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S E A R C H    D V D B e a v e r

directed by Henry King
USA 1958

 

Except for Joan Collins's abject failure as a Latina heiress and some of the overly pumped-up musical score, "The Bravados" is a great film, one of the great adult westerns of the 1950s, in the company of Anthony Mann's westerns with James Stewart and John Ford's "The Searchers," which is now recognized as a canonical masterpiece. Peck in "The Bravados" has the same relentless monomania John Wayne had in "The Searchers" (and that Peck himself had in John Huston's film of "Moby Dick").

Jim Douglass (Peck) arrives in Rio Arriba at the start of the film to watch the hanging of four men he has been stalking for six months, since his wife was raped and murdered. He is practically mute, with a barely contained rage blazing in his eyes. When the Sheriff Sanchez (Herbert Rudley) lets him look at the prisoners in their cell, he emits no sound. The "Indian" Lujan (Henry Silva) recognizes the eyes of a hunter. None of the four condemned men know Douglass or who he is. (Over the course of the movie, they find out.)

They are sprung by Joe DeRita ("Curly Joe" of the 3 Stooges!) as the hangman and the hunt resumes, with Douglass the de facto leader of a posse, but picking off the escaped prisoners in direct encounters, confronting them with the picture of his dead wife and young daughter that he carries inside his pocket watch. The ones I recognize are Lee Van Cleef, Stephen Boyd, and Henry Silva. (I think the other is Albert Salmi.) For me, Silva is indelibly one of the villains from "The Manchurian Candidate," but his role here turns out to have surprising depths. He does more than lock eyes with Peck in the jailhouse scene.

The movie has a denouement (before the ending) that rivals those in "The Gunfighter" and "The Searchers" for poetic justice (of the mouthful of ashes flavor). The movie is also very scenic (filmed by four-time Oscar winner Leon Shamroy) and contains the carefully wrought details of escape and the hunt of the best action flicks. What really matters most, however, is all in Gregory Peck's eyes (and not just the burning quest for vengeance).

Henry King made a range of movies. Indeed, he made a range of movies just with Gregory Peck, including some of Peck's best (Twelve o'clock High, The Snows of Kilimanjaro, The Gunfighter).

Excerpt from Stephen O. Murray's review on Epinions located HERE

 

  Posters

Theatrical Release: June 25th, 1958

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Comparison:

20th Century Fox - Region 1 - NTSC vs. Twilight Time  - Region FREE - Blu-ray

1) 20th Century Fox - Region 1 - NTSC - LEFT

2) Twilight Time - Region FREE - Blu-ray - RIGHT

 

Box Cover

   

   

 

There is a German Blu-ray also available:

  

Distribution 20th Century Fox Home Video - Region 1 - NTSC Twilight Time - Region FREE - Blu-ray
Runtime 1:37:42  1:37:48.904 
Video 2.35:1 Original Aspect Ratio
Average Bitrate: 5.67 mb/s
NTSC 720x480 29.97 f/s

2.35:1 1080P Dual-layered Blu-ray

Disc Size: 31,139,257,460 bytes

Feature: 30,132,811,776 bytes

Total Video Bitrate: 29.99 Mbps

Codec: MPEG-4 AVC Video

NOTE: The Vertical axis represents the bits transferred per second. The Horizontal is the time in minutes.

Bitrate:

Bitrate: Blu-ray

Audio English (Dolby Digital 4.0 Surround), DUBs: French (Mono) , Spanish (Mono) 

DTS-HD Master Audio English 2799 kbps 5.1 / 48 kHz / 2799 kbps / 24-bit (DTS Core: 5.1 / 48 kHz / 1509 kbps / 24-bit)
DTS-HD Master Audio English 1757 kbps 4.0 / 48 kHz / 1757 kbps / 24-bit (DTS Core: 4.0 / 48 kHz / 1509 kbps / 24-bit)
DTS-HD Master Audio English 1993 kbps 2.0 / 48 kHz / 1993 kbps / 24-bit (DTS Core: 2.0 / 48 kHz / 1509 kbps / 24-bit)
Isolated Score:

DTS-HD Master Audio English 1789 kbps 2.0 / 48 kHz / 1789 kbps / 24-bit (DTS Core: 2.0 / 48 kHz / 1509 kbps / 24-bit)

Subtitles English, Spanish, None English (SDH), None
Features

Release Information:
Studio: 20th Century Fox Home Video

Aspect Ratio:
Original Aspect Ratio 2.35:1

Edition Details:

• Theatrical trailer
• Fox Movie-Tone news (2 short features)

NOTE: Full Screen version on opposite side.

DVD Release Date: May 24th, 2005

Keep Case
Chapters: 12

Release Information:
Studio: Twilight Time

 

2.35:1 1080P Dual-layered Blu-ray

Disc Size: 31,139,257,460 bytes

Feature: 30,132,811,776 bytes

Total Video Bitrate: 29.99 Mbps

Codec: MPEG-4 AVC Video

 

Edition Details:
• 
Isolated Music Track
Quick Draw Lesson by Hugh O'Brien (2:19)
Fox Movietone Newsreels - Bravados Hit NY! (0:53)
Hollywood Salutes The Bravados (silent - 8:36)
Original Theatrical Trailer (2:19)
 

Blu-ray Release Date: October, 2018
Transparent Blu-ray Case

Chapters 16

 

 

Comments:

NOTE: The below Blu-ray captures were taken directly from the Blu-ray disc.

ADDITION: Twilight Time - Region FREE - Blu-ray - October 2018': The new 1080P transfer is excellent - deep, intense, black levels, approaching moiring, support a crisp image with rich colors - perhaps a shade of teal leaning, but the dual-layered rendering with a high bitrate looks beautiful in-motion. Skin-tones warm and the darker visuals - with maybe even more 'Cinemascope mumps' - significantly advance on the 2005 DVD.   

The Bravados was shown theatrically with 4-Track Stereo (Westrex Recording System) sound. Twilight Time give four options; a DTS-HD Master 5.1 surround bump, a rare but authentic DTS-HD 4.0 channel stereo track or a simpler DTS-HD 2.0 channel track - all in the original English language at 24-bit. The fourth option is the isolated score for the film (discussed below.) The film has some typical western effects; guns and horses - and there is some separation, and depth, in the first 2 track choices.  The, occasionally boisterous, film score is by Lionel Newman (Don't Bother To Knock, The Killer is Loose, A Kiss Before Dying, Compulsion, The Boston Strangler, The Proud Ones), Hugo Friedhofer (The Revolt of Mamie Stover, Joan of Arc, Broken Arrow, Between Heaven and Hell, Man in the Attic, Ace in the Hole, Body and Soul, Gilda, The Bishop's Wife) and Alfred Newman (The Diary of Anne Frank, Bus Stop, Blood and Sand, Yellow Sky, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Panic in the Streets, The Song of Bernadette etc. etc.) and sounds excellent in the lossless supporting the film's subtle and evolving revenge themes. There are optional English subtitles (SDH) on the Region FREE Blu-ray.

Aside from the appreciated isolated music track option, they seem to have included all the extras from the DVD - two Fox Movietone Newsreels; a 2-minute Quick Draw Lesson by Hugh O'Brien and running less than a minute Bravados Hit NY! and an original theatrical trailer, We also have Hollywood Salutes The Bravados running over 8-minutes but it has no audio. Plus there are the usual liner notes.

This is a well-above-average western and Peck is great as are the supporting cast, with Collins just developing her vixen charms. I, again, liked it even more on Blu-ray and this Twilight Time is strongly recommended to fans of westerns.

***

ON THE DVD:

NOTE: This image seems slightly horizontally stretched to me ('CinemaScope Mumps').

Many have noted that in the past year or so I have become a HUGE western fan. Luckily they are being released on DVD quite frequently of late, so I am indulging very extensively.

The anamorphic image on this DVD is very good.  Colors seem acceptable (skin tones realistic) and it has relative sharpness. The progressive image is an accurate and tight  2.35:1 ratio and looks fabulous on a tube TV. Minor complaint might be that it looks a little thick in some scenes, but contrast and black levels are quite strong. The 4.0 audio is tested a few times and is up to par. The subtitles are well-done and Extras are quite lean with a trailer and 2 Fox Movie-Tone filler clips.

I have to try to be objective in my estimation of the film as I tend to enjoy westerns so much these days, but I saw a lot of positives in this movie. Strong story and performances and adept direction from King. I recommend! out of     

Gary W. Tooze

 


DVD Menus


 

Twilight Time - Region FREE - Blu-ray


 


CLICK EACH BLU-RAY CAPTURE TO SEE ALL IMAGES IN FULL 1920X1080 RESOLUTION

Subtitle Sample

1) 20th century Fox - Region 1 - NTSC - TOP

2) Twilight Time - Region FREE - Blu-ray - BOTTOM

 

1) 20th century Fox - Region 1 - NTSC - TOP

2) Twilight Time - Region FREE - Blu-ray - BOTTOM

 


1) 20th century Fox - Region 1 - NTSC - TOP

2) Twilight Time - Region FREE - Blu-ray - BOTTOM

 


1) 20th century Fox - Region 1 - NTSC - TOP

2) Twilight Time - Region FREE - Blu-ray - BOTTOM

 


1) 20th century Fox - Region 1 - NTSC - TOP

2) Twilight Time - Region FREE - Blu-ray - BOTTOM

 


1) 20th century Fox - Region 1 - NTSC - TOP

2) Twilight Time - Region FREE - Blu-ray - BOTTOM

 

 


 

 


Recommended Reading for Western Genre Fans (CLICK COVERS or TITLES for more information)

 

Check out more in "The Library"


 

Box Cover

   

   

 

There is a German Blu-ray also available:

  

Distribution 20th Century Fox Home Video - Region 1 - NTSC Twilight Time - Region FREE - Blu-ray

 





 

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