Man of the West is a 1958 American Western film starring Gary Cooper and directed by Anthony Mann,
produced by Walter Mirisch and distributed by United Artists.
The screenplay, written by Reginald Rose,
is based on the 1955 novel The Border Jumpers, by Will C. Brown.
The film co-stars Julie London, Jack Lord, Arthur O'Connell and Lee J. Cobb in supporting roles.
The film is one of Cooper's final western roles.
The film premiered in October 1, 1958.
At the time of release, the film was largely panned by American critics,
but it was praised by Jean-Luc Godard,
who, before he became a director, was a film critic.
Godard claimed that Man of the West was the best film of the year.
Decades after the film's releaseit has gained a cult following and greater acclaim
, with film historian Phillip French
claiming the film to be Anthony Mann's masterpiece, containing Cooper's finest performance.
Look out for Chuck Roberson ... Rifleman-Guard on Train (uncredited)
User Review
QuoteDisplay MoreGary Cooper pinch hits
12 January 2005 | by bkoganbing (Buffalo, New York)
Man of the West is a fine gritty western with Gary Cooper stepping into the James Stewart parts in those 50s Anthony Mann westerns.
Mann and Stewart during the 50s did eight films, five of them westerns. and some of the best westerns ever made. They were on the set of a sixth, Night Passage, when they quarreled and Mann walked out. I'm sure that both The Tin Star and Man of the West were properties that he originally developed with James Stewart in mind. But at least in this one Gary Cooper pinch hits admirably.
The key here is incest. Gary Cooper is former outlaw Link Jones trying to live his past down. He's on the way with his town's savings for a schoolteacher. The train is held up by the Doc Tobin gang and while he eludes them in the holdup, he runs into them later on when he's left behind by the train. These aren't just former outlaw compatriots, they're his family.
And what a family, the most frightening group of inbreds ever put on screen until Deliverance. From Lee J. Cobb on down, a lovely group of twisted psychos. Cooper is not just running from his past, but from his lineage.
The rest of the gang is Robert J. Wilke, Royal Dano, Jack Lord, and John Dehner. Lee J. Cobb is Doc Tobin and though he's 10 years younger than Cooper, he plays his uncle. Along for the ride are fellow train passengers Julie London and Arthur O'Connell. It's an admirable cast.
A real downer of a western, but a great classic.