Release Date: Oct 22, 2002 Region: 1 Runtime: 85 mins Studio: Artisan Audio:
ENGLISH: Dolby Digital Stereo [CC]
Video:
Standard 1.33:1 B&W
Subtitles: [None] Packaging: Keep Case Rating: NR Features:
"The Making Of High Noon" hosted by Leonard Maltin includes on-camera interviews with actor Lloyd Bridges, director Fred Zinnemann and producer Stanley Kramer and Production Stills Commentary with Maria Cooper-Janis, Jonathan Foreman, Tim Zinnemann and John Ritter Original, never-before-seen "Behind High Noon" documentary; on-screen interviews with Maria Cooper-Janis (Gary Cooper's daughter), Tim Zinnemann (Fred Zinnemann's son), Jonathan Foreman (Carl Foreman's son) and Prince Albert of Monaco (Grace Kelly's son) Radio broadcast with Tex Ritter Chapter stop for Oscar winning song "Do Not Forsake, Oh My Darlin' " Interactive Menu Scene Index Trailers
One of the greatest Westerns ever made gets the deluxe treatment on this superior disc. Written by Carl Foreman (who was later blacklisted during the anticommunist hearings of the 1950s) and superbly directed by Fred Zinnemann, this 1952 classic stars Gary Cooper as just-married lawman Will Kane, who is about to retire as a small-town sheriff and begin a new life with his bride (Grace Kelly) when he learns that gunslinger Frank Miller (Ian MacDonald) is due to arrive at high noon to settle an old score. Kane seeks assistance from deputies and townsfolk, but soon realises he will have to stand alone in his showdown with Miller and his henchmen. Innovative for its time, the suspenseful story unfolds in approximate real time (from 10:40 a.m. to high noon in an 84-minute film), and many interpreted Foreman's drama as an allegorical reflection of apathy and passive acceptance of Senator Joseph McCarthy's anticommunist campaign. Political underpinnings aside, this remains a milestone of its genre (often referred to as the first "adult" Western), and Cooper is flawless in his Oscar-winning role. The first-rate DVD gives this landmark film all the respect it deserves, beginning with a digitally remastered transfer from the original film negative. --Jeff Shannon, Amazon.com