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Comanche Station

Comanche Station
Director: Budd Boetticher
Actors: Randolph Scott, Nancy Gates, Claude Akins, Skip Homeier, Richard Rust
Studio: Sony Pictures

List Price: $14.95
Buy Used: $9.95
You Save: $5.00 (33%)



New (2) Used (10) Collectible (1) from $9.95

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 11 reviews
Sales Rank: 19140

Format: Color, Ntsc
Language: English (Original Language)
Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Media: VHS Tape
Number Of Items: 1
Running Time: 74 Minutes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 7.3 x 4.2 x 1.1

ISBN: 6304092024
UPC: 043396822139
EAN: 9786304092026
ASIN: 6304092024

Theatrical Release Date: March 1960
Release Date: July 9, 1996
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 6-10 of 11



5 out of 5 stars A Clasic Randolph Scott   February 25, 1999
5 out of 6 found this review helpful

I love this movie and have seen it many times. I have purchased copies for gifts, and this is why, I was the Stunt Doubel for Nancy Gates! Fun Stuff.


5 out of 5 stars One of the great westerns of all time..   December 22, 2006
Daniel G. Madigan (Redmond, WA United States)
5 out of 6 found this review helpful

All of Bud Boetticher's westerns are superior to many westerns received as classics. I won't mention John Ford's The Searchers or his Calvary Trilogy at all, but Randolph Scott, unlike Wayne, can act; Scott has that vacant, self-absorbed quality in his face, forged in this film and many others onlife styles chiefly underscored by major sensory deprivation. Budd Boetticher removes the conventional dust and the Dance Hall "scenes" and the irritating, endless, comic breaks, as A. Mann did with J. Stewart in The Naked Spur, as Zimmernman and Wyler did with Cooper in High Noon and the Westerner. Boetticher gives us here an almost absurdist odyssey of a man looking for his lost wife by searching for stolen white women, allegedly captured by Indians. Comanche Station, the title, functions in the film as a real place where the heart of this drama works itself out. It has, the Station, the look of Rashomon, a locale ruined by humans turned into beasts, bodies everywhere, undiscovered and visible. There's no peace at the "station," nothing but chaos. A place where everything stops, where there is nothing to understand, and no truth... too much ignorance out there, and a love of racism and how it makes everything evil.

The point of Comanche Station is that there is no point; the notion in this film that a white person would have something to bring to the table in the way of protest to the Indians is what Scott knows and acts out for us. In The Searchers no such discovery ultimately infuses that film, because with Ford in westerns, it's always about the sorrows of the whites; the Indians are unimportant because they are not quite human, and therefore without moral purpose, no credentials for being in the world. In Budd Boetticher's film the native Americans are very much a cultural/ moral issue, and their vengeance in taking whites is seen as boldly civilized, compared to the white way of breaking treaties, and ghetto-izing and murdering. Here in this film, the Comanches wear blue pants, bare tops and resemble a force for self-preservation, a dignity seldom afforded them in other westerns.Randolph Scott magnifies all of this in his portrayal, and he and the rst of the cast are brilliant.


The color, the cinemascope, not Vista Vision, are, however, crucial to this film, and the VHS tape is a pan scan job, but, the DVD should be forth coming.

See this and then watch a Wayne western...you'll see all the problems Huston had with Wayne, Hawkes had with Wayne, and countless co-stars, far above him in every way, both in talent and insight.

Budd Boetticher: an artist and major influence, as said above, on Pekinpah and even on Anthony Mann.


See this and all of Boetticher's work.



3 out of 5 stars Before the high country!   September 3, 2001
4 out of 11 found this review helpful

Slightly disappointing Scott/Boetticher western with Comanches looking more like Mohicans when you look at their haircut. Nancy Gates had been held prisoner at the Comanches, but looks more like she just came from tea with her aunt on a Sunday afternoon. Some nice photography, though - and Scott has a beautiful pony in this one!


5 out of 5 stars "Comanche Station (1960) ... Randolph Scott ... Columbia Pictures"   March 28, 2007
J. Lovins (Missouri-USA)
2 out of 3 found this review helpful

Columbia Pictures / Ranown Pictures Corporation "COMANCHE STATION" (1960) (73 mins/Eastmancolor/Widescreen) (Dolby digitally remastered) --- Starring Randolph Scott, Nancy Gates, Claude Akins & Skip Homeier --- Directed by Budd Boetticher and released in March 1960, our story line and film, Loner Cody trades with the Comanches to get a white girl released ... He is joined on his way back to the girl's husband by an outlaw and his sidekicks. It turns out there is a large reward for the return of the girl, and with the Indians on the warpath and the outlaw being an old enemy of Cody's, things are set for several showdowns --- Another typical interestingly plotted entry from the Scott/Boetticher/Kennedy teaming (their last), in which the old west moral code of right versus wrong gets a surprising twist ending --- Beautiful widescreen print that was remastered in the late 1990s, this one would be a welcome addition to any western library. It needs a DVD release.

Under Budd Boetticher (Director / Producer), Harry Joe Brown (Producer), Randolph Scott (Producer), Burt Kennedy (Screenwriter), Charles Lawton (Cinematographer), Mischa Bakaleinikoff (Composer (Music Score), Edwin H. Bryant (Editor), Carl Anderson (Art Director), Frank A. Tuttle (Set Designer), George Cooper (Sound/Sound Designer), Sam Nelson (First Assistant Director) - - - - the cast includes Randolph Scott (Jefferson Cody), Nancy Gates (Mrs. Lowe), Claude Akins (Ben Lane), Skip Homeier (Frank), Richard Rust (Dobie), Rand Brooks (Station Man), Dyke Johnson (Mr. Lowe), Foster Hood (Comanche lance bearer), Joe Molina (Comanche chief), Vincent St. Cyr (Warrior), P. Holland (Boy) - - - - Randy Scott had a quiet gentleman nature about him which is not seen in the films of today ... Randy took his job and his responsibility to his audience very seriously...would not settle for anything less than his best...same was true in his personal life.

SPECIAL FEATURES BIOS:
1. Randolph Scott (aka: George Randolph Scott)
Date of birth: 23 January 1898 - Orange County, Virginia
Date of death: 2 March 1987 - Beverly Hills, Los Angeles, California

Special footnote, George Randolph Scott better known as Randolph Scott, was an American film actor whose career spanned the sound era from the late 1920s to the early 1960s ... his popularity grew in the 1940s and 1950s, appearing in such films as "Gung Ho"! (1943) and "Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm" (1938); but he was especially famous for his numerous Westerns including "Virginia City" (1940) with Errol Flynn and Humphrey Bogart, "Western Union" (1941) with Robert Young and "Ride the High Country" (1962) with Joel McCrea (a coin was flipped to see whether Scott or McCrea would receive top billing, and Scott won despite having a slightly smaller role) ... his long fistfight with John Wayne in "The Spoilers" (1942) was frequently cited by critics and the press as the most thrilling ever filmed; they were fighting over Marlene Dietrich ... another smash hit film together that same year called "Pittsburgh" (1942) once again with Dietrich, Scott and Wayne --- Daniel Webster defines "Legend", as being a notable person, or the stories told about that person exploits --- well by the time Randolph Scott made his best films he had long established himself as a legend in the film industry --- they say practice makes perfect, if that is true by 1958 at 60 years of age he was the master with these oaters from the 50s ... "The Cariboo Trail" (1950), "The Nevadan" (1950), "Colt .45" (1950), "Santa Fe" (1951), "Sugarfoot" (1951), "Fort Worth" (1951), "Man in the Saddle" (1951), "Carson City" (1952), "The Man Behind the Gun" (1952), "Hangman's Knot" (1952), "Thunder over the Plains" (1953), "The Stranger Wore a Gun" (1953), "Ten Wanted Men" (1954), "Riding Shotgun" (1954), "The Bounty Hunter" (1954), "Rage at Dawn" (1955), "Tall Man Riding" (1955), "A Lawless Street" (1955), "Seven Men from Now" (1956), "Seventh Cavalry" (1956), "Decision at Sundown: (1957), "Shoot-Out at Medicine Bend" (1957), "The Tall T" (1957), "Buchanan Rides Alone" (1958), "Ride Lonesome" (1959), "Westbound" (1959), "Comanche Station" (1960) --- Scott's age seemed to matter little, they only came to see another Randolph Scott film and always got their money's worth --- Scott's films were good and getting better becoming classics --- so if you ever wonder "What Ever Happened To Randolph Scott", just rent or purchase one of his films and you'll see he's never left us.

2. Nancy Gates
Date of Birth: 1 February 1926 - Dallas, Texas
Date of death: Still Living

3. Claude Akins
Date of Birth: 25 May 1918 - Nelson, Georgia
Date of Death: 27 January 1994 - Altadena, California

4. Skip Homeier
Date of Birth: 5 October 1930 - Chicago, Illinois
Date of death: Still Living

5. Budd Boetticher (aka: Oscar Boetticher Jnr) (Director)
Date of Birth: 29 July 1916 - Chicago, Illinois
Date of Death: 29 November 2001 - Ramona, California

Hats off and thanks to Les Adams (collector/guideslines for character identification), Chuck Anderson (Webmaster: The Old Corral/B-Westerns.Com), Boyd Magers (Western Clippings), Bobby J. Copeland (author of "Trail Talk"), Rhonda Lemons (Empire Publishing Inc), Bob Nareau (author of "The Real Bob Steele") and Trevor Scott (Down Under Com) as they have rekindled my interest once again for Film Noir, B-Westerns and Serials --- looking forward to more high quality releases from the vintage serial era of the '20s, '30s & '40s and B-Westerns ... order your copy now from Amazon where there are plenty of copies available on VHS, stay tuned once again for top notch action mixed with deadly adventure --- if you enjoyed this title, why not check out VCI Entertainment where they are experts in releasing B-Westerns and Serials --- all my heroes have been cowboys!

Total Time: 73 min on VHS ~ Sony Home Video ~ (7/09/1996)



5 out of 5 stars The Cowboy's Quest   December 7, 2007
William Kohnke (Waldorf, Maryland United States)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I've only seen "Comanche Station" once, on television years ago. Like John Wayne's character Nathan in "The Searchers", Randolph Scott plays a loner for whom honor and duty is everything. And like "The Searchers", it is a powerful film about a solitary man's determination to find his only real connection to the world, in this case his long missing wife. But unlike "The Searchers", the story is much more encapsulated in time and space, which makes the viewer feel he is a part of the journey. The scenery is breathtaking and the suspense is real. It is perhaps Budd Boetticher's best work, certainly equal to "Seven Men From Now", but with a far superior musical score, haunting and moody, yet as beautiful as the landscape. The ending is worth the wait. I hope someone has the good sense to release a clean, crisp version on DVD soon, so my kids can see what good scripting, directing, cinematography, and acting are really like.


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