ARROW BLU RAY RELEASE: The Shootist (1976)

In the opening hours of June 11, 1979, I was listening to KDKA AM radio with my dad. In the middle of a show, the national news broke in to say that John Wayne had died.

I started crying because I always thought my grandfather was John Wayne. If the Duke could die, my grandfather could.

It was too much for a six year old child.

I’m glad the young version of me never saw The Shootist.

The last movie that Wayne would be in, this is the tale of sheriff-turned-gunfighter John Bernard “J.B.” Books, a man who has killed more than thirty men and become a legend. The kind of man that people run from rather than even look at, someone who Marshal Walter Thibido (Harry Morgan) hopes he doesn’t have to arrest.

He’s in Carson City to visit one of the only people he trusts, Dr. E.W. “Doc” Hostetler (Jimmy Stewart), the man who once saved his life after a gunfight gone wrong. He doesn’t have the energy he once did and he soon finds out that he has cancer. He has days, maybe weeks left. All he can do is take liquid painkillers and hope for the best.

Until he’s taken, he plans on just living a quiet unknown existence in the home of widow Bond Rogers (Lauren Bacall), a woman who instantly dislikes him and grows to feel differently. He also ends up being a father of sorts to her son Gillom (Ron Howard) who is close to being a criminal.

Once others learn he is in town, killers come to make their names off shooting him but even in the throes of death, Books is too tough to die. He also has no interest in telling his story to reporter Dan Dobkins (Rick Lenz), even if it makes money for one of the only women he ever loved, Serepta (Sheree North).

Realizing the end is near, Books tells Gillom to bring three men to the bar. They are dairy owner Jay Cobb (Bill McKinney), a man who insulted him when he first arrived; Jack Pulford (Hugh O’Brian), a Faro dealer who was once a killing machine who needs to destroy Books to get his name back and Mike Sweeney (Richard Boone), who wants to kill Books in revenge for the death of his brother. Despite being critically wounded, Books kills all three before being shot in the back by a bartender, someone he never even figured on. Gillom takes his gun and shoots the man before throwing the revolver down. As he dies, Books smiles and nods.

Gillom walks away without a sound.

Books lived by the words “I won’t be wronged, I won’t be insulted, and I won’t be laid a hand on. I don’t do these things to other people, and I require the same from them.”

Paul Newman, George C. Scott, Charles Bronson, Gene Hackman and Clint Eastwood all passed on this movie and it was thought that Wayne — who had his left lung and several ribs removed when he first had cancer — couldn’t handle the role. His breathing and mobility, as well as the altitude of Carson City were challenges he had to fight. When he made Rooster Cogburn a year before, he had pneumonia so bad that he damaged his heart from how much he coughed. A lot of people thought he couldn’t make this movie and his doctors almost stopped filming after he caught the flu.

He changed the ending of the book and the script. Books was supposed to kill his last opponent by shooting him in the back and would be put out of his misery by Gillom after he was shot in by the bartender. Wayne felt that he had never shot a man in the back and would not in this movie either. He also objected to his character being killed by Gillom and added the bartender shooting him in the back because “no one could ever take John Wayne in a fair fight.”

Director Don Siegel told Wayne. “That’s what Clint Eastwood would do.”

Wayne apocryphically replied, “Well I don’t like that, and I didn’t like High Plains Drifter!”

There are also some great moments with Scatman Crothers as a blacksmith and a short role for John Carradine (Wayne, figuring this was his last movie, got several of his friends to act in the film) as an undertaker. Even the horse, Dollar, is Wayne’s horse.

This is also one of only seven movies in which Wayne dies, along with Reap the Wild Wind, The Fighting Seabees, Wake of the Red Witch, Sands of Iwo Jima, The Alamo and The Cowboys.

The father and son relationship between Books and Gillom reminds me of the way that Tin Star takes a man ruined by a hard life and shows how he can be redeemed by how he treats a younger one.

The Arrow blu ray of The Shootist has a new 2K remaster by Arrow Films from the original 35mm camera negative and extras such as a new audio commentary by filmmaker and critic Howard S. Berger, a visual essay by film critic David Cairns, an interview with Western author C. Courtney Joyner, an appreciation of Elmer Bernstein’s score by film historian and composer Neil Brand, a visual essay on Wayne by filmmaker and critic Scout Tafoya and The Shootist: The Legend Lives On, an archival featurette, There is also a trailer and image gallery.

It all comes inside a reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Juan Esteban Rodríguez, as well as even more like a double-sided fold-out poster, six postcard-sized lobby card reproductions and an illustrated collector’s booklet featuring new writing by film critic Philip Kemp.

You can get this movie from MVD.

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.