Wichita (1955 film) explained

Wichita
Director:Jacques Tourneur
Producer:Walter Mirisch
Victor Heerman
Screenplay:Daniel B. Ullman
Story:Daniel B. Ullman
Starring:Joel McCrea
Music:Hans J. Salter
Cinematography:Harold Lipstein
Editing:William Austin
Color Process:Technicolor
Studio:Allied Artists Pictures
Distributor:Allied Artists Pictures
Runtime:81 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English
Gross:$2.4 million (US)[1]

Wichita is a 1955 American CinemaScope Western film directed by Jacques Tourneur and starring Joel McCrea as Wyatt Earp. The film won a Golden Globe Award for Best Outdoor Drama. The supporting cast features Vera Miles, Lloyd Bridges, Edgar Buchanan, Peter Graves, Jack Elam and Mae Clarke. The film's premiere was held in Wichita, Kansas, at The Wichita Theatre, 310 East Douglas, with the stars in attendance. Vera Miles had been Miss Kansas in 1948 and was third runner up in the Miss America pageant. The Hollywood Foreign Press Association awarded the film with "Best Picture - Outdoor Drama" in 1955.

It was mostly filmed in California,[2] including in Thousand Oaks, CA.[3]

Plot

Former bison hunter and entrepreneur Wyatt Earp (Joel McCrea) arrives in the lawless cattle town of Wichita, Kansas. His skills as a gunfighter make him a perfect candidate for marshal but he refuses the job until he feels morally obligated to bring law and order to this wild town. His least popular move is to take away the guns of everyone in town, no matter how important. Only when town banker Sam McCoy (Walter Coy) is hit with a personal tragedy does Earp's no-guns edict begin to make sense.[4]

Cast

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. 'The Top Box-Office Hits of 1955', Variety Weekly, January 25, 1956
  2. Web site: Wichita (1955) - IMDb. IMDb.
  3. Fujiwara, Chris (2013). Jacques Tourneur: The Cinema of Nightfall. McFarland. Page 308. .
  4. Web site: Wichita (1955) - Jacques Tourneur - Synopsis, Characteristics, Moods, Themes and Related - AllMovie. AllMovie.