Outlawed, feared, loved - Billy the Kid
Movie | |
---|---|
German title | Outlawed, feared, loved - Billy the Kid |
Original title | Billy the Kid |
Country of production | United States |
original language | English |
Publishing year | 1930 |
length | 98 minutes |
Age rating | FSK 12 |
Rod | |
Director | King Vidor |
script | Wanda Tuckock |
production | King Vidor Irving Thalberg |
music |
Euphemia Allen Frederick Stahlberg |
camera | Gordon Avil |
cut | Hugh Wynn |
occupation | |
|
Outlawed, Feared, Loved - Billy the Kid is a 1930s black and white western directed by King Vidor .
action
Rich cattle baron William Donovan hires Sheriff Pat Garrett to hunt down Garrett's old companion, Billy the Kid. He got up against Donovan and shot some of his henchmen. After Billy the Kid succeeds several times in escaping Garrett and heading for Mexico, there is a decisive showdown between the two friends.
background
Billy the Kid (real name Henry McCarty or William H. Bonney) and Pat Garrett really existed, their conflict with one another is historically documented. The film itself goes back to the novel The Saga of Billy the Kid by Walter Noble Burns .
King Vidor's version is one of the first film adaptations in history, after Laurence Trimble's short film from 1911. Numerous other films followed .
The film was shot in Lincoln County , where the real William Bonney worked. William S. Hart served as a technical advisor. It is said that lead actor Brown even used Bonney's real weapons in the film.
The film was shot in parallel in a 35 mm version and in a version with 70 mm wide screen film. The attempt to establish this format in cinemas quickly failed because the cinema operators had to invest in sound film equipment instead .
Reviews
Joe Hembus notes that the film is suffering "from the cast of the lead actor" . Billy the Kid was merely a vehicle to grant the football player Brown a leading role that had been contractually guaranteed for three years. Phil Hardy says that Billy is a real Vidor hero with his rebel attitude. The film format made it difficult for Vidor to illustrate his hero's emotional world with close-ups.
Web links
- Ostracized, feared, loved - Billy the Kid in the Internet Movie Database (English)
Individual evidence
- ^ A b Phil Hardy: The Encyclopedia of Western Movies. Woodbury Press Minneapolis 1984. ISBN 0-8300-0405-X . P. 20
- ↑ a b Joe Hembus: Western Lexicon - 1272 films from 1894-1975. Carl Hanser Verlag Munich Vienna 2nd edition 1977. ISBN 3-446-12189-7 . P. 54