The Searchers (1956) - Stand Aside! Scene (7/10) | Movieclips
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 29 ส.ค. 2024
- The Searchers movie clips: j.mp/2jtnME6
BUY THE MOVIE: bit.ly/2ka7AYL
Don't miss the HOTTEST NEW TRAILERS: bit.ly/1u2y6pr
CLIP DESCRIPTION:
When Debbie (Natalie Wood) comes to Martin (Jeffrey Hunter) in the desert, he must protect her from Ethan (John Wayne). Then, they are ambushed by Native Americans and Debbie is recaptured.
FILM DESCRIPTION:
John Wayne plays Ethan Edwards, a former Confederate soldier who returns to his brother Aaron's frontier cabin three years after the end of the Civil War. Ethan still has his rebel uniform and weapons, a large stash of Yankee gold, and no explanations as to where he's been since Lee's surrender. A loner not comfortable in the bosom of his family, Ethan also harbors a bitter hatred of Indians (though he knows their lore and language well) and trusts no one but himself. Ethan and Martin Pawley (Jeffrey Hunter), Aaron's adopted son, join a makeshift band of Texas Rangers fending off an assault by renegade Comanches. Before they can run off the Indians, several homes are attacked, and Ethan returns to discover his brother and sister-in-law dead and their two daughters kidnapped. While they soon learn that one of the girls is dead, the other, Debbie, is still alive, and with obsessive determination, Ethan and Martin spend the next five years in a relentless search for Debbie -
CREDITS:
TM & © Warner Bros. (1956)
Cast: Natalie Wood, Jeffrey Hunter, John Wayne, Henry Brandon
Director: John Ford
Producers: Merian C. Cooper, Patrick Ford
Screenwriters: Frank S. Nugent, Alan Le May
WHO ARE WE?
The MOVIECLIPS channel is the largest collection of licensed movie clips on the web. Here you will find unforgettable moments, scenes and lines from all your favorite films. Made by movie fans, for movie fans.
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR MOVIE CHANNELS:
MOVIECLIPS: bit.ly/1u2yaWd
ComingSoon: bit.ly/1DVpgtR
Indie & Film Festivals: bit.ly/1wbkfYg
Hero Central: bit.ly/1AMUZwv
Extras: bit.ly/1u431fr
Classic Trailers: bit.ly/1u43jDe
Pop-Up Trailers: bit.ly/1z7EtZR
Movie News: bit.ly/1C3Ncd2
Movie Games: bit.ly/1ygDV13
Fandango: bit.ly/1Bl79ye
Fandango FrontRunners: bit.ly/1CggQfC
HIT US UP:
Facebook: on. 1y8M8ax
Twitter: bit.ly/1ghOWmt
Pinterest: bit.ly/14wL9De
Tumblr: bit.ly/1vUwhH7
As a guy who grew up around horses and even worked as a paid cowboy in H.S. one summer, that was some damn good horse riding by the stunt doubles...especially the leap down at 1:45...those two gents knew what they were doing for sure.
@Steve Fowler - Fact.
I was impressed with that. Not easy to slide a horse down loose dirt.
@@2degucitas I would think it is even tougher for the horse than the rider. I'm sure those were "stunt horses" that were every bit as talented and experienced in their jobs as the stunt men riding them.
It wasn’t just stunt doubles. John Wayne was a superb rider.
The scene where Martin puts himself in front of Debbie to protect her cements him as the best character in the film. He doesn’t share Ethan’s prejudiced victim-blaming. His sister is his sister and he will always fight for her. “Remember when I used to let you ride my horse and tell you stories?” That’s just the kinds of things a brother would do for his sister in a rural life. It doesn’t matter they’re not biologically related. He is her brother.
I always wondered why they had a blue eyed man play the chief. It seemed cheesy and unbelievable at first. Then I learned that the last great chief on the Comanches, Quanah Parker, was secretly half white, being the son of Cynthia Parker, a woman who was kidnapped by the tribe at a young age and raised as one of their own (and who coincidently Natalie Woods character is based upon). I wonder now if the casting is supposed to imply a mixed ancestry similar to Parker’s?
Natives Americans have never heard of racial purity. The Sierra Madre was the last stronghold of the renegade Apaches, who have managed to hold out until the 1930s. They've kidnapped Mexican and Mormon women and children regularly. Two Arizonan cowpokes saw one of their raiding parties in 1924, which was led by tall, bearded, blonde-maned White man, dressed in a traditional loincloth.
@@Nightbreed24 wow
But Quanah Parker wasn't secretly half white. He was famous as the son of Cynthia Anne Parker, the young, kidnapped woman _The Searchers_ story was based on. Not only that, but after she returned to the Comanche, he spent his life, half in the white world, and half in the Indian world. He was also a rancher and a state legislator. It's a fascinating story. There's a town names after him in Comanche country, Quanah, TX.
I have a theory for why Ford used a European to portray Scar. People object, but for a real Indian to have played the brutal character of Scar, would have fed into the biases of people who still said, "the only good Indian is a dead Indian". Most of the time you'd hear that in the 50s, it was from someone quoting an elderly or dead relative, in regard to the issues in western films. But you heard it in a more direct way about the Japanese, considering that so many traumatized men had been in Japanese camps, and mostly stoically bore it afterwards, keeping it to themselves. And many more had heard tales of the brutality committed in them. So we had a lot of people focused on race as an explanation for all that was wrong.
If only this factored into the decision haha the actor has blue eyes because they look better on camera
Someone read Empire of the Summer Moon
Love those two hundred metre handgun shots.
One of THE best Western movies with John Wayne, Jeffrey Hunter AND Natalie Wood!!!
One of? Come on man, this is THE best western!
@@Glassandcandy once upon a time in the west is the best
John Wayne films are fun to watch. Much like The Quick and The Dead
Notice the expression on Ethan’s face when he says “Stand aside, Martin!” It’s not anger, but SADNESS. He doesn’t actually WANT to kill Debbie, but his beliefs/principles make him believe he HAS to.
This is what makes his character arc so compelling. He was struggling between succumbing to his racism and remembering Debbie is… family.
It's a lot like "honour" killing in some societies that most Americans hate. That a woman is worthless if she loses her chastity, especially if it's from a particularly unfavoured ethnicity.
The searchers is The king movie of all the westerns ever made till this day! All the western movies are like children/ kids and the searchers is their father!
The original The Magnificent Seven is clearly the greatest western of all time. Greatest cast, greatest soundtrack, greatest cinematography. All others fall short in comparison.
What Max Steiner did with the song "Lorena" in this score was genius.
One of My top 3 favourite movies
According to a behind the scenes website that I once read(I forget the name of it) the scene of them meeting in the teepee on the other side of the sand dune was actually hundreds of miles away from this scene being shot in California.
Natalie Wood isn’t just pretty. She is super pretty. No fake hair or plastic surgery. Just a beautiful girl.
One of the most beautiful womens in history.
She's also 18 so
The music is so good!
Greatest scene of all time.
Mighty bold statement.
Classic, great , great film with world famous landscapes brilliant actors and storyline, occasionally strangely let down with poor quality studio sets .
How Naruto should have ended.
Filme acima da média. Uma obra de arte. Clássico. Atores fantástico.Natali Woody
Belissima.
Does anyone know where EXACTLY in Monument Valley these scenes were filmed? Thanks
What you want me to do draw you a picture?
@@Johnnysmithy24 LOL - As long as you live, I won’t ask you any more! Actually, I was hoping for a general description or, even better, some decimal coordinates that I could paste into Google.
@@gehbw I don’t know man, I just wanted to make the joke lol
What a shot !
Outstanding !
Get you a case of beer for that one !
is that you john wayne?
is this me?
Who said that?
Yes! It is I.
THANKS !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I wonder if either Marty or Ethan just missed their aim or did they deliberately miss Chief Cicatriz and just knock him off his horse, and if so, why?
The reason that they don't kill him in this scene is because they're still a good hour and a half left a movie Plus they're shooting with revolvers it's probably a lot easier to hit the horse than it would be to hit Chief scar because what they're doing is shooting with pistols at a far distance your normal pistols for that era are only good up to about a few feet maybe they're not meant for super accurate oh I'm going to hit that guy that's a quarter mile away from me no it's to hit somebody that's up close and personal with you had John Wayne or his half Cherokee sidekick gotten a rifle then yes they could have taken out scar pretty easy
A horse is the obvious target with a pistol. Besides if you are being charged do you care about the person riding the horse or the 2,000lb animal bearing down on you.
@@Mr.wednesdayallfather Plus, that's what was in the script.
Scar called in Sauron’s Nazgûl! Did John Wayne have the One Ring?
Super exelente producción .
Duke using his single action revolvers again(?)
Dope shit
Warfox don't you remember, Debbie
I always wondered if Jeffrey Hunters character was Ethan Edward son in the movie???
Why was John Wayne about to shoot her?
Because she "became" an Indian. He has a virulent hatred of Indians, and he's spent the last five years of his life searching for her, believing her to be the tribe's captive. When he realizes she's integrated into their group, his prejudice overthrows his reason.
@@EwoktheMoid Ethan was never really searching for Debbie he spent those 5 years seeking revenge against Scar the tribe chief for murdering the rest of his family. I think he expected Debbie to become an Indian since he did not really look surprised when Debbie said that they were her people
@@EwoktheMoid Also because it was 'implied' that she had become the wife of one of the Comanches. One of the vilest things in nineteenth century culture was if a woman was violated or slept with a non white they were seen as 'soiled', not just by the men but also the women. This is explored even more in the Western 'Two Rode Together' starring Richard Widmark and James Stewart. It's also why Hunter's fiancee told him his mother would have preferred him to shoot Debbie rather than bring her back to the white settlers.
Because they go mad and plus she aint a white girl anymore
Belle représentation de l’inde
Pretty realistic. 😅
love native girls with perfect makeup in the middle of the desert
Natalie Wood wasn’t playing a native, she was playing a white girl who was kidnapped and integrated into the tribe.
Actually what I thought was ridiculous is when I saw Dances With Wolves and the woman who plays the Indian woman ... I can't think of the actress's name but she had sort of the same hairstyle as the actual era when the movie was made ... can't remember if it was the 1980s and 1990s but I just thought it was weird that it was so obvious about her hair and look like nothing from back in the era it was supposed to be
This in my opinion is the most sincere and brutal representation of the American cowboy, of those who are guilty of the most brutal genocide in human history. This is why I thank God every night for not being born American.
No.
Nope
I to shall thank God, you were not born an American, as you have no place here, and would ultimately only slow us down.
This is one of the dumbest comment on youtube
native americans were the true cowboys but of course. so sad that more than 1 miliion natives were slaughtered and betrayed.
John Wayne corny as hell rolling that pistol on his finger during a situation like that lol. Like you're about to kill a young woman and youre worried about that pistol trick
It’s muscle memory, he’s used to doing that whenever he pulls out his pistol. Probably was unconsciously(for the character I mean)
LOL remember that time when John Wayne went mad in a movie cause her brother´s daughter went interracial? LOL, good ol´times LOL
If you watch the movie closely, particularly near the beginning, you can work out she's actually HIS daughter.
Possibly his daughter. Either way, one of the greatest films of all time.
In real life John Wayne married two Latinas: first a Panamanian, by whom he had four children (including Patrick, a lieutenant in this film), then a Mexicana.