Showdown | |
---|---|
Directed by | George Seaton |
Screenplay by | Theodore Taylor |
Story by | Hank Fine |
Produced by | George Seaton |
Starring | Rock Hudson Dean Martin Susan Clark |
Cinematography | Ernest Laszlo |
Edited by | John W. Holmes |
Music by | David Shire |
Production company | Universal Pictures |
Distributed by | Universal Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 99 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Showdown is a 1973 American Western film produced and directed by George Seaton and starring Rock Hudson, Dean Martin and Susan Clark.
Plot
Childhood friends Billy Massey and Chuck Jarvis go in opposite directions after Chuck ends up married to Billy's former sweetheart. Billy becomes a bank robber, Chuck a lawman. But they end up joining forces against common enemies in a final showdown. A series of life circumstances put two close childhood friends pitted against each other. The seemingly inevitable ending takes a twist that allows the friendship to continue after Billy commits an act of bravery that he knows is suicidal but saves Chuck's life.
Cast
- Rock Hudson as Chuck Jarvis
- Dean Martin as Billy Massey
- Susan Clark as Kate Jarvis
- Donald Moffat as Art Williams
- John McLiam as F.J. Wilson
- Charles Baca as Martinez
- Jackson Kane as Clem
- Ben Zeller as Perry Williams
- John Richard Gill as Earl Cole
- Philip L. Mead as Jack Bonney
- Rita Rogers as Girl
- Vic Mohica as Big Eye
- Raleigh Gardenhire as Joe Williams
- Ed Begley Jr. as Pook
- Dan Boydston as Rawls
Production notes
It was the final film for Seaton, who three years earlier had directed Martin and an all-star cast in the blockbuster hit Airport. It was also Dean Martin's last western.
In a November 1972 episode of the TV series McMillan & Wife called “Cop of the Year,” McMillan (played by Hudson) visits the set of a Western film titled "Showdown" that is in production (directed by Seaton, who plays himself) to ask the special-effects supervisor about how to make a gunshot wound appear on the chest of a gunman—who, in the shot being filmed, is the victim in a showdown.
Reception
Quentin Tarantino later wrote that "the slightness of the whole project is surprising. But along with the pairing of Hudson & Martin, who share the screen for the first time, it’s the films low-key modesty that ends up being one of its most charming features."[1]
See also
References
- ↑ Tarantino, Quentin (December 24, 2019). "Showdown". New Beverly Cinema.
External links
- Showdown at IMDb
- Showdown at the American Film Institute Catalog
- Showdown at the TCM Movie Database
- Showdown at Letterboxd
- Showdown at Rotten Tomatoes