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Stagecoach
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Stagecoach (1939) More at IMDbPro »

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Stagecoach (1939) -- A simple stagecoach trip is complicated by the fact that Geronimo is on the warpath in the area. The passengers on the coach include a a drunken doctor...
Stagecoach (1939) -- US Home Video Trailer from United Artists
Stagecoach (1939) -- US Theatrical Trailer from Warner Bros.
Stagecoach (1939) -- MyMovieScripts.com - Trailer (Flash)
Stagecoach (1939) -- Moviesbox.us - Trailer (Flash)

Overview

User Rating:
7.8/10   13,184 votes
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Director:
John Ford
Writers:
Ernest Haycox (story)
Dudley Nichols (screenplay)
(more)
Contact:
View company contact information for Stagecoach on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
2 March 1939 (USA) more
Tagline:
Danger holds the reins as the devil cracks the whip ! Desperate men ! Frontier women ! Rising above their pasts in a West corrupted by violence and gun-fire ! more
Plot:
A simple stagecoach trip is complicated by the fact that Geronimo is on the warpath in the area. The... more | add synopsis
Awards:
Won 2 Oscars. Another 2 wins & 5 nominations more
User Comments:
Great ensemble western more (103 total)

Cast

  (in credits order) (verified as complete)

Claire Trevor ... Dallas

John Wayne ... Ringo Kid
Andy Devine ... Buck
John Carradine ... Hatfield
Thomas Mitchell ... Doc Boone
Louise Platt ... Lucy Mallory
George Bancroft ... Curley
Donald Meek ... Peacock
Berton Churchill ... Gatewood

Tim Holt ... Lieutenant
Tom Tyler ... Luke Plummer
rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Dorothy Appleby ... Girl in saloon (uncredited)
Frank Baker ... (uncredited)
Chief John Big Tree ... Indian scout (uncredited)
Ted Billings ... Bit part (uncredited)
Wiggie Blowne ... Bit part (uncredited)
Danny Borzage ... (uncredited)
Ed Brady ... Lordsburg saloon owner (uncredited)
Fritzi Brunette ... Bit part (uncredited)
Yakima Canutt ... Cavalry scout (uncredited)
Nora Cecil ... Boone's landlady (uncredited)
Steve Clemente ... Bit (uncredited)
Bill Cody ... Rancher (uncredited)
Jack Curtis ... Bartender (uncredited)
Marga Ann Deighton ... Mrs. Pickett (uncredited)
Patricia Doyle ... Bit part (uncredited)
Tex Driscoll ... Bit part (uncredited)
Franklyn Farnum ... Deputy Frank (uncredited)
Francis Ford ... Billy Pickett (uncredited)
Brenda Fowler ... Mrs. Gatewood (uncredited)
Helen Gibson ... Girl in saloon (uncredited)
Robert Homans ... Ed (editor) (uncredited)
William Hopper ... Sergeant (uncredited)
Si Jenks ... Bartender (uncredited)
Cornelius Keefe ... Capt. Whitney (uncredited)
Florence Lake ... Nancy Whitney (uncredited)
Duke R. Lee ... Lordsburg sheriff (uncredited)
Theodore Lorch ... Lordsburg express agent (uncredited)
Chris-Pin Martin ... Chris (uncredited)
Jim Mason ... Jim (Tonto express agent) (uncredited)
Louis Mason ... Tonto sheriff (uncredited)
Merrill McCormick ... Ogler (uncredited)
J.P. McGowan ... (uncredited)
Walter McGrail ... Capt. Sickel (uncredited)
Paul McVey ... Pony Express agent (uncredited)
Kent Odell ... Billy Pickett Jr (uncredited)
Artie Ortego ... Lordsburg bar patron (uncredited)
Vester Pegg ... Hank Plummer (uncredited)
Jack Pennick ... Bartender in Tonto (uncredited)
Joe Rickson ... Ike Plummer (uncredited)
Elvira Ríos ... Yakima (uncredited)
Buddy Roosevelt ... Rancher (uncredited)
Mickey Simpson ... (uncredited)
Woody Strode ... Man in saloon (uncredited)
Chuck Stubbs ... (uncredited)
Harry Tenbrook ... Telegraph operator (uncredited)
Mary Kathleen Walker ... Lucy's infant (uncredited)
Bryant Washburn ... Capt. Simmons (uncredited)
Whitehorse ... Indian chief (uncredited)

Hank Worden ... Cavalryman Extra (uncredited)
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Directed by
John Ford 
 
Writing credits
Ernest Haycox (story)

Dudley Nichols (screenplay)

Ben Hecht  uncredited

Produced by
John Ford .... producer (uncredited)
 
Original Music by
Gerard Carbonara (uncredited)
 
Cinematography by
Bert Glennon (director of photography)
 
Film Editing by
Otho Lovering 
Dorothy Spencer 
Walter Reynolds (uncredited)
 
Art Direction by
Alexander Toluboff 
 
Costume Design by
Walter Plunkett 
 
Production Management
Daniel Keefe .... production manager (uncredited)
Jack Kirston .... assistant production manager (uncredited)
 
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
Wingate Smith .... assistant director
Yakima Canutt .... second unit director (uncredited)
Lowell J. Farrell .... assistant director (uncredited)
 
Art Department
Wiard Ihnen .... associate art director (as Wiard B. Ihnen)
 
Sound Department
Frank Maher .... sound
 
Special Effects by
Ray Binger .... special photographic effects (uncredited)
 
Stunts
Yakima Canutt .... stunt coordinator (uncredited)
Iron Eyes Cody .... stunts (uncredited)
Ken Cooper .... stunts (uncredited)
Johnny Eckert .... stunts (uncredited)
W. Frank Long .... stunts (uncredited)
Jack Mohr .... stunts (uncredited)
David Sharpe .... stunts (uncredited)
Henry Wills .... stunts (uncredited)
Billy Yellow .... stunt rigger (uncredited)
 
Camera and Electrical Department
James V. King .... assistant camera (uncredited)
Ned Scott .... still photographer (uncredited)
Cliff Shirpser .... assistant camera (uncredited)
 
Casting Department
Lee Bradley .... extras casting (uncredited)
Harry Goulding .... extras casting (uncredited)
 
Editorial Department
Otho Lovering .... supervising editor (uncredited)
 
Music Department
Louis Gruenberg .... music adaptor
Richard Hageman .... music adaptor
W. Franke Harling .... music adaptor (as Franke Harling)
John Leipold .... music adaptor
Boris Morros .... musical director
Leo Shuken .... music adaptor
Danny Borzage .... musician: accordion (uncredited)
 
Other crew
Walter Wanger .... presenter
Danny Keith .... location manager (uncredited)
W. Frank Long .... horse handler/wrangler (uncredited)
 
Crew verified as complete


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Additional Details

Runtime:
96 min
Country:
USA
Language:
English
Aspect Ratio:
1.37 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Mono (Western Electric Mirrophonic Recording)
Certification:
Australia:G | UK:U | Iceland:L | West Germany:12 (nf) | Finland:S (1951) | Norway:16 (1939) | South Korea:15 | Sweden:15 | USA:Approved (certificate #5029)

Fun Stuff

Trivia:
This was the first of many films that John Ford filmed in Monument Valley, Utah. Others were: My Darling Clementine (1946), Fort Apache (1948), She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (1949), Wagon Master (1950), Rio Grande (1950), The Searchers (1956), Sergeant Rutledge (1960) and his last western, Cheyenne Autumn (1964). more
Goofs:
Revealing mistakes: In the scene at Apache Wells where Chris rushes in to wake the Marshall played by George Bancroft to say his wife has run off, Bancroft and John Wayne are chained together at the ankle. George Bancroft delivers his line but moves his chained leg to far, jerking the chains around Wayne's ankle. Wayne yelps and grabs his ankle. As Bancroft turns toward Wayne to undo the chains, Bancroft is clearly struggling not to break up laughing as Wayne glares at him. more
Quotes:
[first lines]
Cavalry scout: These hills here are full of Apaches. They've burnt every ranch building in sight.
[referring to Indian scout]
Cavalry scout: He had a brush with them last night. Says they're being stirred up by Geronimo.
Capt. Sickel: Geronimo? How do we know he isn't lying?
Cavalry scout: No, he's a Cheyenne. They hate Apaches worse than we do.
more
Movie Connections:
Featured in "Evolution: The Evolutionary Arms Race (#1.4)" (2002) more
Soundtrack:
She's More to Be Pitied than Censured more

FAQ

This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.
22 out of 28 people found the following comment useful.
Great ensemble western, 6 May 2004
10/10
Author: ninazero from Prague, Kalamazoo

I grew up watching the old, crotchety, gruff John Wayne, the iconic hero of the right wing, and even though I'd seen some of his early films on television, I'd forgotten what a sexy and compelling presence he had when a young man. It's easy to see while watching his performance how this film made him a star. As great as Wayne is in this film, he doesn't overshadow any of his fellow performers. Thomas Mitchell plays the drunken doctor thrown out of town, a performance that earned him an Academy Award. Andy Devine is hilarious as the complaining, squeaky voiced stagecoach driver. John Carradine is sleek and snake-like as the gambler. Claire Trevor gives a heartbreaking turn as the good-hearted whore thrown out of town by pious hypocrites. Donald Meek plays his name, a meek whiskey salesman befriended by the whiskey-loving Doc. Each actor quickly and deftly sketches his character so vividly that every performance is memorable.

But the real star of the show is John Ford, the director. To introduce and define nine characters in the context of a fast-paced western is no easy task, and he accomplishes it in masterly fashion. Much of the action takes place in the limited confines of a stagecoach, but Ford takes advantage of the limits by staging brilliant and subtle bits between characters; John Wayne casts sultry glances at Clare Trevor, who blossoms under his glance, the young calvary wife's eyes glaze over as the banker pontificates, and Doc sneaks sips of whiskey from the samples case while he solicitously keeps the wind from chilling the whiskey salesman. When the action moves outside, he films the action in dynamic angles and stunts that were the most daring of its time.

If you enjoy westerns and haven't seen this, you have a great night of film-watching ahead of you. And if the last time you saw Stagecoach was some midnight years ago when you wandered home for a bit of the late show before bedtime, watch it again and rediscover what a great western it is

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