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Stagecoach

DVD - 2010 DVD Western Stagecoach 3 On Shelf No requests on this item Community Rating: 4.4 out of 5

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Locations
Call Number: DVD Western Stagecoach
On Shelf At: Downtown Library, Traverwood Branch, Westgate Branch

Location & Checkout Length Call Number Checkout Length Item Status
Downtown 1st Floor
1-week checkout
DVD Western Stagecoach 1-week checkout On Shelf
Traverwood Adult A/V
1-week checkout
DVD Western Stagecoach 1-week checkout On Shelf
Westgate Adult A/V
1-week checkout
DVD Western Stagecoach 1-week checkout On Shelf

Based on the original story "Stage to Lordsburg" by Ernest Haycox.
Originally released as a motion picture in 1939.
Special features: Disc 1. Commentary with film historian, Jim Kitses; Original theatrical trailer. Disc 2. "Bucking Broadway" John Ford silent film (1917); John Ford interview; "Peter Bogdanovich" offers his thoughts on Stagecoach; "Dreaming of Jeanie" video essay by Tag Gallagher; "John Ford home movies" interview with grandson Dan Ford; "True West" video interview with Buzz Bissinger; "Yakima Canutt" stuntsman Vic Armstrong discusses Camutt's contributions to filmmaking; "Screen director's playhouse" radio adaptation of Stagecoach broadcast Jan. 9, 1949 with John Wayne and Claire Trevor. Booklet: "Taking the stage" by David Cairns; "Stage to Lordsburg" by Ernest Haycox.
Disc 1: Film -- Disc 2. Supplements.
Claire Trevor, John Wayne, Andy Devine, John Carradine, Thomas Mitchell, Louise Platt, George Bancroft, Donald Meek, Berton Churchill, Tim Holt, Tom Tyler.
A group of passengers with nothing in common is stuck inside a coach that is being attacked by bandits and Indians.
DVD; region 1, NTSC, full screen (1.37:1) presentation; Dolby Digital mono.
Contents: Dreaming of Jeanie. -- Taking the stage. -- Stage to Lordsburg.

REVIEWS & SUMMARIES

Library Journal Review

COMMUNITY REVIEWS

It's a great story. Such a tight reduction of humanity. submitted by lisa on July 30, 2019, 10:57am During those later years with John Wayne I could never figure out why he was celebrated. I mean, ugh, y'know? But then eventually I saw Stagecoach, and I kinda got it.

Not that I don't have some ugh left for some of those later pictures, and the whole gendered social order they can be so excessively gung-ho on honoring, preserving, and holding up like it's all to be celebrated and defended in some inherently-good bogusness.