelse
High Noon (1952) [2-Disc Ultimate Collector's Edition]

High Noon (1952) [2-Disc Ultimate Collector's Edition]
DVD9 + DVD5 | ISO | NTSC 4:3 (720x480) | 01:24:42 | 5,86 Gb + 4,43 Gb
Audio: English AC3 3.1/2.0 @ 384/192 Kbps + English Commentary | Subs: English, Spanish
Genre: Drama, Western | Won 4 Oscars + 11 wins | USA

This Western classic stars Gary Cooper as Hadleyville marshal Will Kane, about to retire from office and go on his honeymoon with his new Quaker bride, Amy (Grace Kelly). But his happiness is short-lived when he is informed that the Miller gang, whose leader (Ian McDonald) Will had arrested, is due on the 12:00 train. Pacifist Amy urges Will to leave town and forget about the Millers, but this isn't his style; protecting Hadleyburg has always been his duty, and it remains so now. But when he asks for deputies to fend off the Millers, virtually nobody will stand by him. Chief Deputy Harvey Pell (Lloyd Bridges) covets Will's job and ex-mistress (Katy Jurado); his mentor, former lawman Martin Howe (Lon Chaney Jr.) is now arthritic and unable to wield a gun. Even Amy, who doesn't want to be around for her husband's apparently certain demise, deserts him. Meanwhile, the clocks tick off the minutes to High Noon – the film is shot in "real time," so that its 85-minute length corresponds to the story's actual timeframe. Utterly alone, Kane walks into the center of town, steeling himself for his showdown with the murderous Millers. Considered a landmark of the "adult western," High Noon won four Academy Awards (including Best Actor for Cooper) and Best Song for the hit, "Do Not Forsake Me, O My Darling" sung by Tex Ritter. The screenplay was written by Carl Foreman, whose blacklisting was temporarily prevented by star Cooper, one of Hollywood's most virulent anti-Communists. John Wayne, another notable showbiz right-winger and Western hero, was so appalled at the notion that a Western marshal would beg for help in a showdown that he and director Howard Hawks "answered" High Noon with Rio Bravo (1959).

IMDB - Top 250 #143

Fred Zinnemann's High Noon was described by John Wayne as the most un-American movie he'd ever seen. It offered an in-your-face story about responsibility, private and public, and some truths about the archetypal American community that would have been unpleasant in any era, but were even more so during the Red Scare of the early 1950s: the spectacle of town marshal Wil Kane (played by a too-old Gary Cooper), abandoned by his friends and neighbors and having to face down outlaws alone, was a pretty raw statement about where some people (including liberal producer Stanley Kramer) feared we were heading in 1952. It was the soundtrack, completed by Dimitri Tiomkin and Ned Washington with a song sung by an off-screen Tex Ritter, that helped turn the movie into a huge box office hit. This was a double irony, and an indicator of just what a miraculous conjuring trick Kramer and Zinnemann and screenwriter Carl Foreman had pulled off: Ritter was a reactionary Republican, Cooper an avowed anti-communist, Foreman an avowed Communist sympathizer (who left Hollywood before the movie was released), the movie had two blacklistees in major roles (Lloyd Bridges and Howland Chamberlain), and Kramer was Hollywood's one respected liberal voice. They came up with a film that opened the way for a generation of serious westerns, including The Bravados, The Big Country, and The Searchers.
Bruce Eder, Rovi
High Noon (1952) [2-Disc Ultimate Collector's Edition]

It’s 10:40AM in the town of Hadleyville, aged Marshal Will Kane (Gary Cooper) is finally tying the knot with his wife, beautiful young Quaker girl Amy Fowler (Grace Kelly), and is set to retire from his job and live in peace with Amy as a store salesman in a nearby town. But soon after the marriage is complete, he receives a telegram from the railway station, in which he finds out that Frank Miller (Ian McDonald), a noteworthy outlaw whom Kane had arrested a long time ago, has been released from prison and is coming to town at high noon with his brother and two henchmen (One of them being a young Lee Van Cleef) to kill him.

High Noon (1952) [2-Disc Ultimate Collector's Edition]

Will is very respected by the townspeople since he spent most of his life cleaning up the city to become again prosperous, but when this news arrives, fear and self-interests plagues everyone and soon, they start deserting Will when he needs them the most this time. Will could’ve simply grabbed his shit and his wife and leave town, but his own conscience tells him not to, since he won’t allow Frank to destroy what he built with his own hands. As the minutes tick on by, nearing high noon, Will realizes in disbelief he’s alone on this one, and that no one will risk joining him to defend the town, and even his wife leaves him because he doesn’t want to see him killed. Convinced that no one will help him, Kane will have to confront his fears and prove his courage as he goes alone against Frank and his men.

High Noon (1952) [2-Disc Ultimate Collector's Edition]

Hardcore critics will bash this film for being predictable, too boring and too uninteresting to watch, and with no action until the end. Depends on how you look at it. If you’re seriously expecting same old action from a typical western, you’ll be seriously disappointed, but this film proves though, that it can be as suspenseful as any movie no matter how predictable it is. Ok, so it’s predictable, it’s a textbook example of good vs. evil, and if you’re a fan of westerns you know that the good guy will always win and the bad guy will end up dead. But seriously, when that time comes, you’ll be seriously on the edge of your seat due to the outcome of events that lead to the climax, thanks to the ever present countdown from the clock, the music (which plays also an important factor in the movie’s atmosphere of suspense), and the ever striking metaphoric shot of the camera on-looking the railroad towards the horizon, where evil will soon come. But it’s also suspenseful since were seeing the last minutes of this man’s life and were sitting there, waiting for the inevitable to come.

High Noon (1952) [2-Disc Ultimate Collector's Edition]

The clock ticks on the minutes and soon you see that no one will help Will and the odds are that he’ll end up dead, the camera closes up on Will’s face and you can see his fear, and his anguish. It’s as riveting as watching a death row inmate in his last hour of life before his death sentence, and when the hour comes, your hope is almost null and you sit there petrified, waiting for the moment to strike. That my friends, is realism caught in at its most severe, and realism is what makes this film work. The hero is no superhuman, he knows he’s going to die, he fears that death will visit him soon enough, but his courage and wit is what pushes him on to prove the cowardice of the people that turned his back on him, and to show who stands “a better man.” That’s filmmaking at its best.

High Noon (1952) [2-Disc Ultimate Collector's Edition]

Fred Zinnemann’s direction is flawless, he adds every element of realism into this movie, and always focuses on the metaphors of the clock, the railroad tracks, and Will Kane and his fear. The cinematography is perfect, and the music plays probably one of the most important factors in influencing the film’s atmosphere of suspense. The editing is also great, and not one scene is there without a purpose. The song, sung in a very odd way by Rex Ritter, soon became a fast favorite of mine, and is played from time to time throughout the movie, which may at times annoy some, but I loved it, and it deserves the Oscar that it won, as well as the editing and the rest of the music score. The script, written by soon-to-be blacklisted Carl Foreman (The Guns Of Navarone) is also flawless. Thanks to these elements, it’s proven once more that filmmaking is an art, and not just for the sake of pure entertainment.

High Noon (1952) [2-Disc Ultimate Collector's Edition]

The performances are fantastic. Gary Cooper has always being seen as somewhat of a non-actor, but the trick is that he never gives out more than what he should, and his emotions are always timed and on the right frame of mind. When the film was being made, Cooper was going through a lot of things, plus some internal injuries (bruised hip, back pains, and stomach ulcers), and you can see he was in pain for most of the movie, but when the suspense is kicking in, you’ll never notice it, hence his gestures add more to the realism of his character. He deserves that Oscar. Grace Kelly is also great in her first starring role, and some people will find the marriage in the film a little bit off-key, since Kelly was younger to Cooper, but it all works fine in the end. The rest of the cast was also great, including a then-young Lloyd Bridges who plays an arrogant wannabe who craves Will’s Sheriff’s badge, you can tell he was a star in the making.

High Noon (1952) [2-Disc Ultimate Collector's Edition]

In the end, this film deserves its place as a milestone in film history. Arguably one of the greatest westerns ever made, this film is recommended for every fan of this genre as well as to every fan of film. Rarely there comes a film where it’s entertaining and portrays an art form, a unique visual by the director who created it, and will always be debated for years to come. See it.
Slyder, eFilmCritic
High Noon (1952) [2-Disc Ultimate Collector's Edition]

DVD Talk Collector Series. It is a rare instance when High Noon isn't placed on the top shelf of any movie categorization, and far be it from me to do any different. It's one of those movies you can watch over and over and never tire of. Though High Noon has had multiple DVD releases over the years, this 2-Disc Ultimate Collector's Edition at last comes up with the kind of package this long-standing triumph deserves. The presentation is sublime, with a full disc of bonus features that truly take you deeper into the understanding of the movie. Thrilling, insightful, and inspiring, High Noon should be owned by all. Truly timeless, it always speaks to whatever period it's viewed in, and in our troubled world, the plight of Marshal Will Kane will never cease to have meaning.
Excerpt from Jamie S. Rich's Review on DVDTalk
High Noon (1952) [2-Disc Ultimate Collector's Edition]

Features:
Disc 1:
- Commentary by Maria Cooper-Janis, Jonathan Foreman, Tim Zinneman, John Ritter and David Crosby.

Disc 2:
- Featurette: Inside High Noon (49:56)
- The Making of High Noon (22:09)
- Featurette: Behind High Noon (9:47)
- Featurette: Tex Ritter: A Visit to Carthage Texas (5:57)
- Tex Ritter performing the Oscar winning theme song on The Jimmy Dean Show (2:54)
- Radio broadcast with Tex Ritter on the Ralph Emery Show (5:35)
High Noon (1952) [2-Disc Ultimate Collector's Edition]

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