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    McLintock!

    4.0 16

    Director: Andrew V. McLaglen Cast: John Wayne

    John Wayne
    , Maureen O'Hara
    Maureen O'Hara
    , Patrick Wayne
    Patrick Wayne
    , Stefanie Powers
    Stefanie Powers


    DVD

    $9.99
    $9.99

    Temporarily Out of Stock Online

    Customer Reviews

    • Release Date: 07/09/2015
    • UPC: 0644827132225
    • Original Release: 0000
    • Language: English
    • Sales rank: 34,311

    Cast & Crew

    Performance Credits
    John Wayne George Washington McLintock,Devlin Warren,Alice Warren
    Maureen O'Hara Katherine Gilhooley McLintock
    Stefanie Powers Becky McLintock,Actor
    Jack Kruschen Birnbaum
    Chill Wills Drago
    Jerry Van Dyke Matt Douglas Jr.
    Edgar Buchanan Bunny Dull
    Bruce Cabot Ben Sage
    Perry Lopez Davey Elk
    Michael Pate Puma
    Strother Martin Agard
    Gordon Jones Matt Douglas
    Robert Lowery Gov. Cuthbert H. Humphrey
    Edward Faulkner Young Ben Sage
    H.W. Gim Ching
    Chuck Roberson Sheriff Lord
    Hal Needham Carter
    Pedro Gonzales Jr. Carlos
    Hank Worden Jeth
    Leo Gordon Jones
    Mary Patterson Beth
    Big John Hamilton Fauntleroy
    Ralph Volkie Loafer
    Dan Borzage Loafer,Loafer
    John Stanley Running Buffalo
    Kari Noven Millie
    Mari Blanchard Camille
    Frank Hagney Bartender
    Bob Steele Railroad Engineer
    Yvonne De Carlo Mrs. Louise Warren
    Carol Daniels Dement Girl in General Store
    Frank De Vol Composer,Actor
    Pedro Gonzalez Carlos
    Fargo Graham Townsman
    Bill Hart Brawler
    William H. Clothier Actor
    James Edward Grant Actor
    Andrew McLaglen Actor

    Technical Credits
    James Edward Grant Screenwriter
    Michael Wayne Producer
    Jim Burk Stunts
    Jack Solomon Sound Effects

    This is the story of the cantankerous cattle baron whose wife has just returned from the East after a two-year separation. This refined lady wants a divorce and custody of their 17-year-old daughter, who has been away at school and holds her Mother's distaste for all things "Western."

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    Recently Viewed 

    • McLintock!
      Director: John Wayne
      Average rating: 4.0 Average rating:
    McLintock! is one of the most popular of John Wayne's movies, but it is also one of the most hated among critics and certain segments of the filmgoing audience. It pushes wildly divergent sets of buttons in different viewers, a reflection of the fact that it's a deceptively complex film. McLintock! is, on its face, a Western comedy, but it also falls in among that handful of more overtly "political" films that Wayne made, such as The Green Berets and Big Jim McLain, and additionally, resounds with echoes of his screen work with director John Ford (indeed, Ford even showed up to direct for a couple of days when the official director, Andrew V. McLaglen, fell ill). The film is a difficult one for fans of the actor to watch without feeling deep pangs of nostalgia at every turn. The first hour of McLintock! is structured very similarly to the openings of the three movies in the so-called "cavalry trilogy" -- She Wore a Yellow Ribbon, Fort Apache, and Rio Grande -- that Wayne made with John Ford, with a leisurely (but carefully delineated) look at the characters and their inter-relationships. Its plot has echoes of both Ford's The Quiet Man and Rio Grande, dealing with courtship between two tempestuous personalities and the estrangement of a husband and wife, with an offspring between them. Mostly, however, McLintock is about age and impending mortality and what these things do to even the strongest of men. Wayne had previously essayed two roles of this type -- in Red River as a man driven to violence by his inability, with time and age, to control the events around him, and in She Wore a Yellow Ribbon, as a cavalry officer in the twilight of his career. McLintock! is a lighter film with a somewhat similar role at its center for the actor. The whole movie is filled with reminders that the circle of longtime friends surrounding Wayne was narrowing, as surely as the one surrounding G.W. McLintock. In 1963, however, reviewers who disagreed with Wayne's politics couldn't get past the movie's digs at big government or the character of the fatuous territorial governor Cuthbert H. Humphrey, a nasty swipe at Senator Hubert H. Humphrey, who was then a living symbol of liberal government. As a result, many critics can't abide the movie's paternalistic attitude toward women or its generally conservative vision of right and wrong. Even in its overt politicking, however, McLintock! is more even-handed than it is often given credit for being -- the first act of violence depicted in the movie shows G.W. McLintock breaking up the lynching of a Native American; and McLintock, in deciding what will happen to his property after his death, arranges to leave his ranch to the government, to turn into a national park so that no one will cut down the trees and spoil the land. As surprising as it is in all of these ways, McLintock! isn't a perfect movie, to be sure -- at least one musical number could have been dropped, and the script is a little sloppy here and there -- but it's essential viewing in understanding the final evolution of Wayne's screen persona.

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