Shane
George Stevens’ 'Shane' earns a place along with 'High Noon' and 'The Gunfighter' as one of the great tumbleweed sagas of the decade.
-- Hollywood Reporter
Shane
Part of our Anniversary Classics series. For details, visit: laemmle.com/ac.
SHANE (1953)
65th Anniversary Screening
Sunday, August 26, at 3 PM
Ahrya Fine Arts Theatre
Q&A with David Ladd, Actor-Producer and Son of Alan Ladd
Laemmle Theatres and the Anniversary Classics Series present a 65th anniversary screening of one of the most beloved Westerns of all time, George Stevens’ production of 'Shane.' The 1950s happened to be a golden age for cowboy sagas, and as the Hollywood Reporter observed, “George Stevens’ 'Shane' earns a place along with 'High Noon' and 'The Gunfighter' as one of the great tumbleweed sagas of the decade.” Or as Leonard Maltin declared decades later, “Classic Western is splendid in every way.”
Alan Ladd, Paramount’s biggest star of the era, plays a mysterious gunfighter who arrives in a small Western town and finds a turf war between the farmers and cattle ranchers who want to drive them off the land. Shane decides to become a protector of these homesteaders and strikes up a friendship with one family; Van Heflin plays the father, Jean Arthur (in her final screen performance) plays the mother, and young actor Brandon De Wilde plays their son, Joey. Jack Palance was cast as the villain of the piece, a black-clad gunslinger hired by the cattle ranchers to eliminate Shane, along with the rest of the farmers. The supporting cast includes gifted character actors Ben Johnson, Edgar Buchanan, Emile Meyer, and Elisha Cook Jr. Ladd received the best reviews of his career for the picture. The Saturday Review wrote, “As Shane, Alan Ladd has one of his best roles and gives what is surely his most rewarding performance.”
Stevens had won the Academy Award for best director of 1951 for 'A Place in the Sun.' 'Shane' gave him his third nomination in the directing category (he would win a second Oscar for 'Giant' in 1956). 'Shane' earned six nominations in all, including Best Picture and two nods in the supporting actor category, for both Palance and De Wilde. The Oscar-nominated screenplay was written by A.B. Guthrie Jr., who adapted the novel by Jack Schaefer. The picture won the Oscar for the magnificent color cinematography of Loyal Griggs. In tune with the fashions of the era, Stevens chose to shoot on location in the gorgeous Grand Tetons outside Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Because of the care he took with the production, the film went over budget, and the studio was nervous. But the film turned out to be a box office smash and proved enticing to adult and family audiences alike. Kids who saw the move in 1953 are not likely to forget the emotional ending and young De Wilde’s cry, “Come back, Shane!”
'Shane' comes back for a one-time showing on the big screen. Joining us for a Q&A will be David Ladd, the son of Alan Ladd. David went on to be a popular child actor in the 1950s. He appeared with his father in two films, 'The Big Land' and 'The Proud Rebel;' he then starred on his own in two family hits, 'Misty' and 'A Dog of Flanders.' He went on to act in a few films as an adult but then segued into a career as producer and studio executive.
Format: DCP
65th Anniversary Screening
Sunday, August 26, at 3 PM
Ahrya Fine Arts Theatre
Q&A with David Ladd, Actor-Producer and Son of Alan Ladd
Laemmle Theatres and the Anniversary Classics Series present a 65th anniversary screening of one of the most beloved Westerns of all time, George Stevens’ production of 'Shane.' The 1950s happened to be a golden age for cowboy sagas, and as the Hollywood Reporter observed, “George Stevens’ 'Shane' earns a place along with 'High Noon' and 'The Gunfighter' as one of the great tumbleweed sagas of the decade.” Or as Leonard Maltin declared decades later, “Classic Western is splendid in every way.”
Alan Ladd, Paramount’s biggest star of the era, plays a mysterious gunfighter who arrives in a small Western town and finds a turf war between the farmers and cattle ranchers who want to drive them off the land. Shane decides to become a protector of these homesteaders and strikes up a friendship with one family; Van Heflin plays the father, Jean Arthur (in her final screen performance) plays the mother, and young actor Brandon De Wilde plays their son, Joey. Jack Palance was cast as the villain of the piece, a black-clad gunslinger hired by the cattle ranchers to eliminate Shane, along with the rest of the farmers. The supporting cast includes gifted character actors Ben Johnson, Edgar Buchanan, Emile Meyer, and Elisha Cook Jr. Ladd received the best reviews of his career for the picture. The Saturday Review wrote, “As Shane, Alan Ladd has one of his best roles and gives what is surely his most rewarding performance.”
Stevens had won the Academy Award for best director of 1951 for 'A Place in the Sun.' 'Shane' gave him his third nomination in the directing category (he would win a second Oscar for 'Giant' in 1956). 'Shane' earned six nominations in all, including Best Picture and two nods in the supporting actor category, for both Palance and De Wilde. The Oscar-nominated screenplay was written by A.B. Guthrie Jr., who adapted the novel by Jack Schaefer. The picture won the Oscar for the magnificent color cinematography of Loyal Griggs. In tune with the fashions of the era, Stevens chose to shoot on location in the gorgeous Grand Tetons outside Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Because of the care he took with the production, the film went over budget, and the studio was nervous. But the film turned out to be a box office smash and proved enticing to adult and family audiences alike. Kids who saw the move in 1953 are not likely to forget the emotional ending and young De Wilde’s cry, “Come back, Shane!”
'Shane' comes back for a one-time showing on the big screen. Joining us for a Q&A will be David Ladd, the son of Alan Ladd. David went on to be a popular child actor in the 1950s. He appeared with his father in two films, 'The Big Land' and 'The Proud Rebel;' he then starred on his own in two family hits, 'Misty' and 'A Dog of Flanders.' He went on to act in a few films as an adult but then segued into a career as producer and studio executive.
Format: DCP
Genre
Western,
Anniversary Classics
Runtime
118
Language
English
Director
George Stevens
Cast
Alan Ladd,
Jean Arthur,
Van Heflin,
Brandon De Wilde,
Jack Palance,
Ben Johnson,
Edgar Buchanan,
Emile Meyer,
Elisha Cook Jr
Played at
Playhouse 7 4.22.07 - 4.22.07
Fine Arts Theatre 8.26.18 - 8.26.18
Firehouse Theater 3.05.23 - 3.06.23
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