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7/10
Tough gritty western that influenced the Spaghetti Western
ChungMo15 May 2005
There is a bit wrong with this film. Gary Cooper's age versus Lee Cobb's. The coincidental stranding of Julie London and Arthur O'Conell after the train robbery. The abrupt ending.

There is quite a bit not wrong also. The outdoor photography. The interior train scenes seem to have been entirely shot on a real train going down the tracks, not a set with rear projection. All the settings are real looking not Hollywood whitewash. Gary Cooper is low-key but builds his conflicted character well. The villains are among the nastiest one can see in pre-1960's westerns. They really lay the groundwork for the stock western psycho in later Spaghetti Westerns. Jack Lord plays a real maniac!

Mann's eye for visual composition really adds to the psychological atmosphere. You can see the influence on Leone and it seems like Leone imitated a couple of shots from this film. The set design for the town of Lasso could have been used in any Italian western.

A good, if depressing, alternate western.
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8/10
Gary Cooper pinch hits
bkoganbing12 January 2005
Warning: Spoilers
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.
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7/10
An awesome rugged Western perfectly performed and masterfully directed by Anthony Mann
ma-cortes14 April 2013
Tense , violent ,epic Western in which Gary Cooper , Lee J Cobb and Julie London stand out . Brilliant and taut Western with wonderful use of locations and top-of-the-range cast . Gary Cooper is the Man of the West , a reformed outlaw called Link Jones (Gary Cooper , he bravely did his own horse-riding scenes despite physical pain from a car accident years earlier though) becomes stranded after an aborted train robbery with two other passengers (Julie London , Arthur O'Connell) . Cooper is forced to rejoin his ex-colleague (Lee J Cobb) and ex-boss to save himself and other innocent people from the band's (Jack Lord , Robert J Wilke, Royal Dano) mistreatment .

Magnificent Western plenty of thrills , shootouts , violence , gorgeous landscapes and results to be pretty entertaining . This excellent Western deserves another look at 1958 , nowadays is better considered then the 50s when was dismissed . In spite of its violence that influenced in Spaghetti Western , ¨Man of the West¨ turns out to be an essential and indispensable Western for hardcore aficionados . Jean-Luc Godard, a film critic before he became a director, raved about the film saying it was the best film of that year ; because of his recommendation, the film has been reevaluated and is now considered a classic western . Gary Cooper is frankly well in the role that fits him like a gun fits a holster .Gary Cooper was, at 56, a decade older than Lee J. Cobb who played his "Uncle" Dock Tobin , in the film Cooper and John Dehner talk about being children together , Dehner was actually fourteen years younger than Cooper . However , Stewart Granger was originally announced for the lead role and James Stewart eagerly sought the role played by Gary Cooper, but since Stewart had fallen out with director Anthony Mann he did not get the part . Very good support cast formed by notorious secondaries such as Jack Lord , Royal Dano , Robert J Wilke , Arthur O'Connell , Frank Ferguson and special mention to Lee J Cobb . Colorful cinematography in CinemaScope by Ernest Haller . Powerful and thrilling musical score by Leigh Harline .

This top-drawer Western was stunningly realized by the master Anthony Mann , infusing the traditional Western with psychological confusion , including his characteristic use of landscape with marvelous use of outdoors which is visually memorable . Mann established his forte with magnificent Western almost always with James Stewart . In his beginnings he made ambitious but short-lived quality low-budget surroundings of Eagle-Lion production as ¨T-men¨ , ¨They walked by night¨ , ¨Raw deal¨ , ¨Railroaded¨ and ¨Desperate¨ . Later on , he made various Western , remarkably good , masterpieces such as ¨The furies¨ , and ¨Devil's doorway¨ and several with his habitual star , James Stewart, as ¨Winchester 73¨ , ¨Bend the river¨ and ¨The far country¨ . They are characterized by roles whose determination to stick to their guns would take them to the limits of their endurance . Others in this throughly enjoyable series include ¨Tin star ¨ and ¨Man of the West¨ is probably one of the best Western in the fifties and sixties . After the mid-50 , Mann's successes came less frequently , though directed another good Western with Victor Mature titled ¨The last frontier¨. And of course ¨Man of the West ¨ that turns out to be stylish , fast paced , solid , meticulous , with enjoyable look , and most powerful and well-considered . This well acted movie is gripping every step of the way . It results to be a splendid western and remains consistently agreeable . Rating : Above average , the result is a top-of-range Western . Well worth watching and it will appeal to Gary Cooper fans .
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6/10
History of Violence
sol-20 March 2016
Stranded in the middle of nowhere after their train is robbed, a former outlaw, a schoolteacher and a gambler take refuge with the gang that the former outlaw once belonged to in this dark western drama. Taking refuge does not come easy to the once-outlaw, played by Gary Cooper, as he has to pretend to still be a tough lawbreaker despite reforming his ways, and there is a lot of tension in the air as the gang members are equally as uneasy about his return. The plot actually has a lot in common with David Cronenberg's 'A History of Violence' with Cooper having to face the violent past that he thought he left behind. Cooper never quite seems right in the role though; aside from being two decades older than his character, it is hard to ever imagine Cooper once being a hardened outlaw. As a character, he is not as well developed as Viggo Mortensen in 'A History of Violence' either with the train robbery happening before we even have a chance to know him. The film is also set back by a melodramatic music score from Leigh Harline that comes off as overbearing half the time. The film does have its moments though. The long distance shots of Cooper entering the supposedly abandoned cabin are great, capturing the eerie isolation of the place. The scene in which Julie London is told to strip at knife point is nail-bitingly intense too, and while he looks too young to really be Cooper's uncle, Lee J. Cobb is delightful in the role, radiating both danger and a sense of longing, wanting so much to reconnect with the outlaw nephew he thought he lost forever.
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9/10
Violent, sometimes sadistic, the film is nonetheless a powerful piece of work
Nazi_Fighter_David14 January 2000
Warning: Spoilers
Mann's cycle began in 1950 with "Winchester '73," continued up to 1958 (his pallid remake of "Cimarron" in 1960 hardly counts here) with "Man of the West," and included a remarkable body of work as "Bend of the River," "The Naked Spur," "The Far Country," "The Man from Laramie," "The Last Frontier," and "The Tin Star."

"Man of the West" starred Cooper instead of James Stewart, and its highly charged story of the conflict between two one-time partnered outlaws, one now reformed, carries strong overtones of sex and violence, the one motivated by the presence of Julie London, the other taken care of by Lee J. Cobb's particularly repulsive villain... The film is replete with interesting, complex characters and exciting situations...

Gary Cooper, in the Arizona of the 1870s, sets forth from his little town with six hundred dollars to hire for it a teacher… A trip on a train introduces him to a comely saloon singer (Julie London), to a card sharp (Arthur O'Connell), but also to a bit of his past he'd rather forget… For when the train is held up it is all too soon apparent that the gang is one to which he'd belonged in the bad old days, led by a villainous kinsman (Lee J. Cobb) and containing another member of the family (John Dehner).

The reformed Cooper's only chance of a getaway—and the girl's chance too—lies in him convincing Cobb and Co., that his loyalties lie with them… Fine, says Cobb, in effect, but do something to prove it.

The 'something' is joining in a stage bank hold-up...

From this moment, the theme is familiar in Mann Westerns and here the mechanics of the 'purging' and the power of it get their best expression… Mann's picture shifts from half-comedy to tense melodrama... Cooper stops being a hick and starts acting serious and clever... "You've changed," O'Connell observes. "You act like you belong with these people."

The clash of family loyalties soon makes itself felt… The old man brought him up when he was a boy—the old man still obviously thinks something of him, since he stops an attempt on his life… But the old man is also a villain, and villainy is his prevailing climate and that is why Cooper initially made his breakaway…

The difference between Cooper and his depraved relatives was significant when it comes across in the way they treat Billie (Julie London). Most Western heroes distrust women, but Cooper respects at least two: his wife and the pretty saloon singer... It makes no difference to him that in Billie's shady past she has probably taken off her clothes for many men and gone much farther than that... When Jack Lord forces Billie to disrobe, Cooper realizes her humiliation... After beating Lord, Cooper makes him cry by stripping off his clothes in front of Billie, reminding him of how he insulted the dancehall girl: "How does it feel?!"

Gary Cooper must take part in two gunfights at the end of the film... The first one in Lassoo, a ghost town which represents the life Cooper left behind... Here, Cooper reveals the very bad talents Cobb taught him... And after finding the saloon singer has been raped, Cooper goes off to find Cobb... Mann typically sets his final gun duels far away from civilization, off in the wilderness, away from all eyes...

Released in CinemaScope and Technicolor, this visually beautiful dramatic Western gained instant notoriety, in 1958, because of the scene in which Julie London strips for the Tobin gang...
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6/10
Welcome back, Link.
rmax30482315 February 2009
Warning: Spoilers
A nice guy, Gary Cooper's career had run out of steam by the 1950s and he made a string of mostly undistinguished Westerns. "Man of the West" is one of the better ones, directed by Mad Anthony Mann. Mann was the fellow responsible for reviving Jimmy Stewart's post-war career as a dramatic actor in some brutal Westerns.

Cooper isn't that good a replacement for Stewart. As an actor, he's not as good at projecting anguish or rage. And he's older. When he's knocked down in a fist fight or falls to the floor after being wounded, there's a painful quality about the scene because no one enjoys seeing the limbs of a tall and elderly man flailing about.

Yet, this is pretty rugged stuff -- due to the direction and performances, not the screenplay. The plot has Cooper and two other innocents left behind by a train in the middle of nowhere. They're a hundred miles from the nearest town, so Cooper leads them to a sprawling shack whose location he recalls from his young, more reckless days. Alas, the shack is still occupied by Cooper's one-time companion, Dock Tobin (Lee J. Cobb), and his gang of four, including some sterling character actors like the mute Royal Dano, the retarded Robert Wilkes, the wolfish Jack Lord, and the thoughtful John Dehner.

Cooper had wised up and ridden away from the gang years ago but Dock welcomes him back, believing he means to stay. He also welcomes one of Cooper's companions, the Hollywood-glamorized Julie London, for somewhat different reasons. The third companion, Arthur O'Connell, generates no interest in the gang. O'Connell's character's name is Sam Beasley, which tells you just about all you need to know. For what it's worth, O'Connell and Jack Lord give the two most notable performances. Lord fights Cooper in a jagged scene, and Cooper humiliates and tears Lord's clothes off in public. A memorable fist fight.

Anyway, Cooper claims that Julie London is his woman and goes along with Dock's assumption that Cooper is here to stay. He isn't, of course, and when the bullets fly at the end, in the ghost town, Cooper and London are left standing.

Cobb's Dock Tobin is a slob but a sentimental one. He puts a stop to Jack Lord's rape of Julie London and otherwise keeps order among his wild gang. One doesn't REALLY want to see him killed. He's not pure evil, like Jack Lord. So in order to justify Cooper's shooting of Dock, the writers have him rape Julie London in Cooper's absence. It's out of character but provides the viewer with some sense of satisfied revenge as we watch the plugged Dock roll endlessly down a long steep hill, bouncing, flapping, but always downward as if that rolling will never stop, looking remarkably like the stock market the day after I get giddy enough to dip a toe in it.

One of the major irritations I had with this movie, common to the genre, are the names of the characters. My own extensive research of real cowboy names reveals that Link never occurs, nor Matt, Luke, or Clint. The three most common names in fact are Alistair, Governeur, and Montmorency. Will these clichés never end?

As a Western, above average for the 1950s but not by much.
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9/10
"You outlived your life, you outlived your kind"
IlyaMauter3 June 2003
Warning: Spoilers
Man of the West was the last Western directed by Anthony Mann, it also stands as one of his best works in the genre. The film belongs to a transition category of Westerns, it was released in a period when the Western practically ceased to be a pure and innocent adventure of cowboys and Indians, a conquering of the West by hopeful pioneers and instead was substituted by a more pessimistic, somewhat more mature, adult and even philosophical approach. The Man of the West is a clear representation of that change, being one of the pioneers in the category along with John Ford's The Searchers, which was made about the same time, the change that was finalized in what is considered as a symbolic death of the Western classical genre - John Ford's The Man Who Shoot Liberty Valance. With all its pessimism and extreme, almost sadistic violence, Man of the West is also an undoubted predecessor to the Westerns made later in the '60s by Sam Pekinpah, beginning with 1962 Ride the High Country and culminating in what considered his best 1969 The Wild Bunch. In Man of the West the transition, the change in the genre incarnates itself in a figure of Link Jones wonderfully played by Gary Cooper. Right from the opening scene of the film we are introduced to him as he appears on the horizon of the classical Western's landscape, a figure that looks like it had been moulded out of as much marked by the time as the hero himself surrounding scenery. And when he enters the town in a classical Western manner of a stranger sure of his strength, the voyage to the past really begins, a past which starts to hunt the main character in almost an exact proportion as it revealed to us. A past that finds its threatening personification in a most evil character of Dock Tobin, superbly played by Lee J. Cobb. An old outlaw who once was Link's buddy and who somehow managed to survive all those years, still remaining in action, outliving his kind, outliving his life, representing no more nor less than a shadow of the classical Western bad guy figure and opposing Link, his once best friend and now enemy of equally phantomous nature. The confrontation reaches its peak and draws to its conclusion in the phantom-town of Lassoo, left by its inhabitants a long time ago and populated only by ghosts and aged Mexican couple before our heroes' arrival. This is where the final duel between the two parties takes place, a duel where again the deviation from the classical Western style is so obvious, where actually the classical duel scheme finds its end when the opponents breaking all the codes and leaving all the moral preoccupations aside shoot each other in pure struggle for survival motivated by the overwhelming hate and the desire to erase the past. The final result is one of the most tragic and pessimistic Westerns in the cinema's history. 9/10
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6/10
Downbeat western with miscast Cooper...
Doylenf11 March 2007
Warning: Spoilers
GARY COOPER plays a man haunted by his shady past when he's stranded by the side of the railroad tracks after a train robbery, along with JULIE London and ARTHUR O'CONNELL. He finds shelter for them in a shack inhabited by several former gang members he'd been associated with, including his derelict uncle LEE J. COBB, the boisterous head of the gang. JACK LORD is the prize villain of the piece, almost unrecognizable as the man who later starred in "Hawaii Five-0" of TV fame.

But the story is a nasty one, none of the desperadoes worth caring about and Cooper is unable to do much with his role of reformed outlaw trying to turn his life around and save schoolteacher/singer London from the clutches of an evil gang.

He manages to do exactly that, in the course of the film's running time but by that time there's been such extravagant over-the-top acting by LEE J. COBB (he chews every piece of scenery to bits) as opposed to Cooper's "man of a few words" anti-hero, played with such lethargy by Cooper that you have to suspect he was already feeling the signs of illness that would take his life a few years later. He looks aged and worn, remaining stoic throughout in what has to be one of the stiffest performances he ever gave in a western.

There's a violent physical battle between Cooper and Lord where it's obvious that a stuntman is filling in for Gary in the long shots. The role should have been played by a much younger man. JACK LORD gives one of the film's best performances as the most ornery of Cobb's sons.

***** POSSIBLE SPOILER ***** The final showdown after a gun battle in which Cooper emerges the hero has him confronting LEE J. COBB and telling him he's "taking him in" so society can punish him. Cobb resists and starts shooting and then Cooper has no choice but to shoot him. Cobb's fall down the side of a steep, rocky hillside is the last word in dramatic death falls as he flails around and stumbles to his resting place. It seemed a fittingly over-dramatic end to Cobb's larger than life performance here.

Summing up: Downbeat western has little new to offer and Cooper's tired look doesn't serve the character well.
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8/10
Gritty, Violent Anthony Mann Western
bsmith55526 November 2001
"Man of the West", being an Anthony Mann directed western, contains a good deal of violence. Usually starring James Stewart, this one stars Gary Cooper in one of the best roles of his career.

The story centers on Cooper as a reformed outlaw who boards a train with Julie London as a saloon girl and Arthur O'Connell as a fast talking gambler. Along the way, the train is held up and the three are left behind. They stumble upon a shack that turns out to be the hide out of the men who had held up the train. Led by a slightly mad Lee J. Cobb, the gang includes Jack Lord as Cobb's sadistic henchman and veteran western performers John Dehner, Robert J. Wilke and Royal Dano as the other gang members. Turns out that Cooper had once been a member of Cobb's gang.

There is a violent fight between Cooper and Lord that is the highlight of the film. There is also an graphic (for the time) shootout in a deserted town and the ultimate showdown between Cooper and Cobb at the end.

Cooper was a little long in the tooth at the time to be believable as Cobb's protege (Cobb was actually 10 years younger), but that can be overlooked due to the excellent performances by both actors. London has little to do but O'Connell is excellent as the gambler who finds his courage.

"Man of the West" is arguably one of Cooper's best.
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7/10
Very interesting Western in parts with a fascinating performance of Gary Cooper
JuguAbraham4 July 2019
Film critic Jean Luc Godard was right when he liked this film. Though the film has its weak spots, the good bits outweigh those. Gary Cooper is outstanding in the main role--a performance as creditable as his role in High Noon. The character of Beasley (Arthur O'Connel) is interesting to note when his role is only a sidebar plot in the main structure. Lee J Cobb is almost unrecognizable (recognizable by his voice) thanks to the beard and other make-up. Julie London is also notable. The cameo of the Mexican lady and then of her Mexican husband returning to a dead town called Lassoo are, for me, high points. But the concept of the ghost town having a bank with lots of money for the gang leader (Cobb) is a very interesting way to look at the way the Wild West was evolving. What does not add up is Cooper's character at the end. Does he eventually hire Billie (London) as the schoolteacher? Does he get married to her, after stating that he has two kids and a wife? An unusual western indeed.
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9/10
"You've outlived your kind and you've outlived your time."
brogmiller3 June 2022
Due to his reputation as a 'genre' director, Anthony Mann's film-making skills are apt to be undervalued but his cycle of exemplary fifties Westerns of which 'Man of the West' is the capstone, marks him out as a master of his craft.

This is his penultimate Western as indeed it is for its star Gary Cooper and one wonders why the film fared badly at the box office. Perhaps audiences were perplexed by the absence of James Stewart. In terms of casting I think the director has made the right call here. Stewart's persona in his Westerns with Mann reveal what one critic has termed an 'underlying hysteria' whereas Cooper's innate vulnerability, if anything deepened by age and ill-health, gives his performance as Link a gravitas which contrasts wonderfully with Lee J. Cobb's demented Dock Tobin and his assorted gang of misfits played Jack Lord, Royal Dano, Robert Wilkie and John Dehner. Cooper's softly-softly, low key approach makes his later acts of violence even more effective. Despite the age difference his cleverly lit scenes with sultry Julie London work really well and their simpatico is palpable.

Mann has had the courage here to make Miss London's forced striptease as slow as possible(who's complaining!) whilst the drawn out fight between Link and the Coley of Jack Lord is stunning in its rawness and brutality. He and his cinematographer Ernest Haller have given us dark and gloomy interiors as well as varying their palette in the changing landscapes whilst the final confrontation in the old ghost town is brilliantly staged. Leigh Harline provides another superlative score.

Time has treated this piece well and it is now rightly seen not just for the masterpiece it assuredly is but also as bridging the gap between the traditional and 'adult' Westerns that were to come.

I am loath to agree with Jean-Luc Godard but when he wrote that with this film Anthony Mann virtually 'reinvented the Western', he hit the nail on the head.
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7/10
"There's a point where you either grow up and become a human being or you rot, like that bunch."
classicsoncall9 October 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Once you've established "High Noon" as one of your favorite movie Westerns, it's a bit difficult to expect Gary Cooper to match performances against his portrayal of Marshal Will Kane. "Man Of The West" came only six years after "High Noon", but Cooper seems much older, and his actions seem indecisive in the early going, something that frustrated me to some extent. As in the cabin, when Coaley (Jack Lord) taunted Billie Ellis (Julie London) to strip down in front of the Tobin gang; I was straining for Link (Cooper) to make a stand. Maybe he would have if the ploy with Dock hadn't worked. Certainly, Link had his say with Coaley later on in that great brawl where the tables were reversed and Coaley was challenged to say how it feels to be degraded. It was a redemptive moment that set up the carnage to follow.

As for rest of the Tobin gang, they were a pretty nasty bunch, led perhaps by the meanest hombre of all, old Dock Tobin as portrayed by Lee J. Cobb. The rest of the Tobin's were pretty well cast, with Royal Dano doing another nice job again as the somewhat off center Trout. He kept you guessing as to whether he couldn't speak, or just wouldn't speak, until the confrontation at Lassoo, and even then it's hard to draw a conclusion. But John Dehner I think, might have given the best performance I've ever seen him in. Usually, as a character actor, he's called upon to perform a cardboard cut out villain, but here he really presented a serious obstacle to the film's hero, as well as a challenge to the authority of the Tobin patriarch. He seemed a bit larger than life in his role, something I can't say about a lot of his other work.

Something curious, you would think with Julie London's successful singing career and her casting here as the saloon girl with the golden voice, that she would actually get to sing a song! I wonder why no one thought of that. The other thing I took note of was the price of a train ticket from Crosscut to Fort Worth, coming in at $8.35. I have no idea of the distance involved, but that seemed a little steep for the late 1800's. Maybe that was for first class.

Anyway, a fairly standard Western with the expected outcome, even if the finale seemed a bit forced, with a dead man rolling all the way down a side of a steep incline instead of just dropping in his tracks. Thinking about it though, the way Cobb played his character, the skunk probably would have given it all the gusto he possibly could have in a death scene. For Dock Tobin, it was like he stated earlier in the picture - "Just like a family of old sinners moving on…"
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5/10
Moody, dour western with scurrilous, mad-dog villains...
moonspinner5512 October 2013
Anthony Mann directed this surprisingly tough (for its era) and gritty western about an ex-outlaw (Gary Cooper) who, along with a card-sharp and a pretty woman, is left stranded after gun-toting thieves rob a train, only to end up taking refuge with the bloodthirsty gang--his former partners, led by his uncle. Screenwriter Reginald Rose, adapting Will C. Brown's book "The Border Jumpers" (a better title!), appears to have been given free reign in regards to the adult content of the story, and some of the sequences--particularly a nasty one wherein knife-wielding Jack Lord commands Julie London to strip in front of the men--are unsettling. Cooper is too old for the lead, and his budding relationship with London seems to bloom off-screen (at first she's a wise, jaded cookie, but too soon becomes the proverbial lovestruck female, turned soft by her victimization). Ernest Haller's cinematography is excellent, as is Leigh Harline's score, but the picture is almost overwhelmed by its own unpleasantness, and by Lee J. Cobb's growling, snarling performance as Cooper's grizzled relative. ** from ****
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I think "Man of the West" is one of the best westerns ever.
hill_matt200216 October 2003
Of all the western movies that I have seen in my time, I would definitely have to say that "Man of the West" is one of the best. Gary Cooper does an excellent job of portraying an ex con who must confront his past and deal with a gang who does not trust him but would like him to help them out. He acts just as though he did in many of his films, playing a quiet, easy going cowboy who knows how to act in tight situations. I also thought Cooper had a very supportive cast that included Jack Lord as a wild and rebellious killer, John Dehner as a cool but equally violent person, Lee J. Cobb as a filthy old man who was the leader of the gang and who surely was the example for the other gangmembers and Arthur O'Connell and Julie London as the innocent bystanders who Cooper must look out for. I also thought that the content and violence was very well done to help people get the feeling of what people could be like. All in all, "Man of the West" is not only one of Cooper's best but one of the best westerns ever.
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6/10
"Man of the West" vs. "The Law and Jake Wade"
Wuchakk7 May 2017
Released in 1958 and directed by Anthony Mann, "Man of the West" stars Gary Cooper as a reformed owlhoot who becomes stranded with two others (Julie London & Arthur O'Connell) in the Arizona wilderness after their train is ambushed. They eventually make their way to a hidden ranch in the rolling hills, which ushers in phantoms of the ex-outlaw's past.

This is hailed as a cult classic and it's obvious why: To compete with so-called adult TV Westerns of the mid-late 50s, like Gunsmoke, Cheyenne, Maverick and the brutal The Rifleman (for which Sam Peckinpah directed several segments), Mann made "Man of the West" so 'adult' that there would be no comparison. He obviously wanted to spur people away from their TV sets and into the theater, along with the added attractions of widescreen, color, spectacular locations and just all-around superior filmmaking.

What's so 'adult' about "Man of the West"? The portrait of the West it paints is decidedly harsh with its band of psychotic killers and an ex-outlaw as a protagonist who's constantly on the verge of letting loose his long-held-in-check violent nature to stamp out the specters of his past. On top of this you have risqué and risky moments for the era (which are rather tame today), like London's character being forced to strip in front of the dudes and an off-screen rape. The other gang members, by the way, are played by Jack Lord, John Dehner, Royal Dano and Robert J. Wilke.

Some reviewers criticize the film for reasons that aren't very justified; for instance, the fact that Lee J. Cobb, who plays the half-mad uncle of Link (Cooper), was ten years younger than Cooper. Yet Cooper's role was originally slated for the younger Stewart Granger. (James Stewart, Mann's go-to man in five of his previous Westerns, desperately wanted the role, but Mann overlooked him due to their falling out during the pre-production of 1957's "Night Passage" wherein Mann pulled out). In any case, Cobb is made out to be about 10-12 years older than Link and I think it works for the most part, particularly since Cooper was still lean & mean at 56 during shooting, although his character is supposed to be 20 years younger. (Cooper would incidentally pass away a mere four years later). True, Link's face looks withered, but it could be argued that that's what a hard life in the Old West does to a man.

Another criticism is the idea that Dock believed the bank in Lassoo would be full of money when the settlement turns out to be a virtual ghost town. Yet ghost towns were birthed overnight back then when mines would suddenly shut down, etc. The looney Dock obviously based his scheme on data from years earlier and an update on the town's status hadn't yet come to him or his gang. They were used to hiding out in their spare time and there was no internet or cell phones. Where's the beef?

That said, there are some justifiable criticisms, like the surreal and lame melodramatics, the slow-pace and the dubiously choreographed fist fight sequence. These elements are so bad they might send modern viewers running away screaming. Thankfully, lame aspects like this went out of vogue by the 60s.

If you can roll with these issues and enter into the world of the movie, however, it has a number of attractions, including the subtext: Cooper's character is named Link because he represents the link between the barbaric and the cultured, the primitive (his old gang) and the civilized (his new life). Unfortunately, with the gift of volition some people inevitably choose to eschew progress and continue in their ape-headed, animalistic ways (which is actually offensive to animals).

After the aborted train robbery, Link starts to recognize his old stomping grounds and is drawn to the hidden shack for shelter & refreshment; yet perhaps also to revisit his past and "the good ol' days." He vacillates between his new identity and the temptation of regressing to the wild "freedom" of his lawless youth.

Interestingly, "Man of the West" is very similar to the slightly superior "The Law and Jake Wade," which debuted four months earlier. As good as the subtext is in "Man" it's meatier in "The Law" (see my review), which is also a little less talky and melodramatic. Yet "Man" has since emerged as a cult classic while "The Law" has fallen into obscurity; no doubt because the latter lacks the two strip sequences and the iconic Cooper.

Although obviously flawed, "Man of the West" was the precursor of the Leone and Peckinpah styled Westerns that came into fashion in the mid-late 60s. The grim, laconic Link is the predecessor of future antiheroes, like Eastwood's 'Man with No Name,' but Link is better IMO because he has more human dimension.

BEST LINE: "There's a point where you either grow up and become a human being or you rot, like that bunch."

The film runs 100 minutes and was shot entirely in California (Santa Clarita, Red Rock Canyon State Park, Jamestown, Thousand Oaks, Newhall, Sonora and the Mohave Desert, with studio-bound scenes done in West Hollywood). The script was written by Reginald Rose from Will C. Brown's book "The Border Jumpers."

GRADE: B-
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8/10
A Tense and Dramatic Classic Western
claudio_carvalho16 August 2004
Link Jones (Gary Cooper) is a former outlaw, coming from the west to hire a schoolteacher to his small town with the savings of the locals. A gang robs the train where Link is traveling, including his luggage with the money, the train successfully escapes from them, but the singer Billie Ellis (Julie London), Sam Beasley (Arthur O´Connell) and him are accidentally left behind, in an isolated place many miles far from any city. The next train will pass by the region only a week later, and they look for a shelter for the cold night. They find an abandoned ranch where Link used to live. However, the gang who stole the train is lodged there, and further, Link was a member of this gang. He introduces Billie as his wife, and says that he decided to return to the group. A tense, dramatic and violent relationship develops between Link and the group, with tragic consequences. This western is very different from the others, without action, but having dramatic psychological drama instead, including a claustrophobic situation in the house. Gary Cooper plays a protective good man who wants to forget his past; Julie London's role is a lonely woman, who does not love any man or anything, but who falls in love with Link; and the performances of the `bad guys' are fantastic. This movie is really a classic western. My vote is eight.

Title (Brazil): `O Homem do Oeste' (`The Man of the West)
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7/10
A very odd coincidence but still a good western
planktonrules12 February 2012
Warning: Spoilers
The film begins with Gary Cooper traveling far from home in order to try to find a school teacher for his village. This is pretty believable but what isn't is after there's a train robbery--then things get a bit hard to buy into. It seems he and two others were separated from the train in the middle of nowhere. One of them is a lady...who happens to be a school teacher. But this isn't the crazy part, after the trio walk just a little ways, they come upon a house that used to be a hideout for Cooper in his outlaw days! Think of the odds! Unfortunately, the train robbers return and it happens that the gang is the same one that Cooper left long ago. He's since turned over a new leaf and is an honest man--but he knows he must pretend to be there to rejoin his old gang for the sake of the school teacher and gambler with him---otherwise they'll be killed. There's MUCH more to the film than this--but I'll leave it up to you to find out what happens.

Fortunately, despite a plot filled with long odds, the film still works due to excellent direction from Anthony Mann as well as very good acting. Sure, Cooper is too old for his part, but he's still quite good--as are the rest. Not a great western but solid and enjoyable--with a very strong ending as well as a grittiness that is rather reminiscent of a noir film, believe it or not.
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8/10
more psychological than you'd expect - par for the course with top tier Mann
Quinoa198427 September 2016
Man of the West, the film that Jean-Luc Godard called the best one of 1958 when he was at Cashiers du cinema, is both brutal and sad in how it places its characters into states of being no one can really get out of. One may call it fate or just bad luck when Link Jones finds himself off the train taking him back to his home and finds the one place he'd rather not go to is the only one close by (and happens to have his Uncle Dock Tobin and his cousins), but much of it comes back to the domination of MEN in this world; the 'Man' of the title is meant to be Gary Cooper, and yet it could be any of the men in here. What does it mean to be a man here? For those people wanting someone with honor and integrity, one might look to Cooper's character.

What's fascinating is how much of an inner struggle he is having as he comes back to his former home, where his uncle taught him to be a "man" along with his cousins and it was in the ways of being a robber and a killer. He tried to leave that life behind, but somehow, some way, he's pulled back in to it (not that his face possibly tipping off an old-time marshall won't get the old wanted posters out again). So when he happens along to his former criminal, gunslinging, bank-robbing kin when off of this train with a good woman (Julie London as Billie) and Arthur O'Connell as a man who seems like a possible annoyance at first (and who isn't so much once the drama really unfolds), it creates an instant conflict.

This is Mann's territory, of the dysfunctional families out in the west (see also Winchester 73 with the brothers who have gone down very different roads of killing, or The Furies with its father-daughter power struggles), and he mines it for some rich dramatic terrain. it's amazing so much of this movie works even when knowing what isn't quite right about it - the age disparity is hard not to see, with Cooper trying to play younger (and, to be fair, not doing a terrible job), and Lee J. Cobb as his *uncle* with a gray wig and some make-up that isn't wholly convincing, certainly on first glance, not to mention his character was a "kid" with one actor half his age - because the acting sells every tension-packed moment. And few moments are more tense and sad and almost tough to watch as when the men demand that Billie take off her clothes in front of them (it takes a knife to Cooper's throat to convince her to start doing it).

That, by the way, has the feel of a rape scene because it is (later, off-screen, there is another, and Mann shows us enough of the aftermath and London is heartbreaking in every moment that Billie is put through the wringer), and yet the only thing that stops that violation of her agency to go further is that "Uncle Dock" says it's time for bed. Man of the West is the kind of film that gains in uneasiness and violence, including a fight scene midway through the movie that does not look fun like many, more possible hacky directors (or just more "commercial" minded) might have done. At one point it's Cooper vs one of this gang and it goes on and on, feeling not unlike something out of the fight scene from They Live only without the sense of over the top spectacle. This is rough and ragged and there's a point where the "movie" ness of it goes away and it's just watching two bedraggled men duking it out - including, ultimately, a "humiliation" that Link does that seems to set off this guy more than a simple shot to the head might do.

What on the surface may seem like a straightforward thriller turns into a moral tale about the implicit terror that masculinity brings to people in the old west - not unlike Winchester 73 a subtle commentary on the form while getting to be it, in the 1950's of course - and Cobb makes this uncle an imposing presence over everyone (how could he not, after all, he's Lee J friggin Cobb!) Cooper brings a sad dignity to the man, someone who no longer wants to kill, and at the same time can spring into action if he's pushed into a corner, which, you know, is what this movie could also be called: Cornered in the West or something like that. Mann and his writers have here less a story that's meant to arouse excitement as much as contemplating what it fully means when someone gets shot, what that violence entails, or what happens when a woman is stripped away down to what she's "made" for (when she Billie says to Link that he's the first man she can remember in a long time, if ever, to not look at her as something to be "had" or defiled, we believe it). And yet London as an actress gives her a ton of screen presence and little moments that don't make her one dimensional.

It may fall short of being a "best of 1958" like Mr. Godard said, but I can see his love for the movie: it's more concerned with ideas and notions of the old west than having it be just empty action and gunfights, and exploring the psychology, to be pretentious about it, of the west itself, of what an outlaw family entails and then what it means to be a *good* person in a world where it's so easy to get a gun and go out and shoot for cash and gold. 8.5/10
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6/10
Excellent Anthony Mann offering
doug-balch10 July 2010
There's a lot to like about this excellent Anthony Mann Western.

  • Great "passing of the West" theme.


  • Great tension and dramatic plot development


  • Really good supporting acting. Lee J. Cobb gives a bravura performance. Jack Lord is tremendous as the henchman. Great work by John Dehner as Link's cousin. It's hard to take Dehner seriously, because he appeared so many "B" pictures and TV westerns. But here he comes across as a legit "A" list supporting actor. Julie London is surprisingly effective and Arthur O'Connell provides solid support as well.


However, there were a number of things that prevented this movie from being better:

  • Gary Cooper's just way too old for this role. The logic of the its own plot says he should be 40 or so, while he looks like he's 60. That also hurts in the creepy romantic subplot with Julie London, a woman nearly 30 years his junior.


  • As is typical in many Anthony Mann movies, there are gaping plot holes. Mainly the preposterous coincidence that Link gets left by the train within short walking distance of his old hideout - and his whole gang is sitting right there, even though he hasn't been anywhere near the place in over a decade.


  • Another plot hole, how could Tobin possibly not have known that Lassoo was a ghost town. He seemed to know a ton about the gold kept there. Also, it also wasn't much of a town, what, 10 buildings in total. How much money was in that bank? Another case of Mann deciding he wanted a climactic shoot out in a small ghost town and not ensuring that the plot sets it up properly.


  • I thought the rape scenes - graphic for their time - were gratuitous.


  • I didn't see the point of killing the Mexican woman in Lassoo. Mann seems sadistic at times.


  • At the end Link and Billie ride off into the sunset, but isn't the whole territory out looking for Link now? Claude said the telegraph wires were "burning" that the sheriff had identified him. What about his horse back in Crosscut? Also, he told everyone where he was from. Won't they hunt him down in his home town now?


  • It may sound like I'm nitpicking, but all these things add up and most of them aren't necessary. Mann was just very sloppy with plot details. I like to give credit to directors who went to the trouble to preserve the integrity of their stories.
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10/10
A superior western by the under-rated director Anthony Mann
krorie30 April 2005
"Man of the West" is one of the best westerns ever made--some would say THE best western ever made. It is far superior to the vastly over-rated "The Searchers," which came out during the same time period. Anthony Mann, who directed noir films of the 40's did even better with the western genre.

"Man of the West" is just as timely today as when it first appeared and has aged well like good wine. Psychological insight is provided on gang mentality and morality. This insight works as well with the outlaw gangs of the old west as it would if applied to the street gangs of today. What makes the Crips and the Bloods families of violence and disorder with their own brand of morality also tied the members of the western gangs together. In "Man of the West" the gang is actually made up of genetic family members.

The acting is superior by all concerned. I would like to mention one actor that usually does not get his just desserts. Royal Dano does what was probably his best acting in this film as the mute Trout, who doesn't utter a sound until he runs dying down the streets of the ghost town. Then he utters a blood-curdling cry somewhere between a yelp and a scream. What I have written only skims the surface of a multi-leveled study of human behavior and interacting during the waning days of the old west. This is one of those movies that can be seen again and again with many new and fresh interpretations and ideas.
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6/10
Laconic Pessimism
jromanbaker19 December 2023
I have to admit that I am not a fan of Gary Cooper, but he fits the role of a ' supposedly ' reformed outlaw very well. The film itself is dark as any Film Noir, with violent scenes succeeding each other and I do not feel it has anything in common with ' King Lear ' or redemption that some claim it has. Anthony Mann goes to the limit and I wonder how much he thought of his own Film Noirs while making it. As for the story there is a hold up on a train and it is the gang that Cooper once belonged to who attack it. Julie London is on the train as well and both she and Cooper are taken to a hideout run by an over acting Lee J. Cobb. After a long and ranting scene with him the nastiness really begins. Viewers should know there are two forced scenes of the unwanted removal of clothes, one for titillation, one for revenge. Cooper remains mute in one a knife to his throat, and in the other he is the enforcer and mutely enjoys the violation of a human body until he gets down to the underwear. I believe the UK censors cut one but not the other. No more spoilers but Cooper is at his laconic best, as if he was forced to speak while having teeth pulled. I give this a six for Julie London's restrained performance and for the occasional good use of Cinemascope. Frankly I think Anthony Mann should have made it in black and white and dispensed with widescreen. Noir is black and there is absolutely no redemption for any of the characters. Mann's bleakest Western and an opening for even more violent Westerns in the 1960's.
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9/10
Wow
loydmooney-122 June 2006
Warning: Spoilers
With Man of the West, Mann created the flat out best series of westerns ever made in America. Period. Not Ford, Boetticer, Peckinpah, or anyone else is in rifle range now. Ford still owns second place with My Darling Clementine which is pound for pound better than this one, and Red River still beats Clementine, but, my God, when all of these are stacked up together its no wonder that there is nobody around to even want to beat them. And I am leaving out Raoul Walsh in the bargain. And even in such a glittering mist, Man of the West owns a pretty fine piece of territory.

The opening is perhaps a bit weak, and the plot from then on worse than thin: very convenient that this band of outlaws are still living at the same house where Cooper killed with them, and about five or six other ludicrosities, but what the hell, give yourself over to just watching yourself plopped into a writhing snake den and you will be just fine.

It's the last third of the film that is near perfection, only a few films rivaling it in intensity, the last 30 of Touch of Evil, Citizen Kane, Clementine, Red River, and very few others.

The weakness of the first and middle perhaps is what led the critics of the day to overlook the brilliance of the last of it. But from the moment of Cooper taunting Lord to sneak up behind him to start their fight, it just never lets up. The fight is astonishing, not as good as one has noted here,kicking and hitting brawl in Treasure of Sierra Madre, and Fritz Lang has a great tooth and claw one in Cloak and Dagger, but this one is pretty damned amazing, and then the buildup to Lassoo, killing of Trout, and THEN the shootout between Cooper and Dehner is just as good as the great, if longer one in Clementine. By then Mann had learned to simplify and strip his camera, let it roam some: nobody with a functioning set of eyes will not wind up hypnotized with this shootout. Absolutely fabulous.

Then the King Lear like nod comes with Cooper returning to the raped Julie London and mad white haired Lee j. Cobb, and Mann once again shoots a finale in echoing rocks, also quite nice, and somehow even the hokey words of London as they ride off into the hills almost works.

Don't miss this one.

It's pure greatness.
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7/10
Highlighted by fine work by Cooper.
Hey_Sweden16 February 2014
Intelligent, heartfelt Western / character study has an interesting tale to tell about a man who looks forward, intent on what his next phase in life will be, but finds that he will be utterly unable to escape the stigma of his past (a common enough theme in the Western genre). A rock solid ensemble of actors fill out a bare minimum of principal cast members, which helps to give "Man of the West" a somewhat intimate feel while at the same time making it somewhat epic. The California scenery is beautiful (naturally) and the widescreen photography is as impressive as one will ever see in this sort of thing. Leigh Harline's music is also wonderful. But the glue that holds it all together is a nuanced, low key performance by legendary actor Gary Cooper as the man who is conflicted in thought and emotion, as fate interrupts his journey.

He plays Link Jones, a man travelling by train to hire a schoolteacher, and who incidentally is a former outlaw trying to forget his shady past. Unfortunately, a group of bandits attempts to rob the train, and it moves on, leaving Jones and two others stranded in its wake. His two new acquaintances are Billie Ellis (Julie London), a singer who just so happens was trained as a teacher, and the garrulous Sam Beasley (an amiable Arthur O'Connell). After a bit of walking, they come upon an isolated farmhouse where Jones says he spent his younger days. He thinks they will find shelter here, but instead he finds his old gang, led by the blustery Dock Tobin (Lee J. Cobb), the unconventional father figure of Jones's past. Tobins' gang contains the mute Trout (Royal Dano), the slow-witted Ponch (Robert J. Wilke), and the aggressive, depraved Coaley (an eerily effective Jack Lord). Jones reluctantly agrees to rejoin this bunch of men, but you can be certain he's not happy about the arrangement.

"Man of the West", during its release, didn't attract that much attention despite the efforts of the great Western director Anthony Mann; it took the complimentary words of French filmmaker Jean-Luc Godard (a critic at the time) to help it start to attain a classic status. Mann does an excellent job with the storytelling (the script is by Reginald Rose, based on a novel by Will C. Brown), and gets fine performances out of Cooper and Cobb. In reality, Cobb was 10 years *younger* than Cooper, but he's reasonably convincing as the ill-intentioned mentor. Wilke, Dano, and John Dehner as Claude are very watchable, although it's a shame that Dano's character is mute given what a memorable voice the actor had. Lord is perfectly despicable playing a man who's a real piece of work (he forces Billie to strip at one point).

The finale could have used a bit more tension, but otherwise this works pretty well. It doesn't miss an opportunity for comedy as we see how Jones reacts to seeing, and riding on, a train, a new experience to him. Western lovers should find it to be satisfactory.

Seven out of 10.
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5/10
Not Gary Cooper's Best, but still entertaining.
Fitzy1414 May 2021
I am not sure why this particular Gary Cooper movie is rated so high, it was not one of my favorites, the acting was merely par and the story line was worn out.

The movie moves along very slow for me and I found myself wandering around and not paying attention to the movie it was so slow.

It feels like Gary Cooper did not want to be in the movie with his delivery and Jack Lord just didn't fit the part he played. The actors in general just felt past their prime.

This was not a bad movie, just not a 7 star rating movie. If you like Gary Cooper you will watch it just like me because of his past movies. If you have not seen him in any other Western don't make this one your first it will taint your view of a great actor and a talent.

This offering was just OK.
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