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Hour of the Gun
Original film poster
Directed byJohn Sturges
Written byEdward Anhalt
Based on
Produced byJohn Sturges
Mirisch-Kappa (Production company)
Starring
CinematographyLucien Ballard, ASC
Edited byFerris Webster
Music byJerry Goldsmith
Production
company
Distributed byUnited Artists
Release date
  • November 1, 1967 (1967-11-01) (New York City)
Running time
100 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$1,800,000 (estimated)
Box office$2 million[1]

Hour of the Gun is a 1967 American Western film depicting Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday during their 1881 battles against Ike Clanton and his brothers in the gunfight at the O.K. Corral, and the gunfight's aftermath in and around Tombstone, Arizona. It stars James Garner as Earp, Jason Robards as Holliday, and Robert Ryan as Clanton. The film was directed by John Sturges.

Sturges had previously directed a highly fictionalized version of the same events in the film Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957) starring Burt Lancaster and Kirk Douglas, but in Hour of the Gun, he strove for more historical accuracy than in most previous screen depictions of Earp's adventures. The film is based on the nonfiction book Tombstone's Epitaph by Douglas D. Martin, with a screenplay by Edward Anhalt.

During the film's opening title and credits sequence, an onscreen title appears last: "This picture is based on Fact. This is the way it happened." Hour of the Gun is, in fact, more accurate than its predecessors in many ways. For instance, it correctly shows Ike Clanton surviving the O.K. Corral shoot-out, whereas previous films had shown him being one of its fatalities.

Not everything in the film, though, adheres strictly to fact. It has Ike Clanton ultimately being killed by Wyatt Earp, whereas Clanton actually died in an 1887 duel with a constable named Jonas Brighton. In addition, Hour of the Gun portrays Doc Holliday as a graying Civil War veteran much older than the Earp brothers, though in fact he was younger than most of them and was too young to have served in that conflict. The death of Curly Bill Brocious is inaccurately portrayed as a street shootout between Brocius and two others vs. Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday. Furthermore, the opening depicts the gunfight as happening at the O.K. Corral, whereas it actually happened in the alley near the corral between Fremont and Allen streets near Fly photography studio.

Plot

[edit]

Outnumbered but determined, the deputy marshal of Tombstone, Wyatt Earp, his older brother Virgil, who is the current city marshal, his younger brother Morgan, a Tombstone special police officer, and ally Doc Holliday, who was made an officer and given a badge for the occasion, confront and get the best of the Ike Clanton gang in a violent shootout at the O.K. Corral in the Arizona town of Tombstone.

Clanton, a rustler, conspires to have the Earps charged with murder and tried in a court of law. When they are cleared, Virgil runs for re-election as Tombstone city marshal, but is ambushed and maimed by some of Clanton's hired guns. Morgan elects to run for the office in his brother's place, but he is assassinated on election day after winning.

While seeing Virgil and his family off to California for their safety, Earp kills Frank Stillwell, foiling an attempted ambush orchestrated by Clanton. An appointment as a federal marshal then gives him the authority to pursue the others involved in the attacks on his brothers. Doc Holliday, a gambler who has been on the wrong side of the law himself more than once, assembles a posse to support the pursuit. The men locate Pete Spence, "Curly" Bill Brocius, and Andy Warshaw. In each case, Earp manipulates the circumstances to get his target to draw a weapon rather than simply surrendering, thus enabling Earp to kill them legally rather than make an arrest. Holliday calls Earp out on his tactics, but his strength gives out due to his tuberculosis, and Earp transports him to a sanitarium in Colorado.

With Clanton weakened, wealthy interests in Tombstone step forward to end the dispute, buying off the men supporting Clanton, which leads him to hide out in Mexico. To entice Earp to remain in Tombstone, the city's leading citizens tell him they are seeking an appointment for him as chief U.S. marshal that could one day make him the adjutant general for the territory. Earp declines to give his answer to the offer immediately, but tells Holliday that he is going back to Tombstone to accept the job. Holliday does not believe him, and knows Earp is really going to Mexico to track down Clanton with the cooperation of the Mexican federal authorities. Holliday again joins Earp on the mission, which ends with a final showdown in which Earp shoots Clanton dead in a fast-draw duel between the two.

Earp returns to the Colorado sanitarium to visit the ailing Holliday and say goodbye to his friend, telling him this time he really is returning to Tombstone. As he leaves, though, Earp admits to a visiting Tombstone elder that he is leaving the Southwest altogether, intending never to be involved in law enforcement again. Holliday glances at the countryside as his friend rides away, and then resumes his poker game with his sanitarium health aide.

Cast

[edit]

Production

[edit]

This is the second film by John Sturges about these events, following the fictionalized film from ten years earlier, Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, which had featured Burt Lancaster as Earp and Kirk Douglas as Holliday. However, Ike Clanton is killed at the end of the earlier film (during the gunfight at the O.K. Corral itself). In Hour of the Gun, Clanton not only survives the gunfight, but also is a major antagonist thereafter. Where Gunfight at the O.K. Corral is more about the main gun battle, this film begins with the gunfight and moves forward from there. Hal B. Wallis had scripted everything in the earlier Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, and Sturges was disappointed with that film.[2] According to critic Paul Brenner, Hour of the Gun is more of a psychological "melancholy character study".[3]

The film's music is composed by Jerry Goldsmith.[4]

Garner wrote in his memoirs that he agreed to make the film without reading the script because he thought so highly of Sturges.[5] Garner also played the lead as Wyatt Earp in a different film more than two decades later, Blake Edwards's Sunset (1988), a comedy thriller based on the 1920s period during which Earp was a technical adviser for silent films.

Hour of the Gun was filmed in the state of Durango, Mexico; at Estudios Churubusco Azteca (studio) in Mexico City, México D.F., Mexico; San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato, Mexico; and Torreón, Coahuíla, Mexico.[6]

Reception

[edit]

At AllMovie, Bruce Eder calls Garner's portrayal of Earp as "taciturn, emotionally repressed, deeply troubled and torn", but criticizes Edward Anhalt's script as being too strict to historical facts and confining the actors, especially Garner.[2] Roger Ebert from Chicago Sun-Times says: "Garner turns in one of his best performances."[7]

Home media

[edit]

Hour of the Gun was released to DVD by MGM Home Entertainment May 17, 2005, and later on Blu-ray by Twilight Time. The film was also made available in the digital format.[8]

See also

[edit]

References

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[edit]

Grokipedia

from Grokipedia
Hour of the Gun is a 1967 American Western film directed by John Sturges that portrays the aftermath of the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, focusing on Marshal Wyatt Earp's pursuit of vengeance against the Clanton gang for the murders of his brothers Virgil and Morgan.[1][2] The film stars James Garner as Wyatt Earp, Jason Robards as Doc Holliday, and Robert Ryan as Ike Clanton, with supporting roles including Frank Converse as Virgil Earp, Michael Tolan as Pete Spence, and Bill Fletcher as Sheriff Jimmy Bryan (based on Johnny Behan).[1] Produced by John Sturges for The Mirisch Corporation and distributed by United Artists, it was released on November 1, 1967, and runs for 100 minutes.[1] Unlike Sturges's earlier film Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957), which took a more romanticized approach, Hour of the Gun draws from historical accounts, including the testimony from the Spicer Hearing and the book Helldorado by William Breakenridge, to present a grittier, more legally oriented narrative spanning from October 26, 1881, to April 15, 1882, in Tombstone, Arizona.[2][3] In the story, following the O.K. Corral shootout where Earp and his allies kill several Clanton associates, Ike Clanton initiates legal proceedings against Earp, but the plot escalates when Clanton's men assassinate Virgil and Morgan, prompting Earp to form a posse with Holliday to track and eliminate the perpetrators outside the bounds of the law.[1] The screenplay by Edward Anhalt emphasizes themes of justice, revenge, and the erosion of moral boundaries in the American frontier.[2] Critically, Hour of the Gun holds an 88% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on eight reviews, with critics praising its realistic depiction of historical events and Sturges's direction in confronting the myths surrounding the O.K. Corral legend.[2] It received a 6.6/10 average rating on IMDb from over 5,000 users, reflecting a mixed but generally positive reception for its performances, particularly Garner's portrayal of a resolute yet conflicted Earp.[1] The film is noted for its influential take on Western genre conventions, influencing later works by highlighting the personal toll of violence.[2]

Background

Historical context

In the late 1870s, Tombstone, Arizona, emerged as a silver mining boomtown amid the lawlessness of the American Southwest, attracting a population of around 7,000 by 1881 and serving as a hub for gambling, saloons, and violent disputes over mining claims and livestock.[4] The Earp brothers—Virgil, Wyatt, and Morgan—arrived between 1879 and 1880, taking on roles as law enforcement officers to curb the chaos; Virgil served as deputy U.S. marshal and town marshal, Wyatt as deputy town marshal and temporarily as deputy county sheriff, while Morgan acted as a shotgun messenger for Wells Fargo.[5] Opposing them were the Clanton family and their associates, known as the "Cowboys," a loosely organized gang of cattle rustlers operating from Newman H. "Old Man" Clanton's ranch near the U.S.-Mexico border, who engaged in stealing livestock from Mexico and Arizona ranchers, as well as stagecoach robberies.[6] Cochise County Sheriff Johnny Behan, a political rival to the Earps and suspected of sympathizing with the Cowboys, held authority over the region but often failed to enforce laws against the rustlers, exacerbating tensions in the volatile environment.[4] The simmering feud erupted on October 26, 1881, around 3:00 p.m., in a vacant lot adjacent to Fly's Photographic Studio on Fremont Street, near the O.K. Corral in Tombstone.[4] Virgil Earp, as town marshal, along with Wyatt and Morgan Earp and their ally John "Doc" Holliday—a gambler and dentist with a reputation for gunfighting—confronted Ike Clanton, his brother Billy Clanton, and the McLaury brothers, Tom and Frank, who were armed in violation of a local ordinance prohibiting firearms in town. The 30-second exchange of gunfire left Billy Clanton, Tom McLaury, and Frank McLaury dead; Virgil Earp suffered a shoulder wound, Morgan a leg injury, and Holliday a hip graze, while Wyatt emerged unscathed and Ike Clanton fled unharmed.[4] The Earps and Holliday were arrested the following day on murder charges filed by Ike Clanton; however, after a preliminary hearing from October 31 to November 30, 1881, Justice of the Peace Wells Spicer ruled the shooting justifiable homicide in self-defense against an armed mob, exonerating them.[4] Retaliation followed swiftly, with Cowboys suspected in assassination attempts on the Earps. On December 28, 1881, Virgil Earp was ambushed by shotgun fire while walking on Allen Street in Tombstone, resulting in the amputation of his left arm; Ike Clanton was later charged but the case was dismissed for lack of evidence.[7] Morgan Earp was assassinated on March 18, 1882, shot in the back while playing billiards at Campbell & Hatch's Saloon in Tombstone.[4] Enraged, Wyatt Earp formed a federal posse and embarked on the "Vendetta Ride" starting March 20, 1882, tracking suspected assassins across southern Arizona; the group killed Frank Stilwell on March 20 in Tucson, Florentino "Indian Charlie" Cruz on March 22 in the Dragoon Mountains, and Curly Bill Brocius on March 24 at Iron Springs near Tombstone.[7] Ike Clanton evaded the vendetta and continued rustling until June 1, 1887, when he was shot and killed by Deputy Marshal Jonas V. Brighton near Springerville, Arizona, while resisting arrest on cattle theft charges—an unrelated incident.[8]

Development

Hour of the Gun originated as a sequel to director John Sturges' 1957 film Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, with Sturges expressing dissatisfaction over the earlier movie's fictionalized elements and seeking a more historically accurate depiction of the Wyatt Earp story.[9] To achieve this, Sturges drew upon trial transcripts and other historical records during pre-production, emphasizing authenticity in portraying the events following the O.K. Corral gunfight rather than the shootout itself.[10] This approach marked a deliberate shift from the heroic, mythologized narrative of the prior film, focusing instead on the moral complexities and vendetta that ensued.[9] The screenplay was written by Edward Anhalt, adapted from Douglas D. Martin's 1951 nonfiction book Tombstone's Epitaph, which chronicles the historical events through contemporary newspaper accounts and records.[11] Anhalt's script centers on the post-gunfight vendetta, including the Earp brothers' pursuit of the Clantons and their allies, highlighting themes of revenge and legal ambiguity over the romanticized gunfight buildup seen in earlier adaptations.[11] This narrative choice allowed for a deeper exploration of the historical aftermath, such as the trials and vendetta ride, while beginning briefly with the O.K. Corral events for context.[9] Casting decisions reflected Sturges' intent for a subdued, realistic portrayal of the figures involved. James Garner was selected to play Wyatt Earp, offering a more restrained and grim interpretation compared to Burt Lancaster's heroic depiction in Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, aligning with the film's aim to humanize the lawman as a vengeful figure driven by personal loss.[10] Garner, who had previously collaborated with Sturges on The Great Escape (1963), brought a nuanced performance that emphasized Earp's moral decline.[12] Jason Robards was cast as Doc Holliday, portraying him as a consumptive but loyal companion, further underscoring the film's grounded tone.[11] The film was produced by The Mirisch Corporation and distributed by United Artists, with pre-production efforts prioritizing extensive research into historical documents to ensure fidelity to the real events.[13] The total budget was allocated at $1.8 million, with significant resources devoted to script development and authenticity verification rather than elaborate sets or action sequences.[14] This investment in research helped distinguish Hour of the Gun as a revisionist Western, though it still incorporated some dramatic liberties for narrative flow.[9]

Production

Filming

Principal photography for Hour of the Gun commenced on November 9, 1966, in Torreón, Coahuila, Mexico, where a facsimile Western town was constructed for $100,000 to stand in for Tombstone, Arizona.[15] Production then shifted to Churubusco Studios in Mexico City on December 20, 1966, for interior scenes, before wrapping in early February 1967 with additional exteriors at a hacienda near San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato, and landscapes in Durango.[13] These Mexican locations were selected to provide dusty, sun-baked desert environments and period-appropriate townscapes that evoked the rugged Arizona Territory, despite some initial concerns over local censorship and union regulations, which had eased by the mid-1960s.[15] The choice avoided filming in the actual Tombstone area, which had undergone significant modernization, making it unsuitable for recreating the 1880s setting.[16] Cinematographer Lucien Ballard employed Panavision anamorphic lenses to capture expansive desert vistas and intimate confrontations, emphasizing the harsh, sun-drenched terrain of the Mexican sites to simulate Arizona's arid ruggedness.[14] This approach presented logistical challenges, including adapting to the variable dust and heat of Durango's landscapes, but resulted in a visually stark portrayal that heightened the film's tense, unforgiving atmosphere.[17] A Mexican camera crew, led by Jorge Stahl, assisted Ballard, ensuring smooth operations amid the remote exteriors.[15] Director John Sturges pursued a procedural realism in his approach, drawing on historical accuracy goals from pre-production to depict events like trials and vendettas with minimal dramatic embellishment, diverging from the more stylized Westerns of his earlier career.[12] He favored naturalistic depictions of the landscape and character interactions, often reviewing dailies with the cast to maintain fidelity to the source material, which fostered a grounded tone over heroic flourishes.[15] This style extended to on-set dynamics, where Sturges managed the production's complexities, including tracking actor Jason Robards' unpredictable behavior through daily oversight by assistant directors.[15] Post-production proceeded efficiently, with editing by Ferris Webster completed by early 1967 to meet the release schedule, culminating in a final runtime of 100 minutes.[13] The process involved refining the Panavision footage to preserve the film's deliberate pacing and realistic procedural elements, readying it for its premiere on November 1, 1967.[1]

Music

Jerry Goldsmith was selected to compose the score for Hour of the Gun due to his established expertise in Western films, including earlier works like Rio Conchos (1964), which demonstrated his ability to craft tense, atmospheric music suited to the genre.[18] His approach emphasized a minimalist orchestration, relying on percussion and brass elements to build suspense and underscore the tension in the film's vendetta sequences, creating a gritty, realistic tone that aligned with director John Sturges's vision of historical events.[19] The score features key cues such as an ominous main theme that accompanies Wyatt Earp's pursuit, evoking a sense of unrelenting determination. Comprising approximately 70 minutes of original music, it deliberately eschews the romantic, sweeping motifs common in prior Western scores like those by Dimitri Tiomkin, opting instead for a subdued palette that reinforces the narrative's somber gravity.[18][19] Goldsmith personally conducted the original sessions with a studio orchestra. The composition draws subtle influences from his contemporary television scoring, such as the rhythmic drive in The Man from U.N.C.L.E., but adapts these to a more restrained style befitting the story's historical weight, with no overt romantic flourishes.[19] Throughout the film, the score is deployed sparingly to maintain a documentary-like authenticity, contrasting sharply with the bombastic orchestral swells found in genre contemporaries like The Magnificent Seven sequels, thereby amplifying the procedural and psychological focus of the proceedings.[18]

Cast and characters

Principal cast

James Garner starred as Wyatt Earp, depicting the lawman as a quiet yet vengeful figure driven by personal loss, a departure from Garner's earlier lighthearted persona established in the television series Maverick (1957–1960), where he played the roguish gambler Bret Maverick; this role marked part of his transition to more dramatic parts in the 1960s following disputes that led him to leave the show.[20] Jason Robards portrayed Doc Holliday, the tubercular dentist and gambler, bringing a cynical intensity honed from his Broadway successes, including Tony Awards for The Disenchanted (1958) and A Thousand Clowns (1963); Hour of the Gun was among his early major film roles as he shifted from stage to screen in the 1960s, starting with the 1962 adaptation of Long Day's Journey into Night.[21] Robert Ryan played Ike Clanton, the cunning and pragmatic antagonist leading the outlaw gang, drawing on his extensive experience as a character actor in film noir, including standout performances as an anti-Semitic killer in Crossfire (1947) and a down-and-out boxer in The Set-Up (1949), which informed his portrayal of morally complex villains. The supporting cast included Albert Salmi as Octavius "Old Man" Clanton, the patriarchal figure behind the family's criminal enterprises; Steve Ihnat as Andy Warshaw, a young Cowboy gang member; Sam Melville as Morgan Earp, Wyatt's slain brother; Frank Converse as Virgil Earp, the wounded marshal; and Charles Aidman as Horace Sullivan, the presiding judge during the inquest. The film featured more than 20 principal actors in total.[22]

Historical portrayals

In Hour of the Gun, James Garner's portrayal of Wyatt Earp emphasizes a moral decline into vigilantism following the O.K. Corral gunfight and the assassination of his brothers Virgil and Morgan, reflecting the real Earp Vendetta Ride of 1882 where Earp led a federal posse to hunt suspected Cowboy perpetrators. This depiction accurately captures Earp's shift from lawman to avenger, as he and his allies killed at least three suspects, including Frank Stilwell and Florentino Cruz, in acts that blurred legal boundaries. However, the film exaggerates Earp's ruthlessness, presenting him as increasingly cold-blooded, whereas historical accounts indicate the vendetta was a targeted response to threats rather than indiscriminate violence. Post-Tombstone, the real Earp largely abandoned such pursuits, relocating to San Francisco in 1882 and later engaging in mining, gambling, and refereeing boxing matches in a more stable, law-abiding manner until his death in 1929. Jason Robards's Doc Holliday is shown as a consumptive gambler with a persistent cough, elements faithful to the historical figure who suffered from tuberculosis diagnosed in his early 20s and supported himself through faro dealing and dentistry. At the time of the O.K. Corral in October 1881, Holliday was 30 years old, yet Robards, aged 45 during filming, portrays him as more weathered and paternal. While Holliday's loyalty to Earp is a cornerstone of both the film and history—demonstrated by his participation in the vendetta ride despite his failing health—the movie fictionalizes this bond by having Holliday act as Earp's conscience, urging restraint against vengeance; in reality, Holliday actively joined the posse and fired on targets like Stilwell without such moral qualms. Robert Ryan's Ike Clanton serves as the film's primary antagonist, culminating in a dramatized 1882 showdown where Earp kills him in Mexico, amplifying Clanton's villainy as the orchestrator of post-O.K. Corral attacks. This represents a major inaccuracy, as Clanton survived the 1881 gunfight unharmed and was not killed by Earp; instead, he continued rustling cattle and was shot dead on June 1, 1887, near Springerville, Arizona, while resisting arrest by deputy Jonas V. Brighton. The film simplifies the Earp family's dynamics, centering on Wyatt, Virgil, and Morgan as a tight-knit unit driven by brotherhood and revenge, omitting the broader clan's complexities, including half-brother Newton Earp's earlier separation from the frontier life and father Nicholas Porter Earp's influence as a former constable who instilled a sense of justice but did not join the vendetta. Additionally, Hour of the Gun concludes with the vendetta's aftermath in 1882, making no reference to Wyatt Earp's later years in Alaska during the Klondike Gold Rush, where from 1899 to 1901 he managed saloons in Nome and attempted mining claims amid the boomtown chaos.

Release and reception

Box office and distribution

Hour of the Gun premiered on November 1, 1967, in New York City, followed by a wide U.S. release through distributor United Artists; the international rollout occurred primarily in 1968.[23][13] The film received an Approved rating under the Motion Picture Production Code upon its initial release.[1] Produced on an estimated budget of $1.8 million, the film grossed approximately $2.06 million in domestic rentals, marking a modest commercial performance that fell short of recouping costs fully when accounting for distribution fees.[1][24] A May 1968 Variety report highlighted low returns for the picture as part of a group of underperforming James Garner vehicles, contributing to its status as a financial disappointment relative to the star's earlier successes.[13] The movie was positioned in marketing as a historically accurate sequel to the 1957 hit Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, leveraging the established Wyatt Earp narrative to attract audiences amid a crowded Western landscape.[13] International box office data remains sparse, though releases across Europe and other markets provided additional revenue streams for the genre's dedicated followers.[23]

Critical response

Upon its release in 1967, Hour of the Gun received mixed reviews from critics, who praised its performances and historical realism while critiquing its deliberate pacing and lack of dramatic flair.[25] Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times awarded it 3.5 out of 4 stars, lauding James Garner's restrained portrayal of Wyatt Earp as one of the actor's best, emphasizing the character's quiet intensity and the film's authentic depiction of frontier law enforcement without romanticization.[10] In contrast, Bosley Crowther of The New York Times dismissed it as a "totally conventional Western drama" that felt slow and obvious, arguing it prioritized factual recounting over engaging storytelling and failed to generate excitement despite John Sturges's direction.[26] Variety echoed this sentiment, noting the film's classic opening gunfight and strong turns by Garner and Jason Robards as Doc Holliday, but expressing surprise that Sturges had crafted such an "obvious, slow" narrative.[27] Positive responses highlighted Sturges's assured handling of the material and Jerry Goldsmith's evocative score, which underscored the moral ambiguity and tension of the post-O.K. Corral vendetta. TV Guide described it as an "interesting, often absorbing offbeat western with excellent production values," crediting the procedural focus on legal and ethical dilemmas for its depth.[28] However, some reviewers found the script's emphasis on historical accuracy detracted from emotional resonance, with one noting that "reality often makes for poor drama."[25] The film garnered no major awards or nominations, with Garner's performance overshadowed by his acclaimed roles in other contemporary works like Grand Prix. Retrospectively, it has been reevaluated as an underrated entry in the Western genre for its demythologizing approach to the Earp legend, earning an 88% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on eight critic reviews that commend its examination of violence's corrosive effects.[2] Critics like Philip French have called it "an intelligent film reflecting the troubled Vietnam era," appreciating its anti-heroic tone amid the era's shifting views on authority.[25]

Legacy

Home media

The home video release of Hour of the Gun began with a LaserDisc edition in the 1990s, featuring a double bill with Duel at Diablo as part of early MGM catalog offerings.[29] The film made its DVD debut on May 17, 2005, distributed by MGM Home Entertainment in Region 1, presented in NTSC format with a runtime of 100 minutes and no supplemental features.[30][31] A limited-edition Blu-ray release followed from Twilight Time in 2013, capped at 3,000 units, sourced from a high-definition master of the original negative and encoded in 1080p with a DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 mono soundtrack; extras included an isolated score track, the original trailer, and a six-page booklet with liner notes by Julie Kirgo discussing the film's production and Western genre context.[32][31][33] As of 2025, the film remains available digitally for streaming on platforms such as Amazon Prime Video and Tubi, with remastered versions optimized for modern viewing, though no 4K UHD edition has been issued. A 4K UHD edition is scheduled for release in 2026 by Kino Lorber Studio Classics.[34][35][36] International DVD editions, including those with subtitles in languages like Spanish, have been released through regional distributors such as MGM in Europe.[37]

Cultural impact

Hour of the Gun contributed to the emergence of revisionist Westerns in the late 1960s and 1970s by depicting Wyatt Earp as a figure consumed by vengeance and moral ambiguity, rather than an unblemished hero.[38] This portrayal marked a departure from earlier romanticized accounts, influencing the genre's shift toward exploring ethical complexities in frontier justice.[39] The film served as a precursor to 1990s depictions in Tombstone (1993) and Wyatt Earp (1994), both of which delved into Earp's darker traits, such as ruthlessness and obsession with retribution, building on the revisionist foundation laid by director John Sturges.[40] In the 21st century, Hour of the Gun has achieved cult status for its emphasis on historical accuracy relative to prior Hollywood myths about the O.K. Corral, earning praise as one of the more faithful adaptations of the events.[41] James Garner's interpretation of Earp established a template for nuanced anti-heroes in the genre, presenting a cold-blooded lawman whose actions blur the line between justice and vigilantism.[42] However, historical analyses have critiqued the film for inaccuracies, including the dramatized killing of Ike Clanton by Earp during the vendetta ride, whereas Clanton actually survived until he was shot and killed by lawman J.V. Brighton on June 1, 1887, while resisting arrest for cattle rustling.[8][43] This debunking of heroic legends, as noted by Earp biographer Casey Tefertiller, underscores the film's role in challenging mythic narratives.[43] In contemporary discussions of the Western revival during the 2020s, Hour of the Gun is cited for advancing realistic portrayals of frontier violence and moral decay, elements echoed in television series like Deadwood (2004–2006).[44]

References

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