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  2. Mar 1, 1998 · And “Red River” is one of the greatest of all Westerns when it stays with its central story about an older man and a younger one, and the first cattle drive down the Chisholm Trail. It is only in its few scenes involving women that it goes wrong.

  3. I watched Red River (1948) Amazing film. I usually prefer the Italian and more violent/cynical Westerns of the 60’s and 70’s over the classical ones but this was really great. Amazing direction and beautifully shot by Howard Hawks and this is easily some of the best acting John Wayne ever did.

  4. Red River: Directed by Howard Hawks, Arthur Rosson. With John Wayne, Montgomery Clift, Joanne Dru, Walter Brennan. Dunson leads a cattle drive, the culmination of over 14 years of work, to its destination in Missouri. But his tyrannical behavior along the way causes a mutiny, led by his adopted son.

    • (35K)
    • Drama, Western
    • Howard Hawks, Arthur Rosson
    • 1948-09-17
  5. Red River is a 1948 American Western film, directed and produced by Howard Hawks and starring John Wayne and Montgomery Clift. It gives a fictional account of the first cattle drive from Texas to Kansas along the Chisholm Trail.

  6. May 27, 2014 · By Geoffrey O’Brien. Essays —. May 27, 2014. M any westerns have been self-consciously conceived on an epic scale, but Howard Hawks’s Red River (1948), in its deepest channels, actually feels like an ancient epic. It is measured in long breaths and offers up scenes eroded to their fundamentals.

  7. Jun 20, 2019 · Overall Score. Rating Summary. Red River is a true masterpiece by a visionary director. Everything works in making this a true masterpiece. It was then and it still is, more than 70 years after its release. Red River is about a man named Thomas Dunson (Wayne) who was quite difficult to deal with.

  8. Red River (1948) is a film that gets better with age. This was the first of five Howard Hawks/John Wayne features. Red River (1948) was Howard Hawks third straight gem right after To Have & Have Not (1944) and The Big Sleep (1946). John Wayne had come a long way from his low budget Lone Star film days.