COWBOY
DIRECTED BY DELMER DAVES
PHOENIX PICTURES
COLUMBIA PICTURES CORPORATION
INFORMATION FROM IMDb
Plot Summary
Chicago hotel clerk Frank Harris dreams of life as a cowboy, and he gets his chance when, jilted by the father of the woman he loves, he joins Tom Reece and his cattle-driving outfit. Soon, though, the tenderfoot finds out life on the range is neither what he expected nor what he's been looking for...
Written by Jorge Mourinha
Cast
Glenn Ford ... Tom Reese
Jack Lemmon ... Frank Harris
Anna Kashfi ... Maria Vidal / Arriega
Brian Donlevy ... Doc Bender - Trail Hand
Dick York ... Charlie - Trail Hand
Víctor Manuel Mendoza ... Paco Mendoza - Ramrod
Richard Jaeckel ... Paul Curtis
King Donovan ... Joe Capper - Trail Hand
Vaughn Taylor ... Mr. Fowler - Chicago Hotel Manager
Donald Randolph ... Senor Vidal - Maria's Father
James Westerfield ... Mike Adams
Eugene Iglesias ... Don Manuel Arriega
Frank DeKova ... Alcaide (as Frank de Kova)
and many more...
Directed
Delmer Daves
Writing Credits
Frank Harris ... (book)
Edmund H. North ... (screenplay)
Dalton Trumbo ... (screenplay) (originally uncredited)
Produced by
Julian Blaustein ... producer
Music
George Duning
Cinematography
Charles Lawton Jr.
Trivia
The trumpeter in the cantina was Raphaël Mendez, who in the 1950s was considered by many professional musicians to be one of the finest trumpet players in the world, if not the best.
The script is based on the memoirs of Frank Harris, chronicling his first trial drive as a greenhorn from Chicago.
George Duning's soundtrack uses themes from traditional western and Mexican folk tunes.
At age 33 Jack Lemon was only three years past his breakout role as Ensign Frank Pulver in Mister Roberts.
The typical cowboy in the Old West died at age 21 from a fall off his horse.
Goofs
Anachronisms
The stampede scene had the cowboys using what appear to be 20th century model Winchesters with round barrels. They should have used octagonal-barreled model 73s.
Continuity
While trying to place a ring on the bulls obviously rubber horn, Don Manuel Arriegas horse is shown being gored in the right shoulder, with blood spurting out of the wound. In subsequent shots there is no sign of any wound. Additionally, many shots in the scene show lunges by the bull that would have disemboweled the horse had the horns been real.
During the bull - ring game, Glenn Ford is rolled on the ground, but when he pops up again, his clothes don't have a speck of dirt on them.
Revealing mistakes
In a rail car containing the shipment of cattle, Tom Reese, an 'experienced' cattle-handler, attempts to help up a fallen steer by pulling the animal's head so that it can get up on its front legs then, presumably, on to its hind legs. No bovine will normally get up like this, and it's easier for it, firstly, to raise itself up on its hind legs by lunging forward, then put its front legs under it to stand up. To help this animal get up, you must lift its rear end by grabbing either the tail root or its backside.
While Don Manuel Arriega and Tom Reese are attempting to place the ring on the bull's horns, it is obvious the horns, which bend and flop, are made of rubber.
When Reese arrives at the hotel and orders hot water for a bath, the bellboy brings in pails of water and pours them in the tub. But none of the pails of water are steaming, so they are clearly not hot.
When Tom and Frank strike their deal in the hotel, Tom says "Get some sleep. We leave first thing in the morning." When Tom and the other cowboys arrive the next morning in the wagon, the shadows on the ground are very short, being almost non-existent. This indicates the sun is almost directly overhead and that it is close to noon, and nowhere near early morning.
Filming Locations
Lawton, Oklahoma, USA
Bonanza Creek Ranch - 15 Bonanza Creek Lane, Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA
El Paso Stockyards, El Paso, Texas, USA
San Ildefonso Pueblo, New Mexico, USA
Elfrida, Arizona, USA
Hereford, Arizona, USA
McNeal, Arizona, USA
Watch the Movie
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