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The
Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1962)
In John Ford's nostalgic and memorable last Western,
a revisionistic work with John Wayne (in a quintessential role):
- in the opening scene, elderly and revered
US Senator Ransom "Ranse" Stoddard (James Stewart) arrived
in the year 1910 in the small western town of Shinbone (either
Arizona or Colorado Territory) with his wife Hallie Stoddard (Vera
Miles) to attend the funeral of Tom Doniphon (John Wayne); he told
newspaperman Maxwell Scott (Carleton Young), in the film's lengthy
flashback, about how he had allegedly become a legend and was known
as "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance"
- Stoddard looked back on his past, beginning 25 years
earlier when he first arrived in the small frontier town as a young,
idealistic pacifistic attorney at law from the East Coast: ("l
was just a youngster, fresh out of law school, bag full of law books
and my father's gold watch, $14.80 in cash. l had taken Horace Greeley's
advice literally: Go west, young man, go west, and seek fame, fortune,
adventure")
- the Senator continued by describing his relationship
with tough and rugged homesteader and gunslinger Tom Doniphon - who
had protected Ransom (famously referred to as "Pilgrim")
from continual taunting, including caring for him after he was beaten
up by outlaw Liberty Valance (Lee Marvin) during a stagecoach robbery;
when Doniphon urged: ("You better start packin' a handgun"),
Stoddard vowed that he was non-violent, and would instead rely on
his law books to bring justice to the town: ("A gun? l don't
want a gun. I don't want a gun. l don't want to kill him. l want
to put him in jail")
- drunken, abusive, violent, silver-knobbed
whip-wielding villain and gun-man Liberty Valance conflicted
with Ransom - especially during their memorable confrontational restaurant
scene when Valance deliberately tripped apron-wearing dishwasher/waiter
employee Ransom while serving a steak dinner to Doniphon, who then
threatened Valance: "That was my steak, Valance!"
- when Doniphon
was teaching Ransom to shoot, he deliberately splattered Ransom
with paint from one of three paint cans during target practice: ("l
hate tricks, Pilgrim, but that's what you're up against with Valance.
He's almost as fast as l am") - Ransom growlingly responded
and slugged Doniphon in the jaw that sent him to the ground: "I
don't like tricks myself, so that makes us even"
- there was a climactic shootout-showdown on a
dusty street in which Valance taunted and then wounded Ransom in
his right arm; Valance aimed his gun and vowed to kill Ransom
with his next shot: ("This
time, right between the eyes"); but miraculously, Random -
left-handed - appeared to shoot Valance dead
- Doniphon privately confronted Ransom a few
weeks later during a political convention when he informed him about
the real truth of the legendary gunfight - Ransom never shot
Liberty; it was told during a 'flashback-within-a-flashback' introduced
with a swirl of smoke from Doniphon's cigarette: ("You didn't
kill Liberty Valance...Think back, Pilgrim. Valance came out of
the saloon. You were walking toward him when he fired his first
shot. Remember?");
Doniphon revealed how he was hidden on a side street with his devoted
sidekick Pompey (Woody Strode) when the showdown occurred; Pompey
threw him a rifle and at the exact moment of the shooting, Doniphon
killed Valance; he had shot Liberty to sacrificially protect the
love of his life Hallie from heartbreak (knowing Stoddard would
die in a face-off), and also for the greater good of the territory
poised for statehood: (Doniphon: "Cold-blooded
murder, but l can live with it. Hallie's happy. She wanted you alive");
Doniphon was now regretful for saving Ransom's life: "I wish
I hadn't. Hallie's your girl now. Go on back in there and take that
nomination. You taught her how to read and write. Now give her somethin'
to read and write about!"
- the bitter sad, and tragic result of Doniphon's
killing of Liberty Valance was that it allowed Ransom
to take Hallie away as his wife - the woman Doniphon had loved
in silence and had hoped to marry; a drunken Doniphon staggered
home and set his own house on fire by tossing an oil lamp into
it; it had an extra addition that he had built - planned to be
the residence for his bride-to-be Hallie; Doniphon (and his horses)
were saved only by Pompey's intervention
- for the remainder of his life as a politician ("Three
terms as governor, two terms in the Senate, Ambassador to the Court
of St. James, back again to the Senate, and a man who, with the snap
of his fingers, could be the next Vice President of the United States"),
Stoddard was mistakenly known as "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance"
- at the end of Stoddard's flashback after he finished
his true tale about his past, local newspaper editor Maxwell
Scott (Carleton Young) delivered a famous line of dialogue in the
film's conclusion as he ripped up his novice reporter's notes and
refused to publish the truth of the story: (Ransom: "You're
not going to use the story, Mr. Scott?" Scott: "No, sir.
This is the West, sir. When the legend becomes fact, print the legend")
- after their visit, Ransom
and Hallie gave complex (and melancholic) reactions to the conductor
on their train back to Washington DC, who enthusiastically
told them: "Nothing's too
good for the Man Who Shot Liberty Valance"
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Ransom Stoddard (James Stewart) - Beaten Up During Stagecoach
Robbery
Tom Doniphon (John Wayne)
Villainous Liberty Valance (Lee Marvin)
Doniphon Slugged to the Ground by Ransom During
Target Practice
Doniphon's Confession About Who Actually Shot Liberty
Valance
Doniphon Setting His Own House on Fire
The Telling of Ransom's Flashbacked Tale
The Stoddards' Train Ride Home
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