- The Shootist
Infobox_Film
name = The Shootist
caption =film poster byRichard Amsel
writer =Glendon Swarthout (novel)Scott Hale Miles Hood Swarthout
starring =John Wayne Lauren Bacall Harry Morgan Ron Howard
James Stewart
music =Elmer Bernstein
director =Don Siegel
producer =M.J. Frankovich
William Self
distributor =Paramount Pictures (USA/UK)
Dino De Laurentiis Company (International)
released =August 11 1976 (USA )
runtime = 100 min.
language = English
amg_id = 1:44462
imdb_id = 0075213
budget ="The Shootist" is a
novel written byGlendon Swarthout and published in 1975.Swarthout, Glendon (1975). "The Shootist", New York, New York: Doubleday. ISBN 0385060998]The book was made into a 1976
Western film directed byDon Siegel and is noted as being the final film role of actorJohn Wayne . Scott Hale and Miles Hood Swarthout (son of the author) wrote the screenplay.Plot
"The Shootist" tells the story of John Bernard (J.B.) Books (
John Wayne ), an aginggunfighter , the most celebrated "shootist" , who is struggling with terminalprostate cancer . Although Books is perceived by some of the characters as an amoral opportunist, he expresses his simple creed when he says, "I won't be wronged, I won't be insulted, and I won't be laid a hand on. I don't do these things to other people, and I require the same from them." Arriving inEl Paso, Texas (the movie :Carson City, Nevada ) in 1901, Books seeks the second medical opinion of an old friend, Doc E. W. Hostetler (Jimmy Stewart). Once Hostetler confirms the presence of the cancer, Books rents a room from the widow 'Bond' ("thats a crackerjack of a name for a woman") Rogers (Lauren Bacall ), and her son Gillom Rogers (Ron Howard ). Books' presence in town is soon known to most, and the news spreads by telegraph throughout the country. This results in the arrival of troublemakers to lure Books back to his past. Not only does he have to deal with his inevitable death, but he has to deal with the vultures who come to profit from his infamy. Having never had trouble facing death in other men, Books now struggles with the fact that death is calling on him.Background
The character of J.B. Books serves to parallel the final days of John Wayne, who died from
stomach cancer three years after production ended. "The Shootist" would be his final film role, concluding a legendary career that began during thesilent film era in 1926. The knowledge of Wayne's health during the production would inspire much of the dialogue and imagery of the film. Lauren Bacall had suffered through the 1957 death of her husbandHumphrey Bogart , who died of throat cancer, adding further shading to the parallels of the film.A popular
urban myth holds that Wayne was dying of cancer when he made this film. Although he was in poor health during the production and this was generally considered to be his final film role, he had been cancer-free since undergoing surgery to remove his left lung in 1964. The cancer would not return until the last year of his life.At the time the movie rights were purchased, John Wayne was not seriously considered for the role, due to questions about his health and his ability to complete the filming. The producers had wanted
George C. Scott , but Wayne actively campaigned for the role and made completion of the filming a personal mission.The film was shot on location in
Carson City, Nevada and at studios inBurbank, California . In Carson City, the house at 500 N. Mountain Street that doubled for J.B. Books' rooming house (owned by Bond Rogers in the movie) is three doors south from the Nevada governor's mansion. The only change to the house was a portico added on the southern side. Besides changing the location from El Paso to Carson City, and having his horse Dollor written in, Wayne also changed the ending of the screenplay. Books was supposed to shoot Jack Pulford (Hugh O'Brian ) in the back, and then Gillom Rogers (Ron Howard) was to shoot Books. Wayne said "I've made over 250 pictures and have never shot a guy in the back. Change it." He also did not want the young Gillom killing him. The screenplay was changed, having him shoot Pulford in the head, the bartender then shooting Books, followed by Rogers shooting the bartender.The horse that J.B. Books (Wayne) rides in the film, Dollor ('Ole Dollor), that he gives to Gillom Rogers (Howard), had been Wayne's favorite horse for ten years, through several Westerns. The horse shown during the final scene of "
True Grit " was Dollor, a two-year-old in 1969. Wayne had Dollor, a chestnut Quarter horse gelding, written into the script of "The Shootist" because of his love for the horse, it was a condition for him working on the project. Wayne would not let anyone else ride the horse.Robert Wagner was a rare exception, who rode the horse in a segment of the "Hart to Hart", after Wayne's death. The book makes no mention of Dollor, or a specific horse, but the script for the film was altered to include the horse. [Whiteside, John. "The Duke's Horse Keeps Special Bond". "Chicago Sun Times ". January 19, 1985]John Wayne and Lauren Bacall made one previous film together two decades earlier called "
Blood Alley " (1955), a seafaring adventure set inChina .James Stewart and John Wayne also made one previous film together,
John Ford 's "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance " (1962).Reception
Upon its release in June 1976, "The Shootist" was a minor success, earning nearly $6,000,000. It received fair-to-excellent reviews, with enormous praise heaped on Wayne by many critics. It was named one of the Ten Best Films of 1976 by the
National Board of Review , along with "All the President's Men" and "Network", and was nominated for one Oscar, a Golden Globe, aBAFTA award, and aWriters Guild of America award. The film currently holds a 93% fresh rating onRotten Tomatoes .Cast
*
John Wayne - John Bernard Books
*Lauren Bacall - Bond Rogers
*Ron Howard - Gillom Rogers
*James Stewart - Dr. E.W. Hostetler
*Richard Boone - Mike Sweeney
*Hugh O'Brian - Jack Pulford
*Harry Morgan - Carson City Marshal Walter J. Thibido
*John Carradine - Hezekiah Beckum (undertaker)
*Sheree North - Serepta
*Scatman Crothers - Moses BrownCrew
*
Don Siegel - director.
*M.J. Frankovich and William Self - producers
*Elmer Bernstein - music
*Bruce Surtees - director of photography
*Douglas Stewart - editing.Awards
* Novel
**Western Writers of America ,Spur Award Winner - "Best Western Novel" - 1975 (as: "one of the best western novels ever written." and as: "one of the 10 Greatest Western novels written in the 20th century.")
* Film
** Writers Guild, nomination: "Best Adaptation of a Screenplay" - Scott Hale and Miles Hood Swarthout
** Academy Awards, nomination: "Best Art Direction-Set Decoration" - Robert F. Boyle and Arthur Jeph Parker)
** Golden Globes, nomination: "Best Motion Picture Actor in a Supporting Role" - Ron Howard
** BAFTA Film Award, nomination: "Best Actress" - Lauren BacallReferences
External links
* [http://www.glendonswarthout.com/ Glendon Swarthout website]
*
* [http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/shootist/ The Shootist at Rotten Tomatoes]
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