| Photos (See all 35 | slideshow) | Videos (see all 3) |
| John Wayne | ... | Tom Doniphon | |
| James Stewart | ... | Ransom Stoddard | |
| Vera Miles | ... | Hallie Stoddard | |
| Lee Marvin | ... | Liberty Valance | |
| Edmond O'Brien | ... | Dutton Peabody | |
| Andy Devine | ... | Marshal Link Appleyard | |
| Ken Murray | ... | Doc Willoughby | |
| John Carradine | ... | Maj. Cassius Starbuckle | |
| Jeanette Nolan | ... | Nora Ericson | |
| John Qualen | ... | Peter Ericson | |
| Willis Bouchey | ... | Jason Tully - Conductor | |
| Carleton Young | ... | Maxwell Scott | |
| Woody Strode | ... | Pompey | |
| Denver Pyle | ... | Amos Carruthers | |
| Strother Martin | ... | Floyd | |
| Lee Van Cleef | ... | Reese | |
| Robert F. Simon | ... | Handy Strong | |
| O.Z. Whitehead | ... | Herbert Carruthers | |
| Paul Birch | ... | Mayor Winder | |
| Joseph Hoover | ... | Charlie Hasbrouck - Reporter for 'The Star' | |
| rest of cast listed alphabetically: | |||
| Charles Akins | ... | (uncredited) | |
| Mario Arteaga | ... | Henchman (uncredited) | |
| Gertrude Astor | ... | (uncredited) | |
| Leonard Baker | ... | Man (uncredited) | |
| Danny Borzage | ... | Townsman (uncredited) | |
| Robert Donner | ... | (uncredited) | |
| Larry Finley | ... | Bar X Man (uncredited) | |
| Shug Fisher | ... | Kaintuck (uncredited) | |
| Duke Fishman | ... | Townsman (uncredited) | |
| Ben Frommer | ... | Cantina Bartender (uncredited) | |
| Helen Gibson | ... | (uncredited) | |
| Herman Hack | ... | Townsman (uncredited) | |
| Sam Harris | ... | Convention Committee Member (uncredited) | |
| Chuck Hayward | ... | Henchman (uncredited) | |
| William Henry | ... | (uncredited) | |
| Bryan 'Slim' Hightower | ... | Shotgun (uncredited) | |
| Earle Hodgins | ... | Clute Dumphries (uncredited) | |
| Stuart Holmes | ... | (uncredited) | |
| Eddie Juaregui | ... | Drummer (uncredited) | |
| Jack Kenny | ... | (uncredited) | |
| Ethan Laidlaw | ... | Party Member at Convention (uncredited) | |
| Anna Lee | ... | Mrs. Prescott - Widow in Stage Holdup (uncredited) | |
| Jacqueline Malouf | ... | Lietta Appleyard (uncredited) | |
| Ted Mapes | ... | Highpockets (uncredited) | |
| Rod McGaughy | ... | Statehood Council Member (uncredited) | |
| Montie Montana | ... | Politician on Horseback (uncredited) | |
| Bob Morgan | ... | Roughrider (uncredited) | |
| Charles Morton | ... | Drummer (uncredited) | |
| Eva Novak | ... | (uncredited) | |
| Jack Pennick | ... | Jack - Barman (uncredited) | |
| Jack Perrin | ... | Statehood Audience Member (uncredited) | |
| Dorothy Phillips | ... | (uncredited) | |
| 'Snub' Pollard | ... | Statehood Audience Member (uncredited) | |
| Stephanie Pond-Smith | ... | (uncredited) | |
| Chuck Roberson | ... | Henchman (uncredited) | |
| Robert Robinson | ... | Statehood Audience Member (uncredited) | |
| Buddy Roosevelt | ... | Townsman in Diner (uncredited) | |
| Charles Seel | ... | Election Council President (uncredited) | |
| Tom Smith | ... | Barfly (uncredited) | |
| Slim Talbot | ... | (uncredited) | |
| Jack Tornek | ... | Townsman (uncredited) | |
| Ralph Volkie | ... | Townsman (uncredited) | |
| Max Wagner | ... | Poker Game Dealer (uncredited) | |
| Blackie Whiteford | ... | (uncredited) | |
| Jack Williams | ... | Henchman (uncredited) | |
Directed by | |||
| John Ford | |||
Writing credits | ||
| James Warner Bellah | (screenplay) and | |
| Willis Goldbeck | (screenplay) | |
| Dorothy M. Johnson | (based on the story by) | |
Produced by | |||
| Willis Goldbeck | .... | producer | |
| John Ford | .... | producer (uncredited) | |
Original Music by | |||
| Cyril J. Mockridge | (music scored by) (as Cyril Mockridge) | ||
Cinematography by | |||
| William H. Clothier | (director of photography) | ||
Film Editing by | |||
| Otho Lovering | (edited by) | ||
Art Direction by | |||
| Eddie Imazu | (art direction) | ||
| Hal Pereira | (art direction) | ||
Set Decoration by | |||
| Sam Comer | (set decoration) | ||
| Darrell Silvera | (set decoration) | ||
Costume Design by | |||
| Edith Head | (costumes by) | ||
| Ron Talsky | (uncredited) | ||
Makeup Department | |||
| Nellie Manley | .... | hair style supervision | |
| Wally Westmore | .... | makeup supervision | |
Production Management | |||
| Don Robb | .... | unit production manager (uncredited) | |
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director | |||
| Wingate Smith | .... | assistant director | |
Art Department | |||
| Robert Ayres | .... | illustrator (uncredited) | |
| Gene Lauritzen | .... | construction coordinator (uncredited) | |
Sound Department | |||
| Charles Grenzbach | .... | sound recordist | |
| Philip Mitchell | .... | sound recordist | |
Visual Effects by | |||
| Farciot Edouart | .... | process photography | |
| Sarah McGrail | .... | image processing specialist (uncredited) | |
Stunts | |||
| John Epper | .... | stunts (uncredited) | |
| Chuck Hayward | .... | stunts (uncredited) | |
| Tom Hennesy | .... | stunts (uncredited) | |
| Bryan 'Slim' Hightower | .... | stunts (uncredited) | |
| John Hudkins | .... | stunts (uncredited) | |
| Eddie Juaregui | .... | stunts (uncredited) | |
| Ted Mapes | .... | stunts (uncredited) | |
| Louise Montana | .... | stunts (uncredited) | |
| Montie Montana | .... | stunts (uncredited) | |
| Bob Morgan | .... | stunts (uncredited) | |
| Hal Needham | .... | stunts (uncredited) | |
| Chuck Roberson | .... | stunts (uncredited) | |
| Jack Williams | .... | stunts (uncredited) | |
Camera and Electrical Department | |||
| Denis Cameron | .... | still photographer (uncredited) | |
Editorial Department | |||
| Stu Linder | .... | assistant editor (uncredited) | |
Music Department | |||
| Irvin Talbot | .... | conductor | |
| Jack Hayes | .... | orchestrator (uncredited) | |
| Leo Shuken | .... | orchestrator (uncredited) | |
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| Appaloosa | Giant | Shane | The Departed | Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid |
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| Full cast and crew | Company credits | External reviews |
| News articles | IMDb top 250 movies | IMDb Drama section |
| IMDb USA section |
"This is the west, sir. When the legend becomes fact, print the legend". - Maxwell Scott, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance In John Ford's most mournful tale, the legendary director asks the question "How did this present come to be? Just how did an inferior race of men whose only weapon was that of law and books defeat the old gunslingers of the great West? Just what exactly happened to the Western heroes portrayed by John Wayne when law and order came to town? How did the wilderness turn into a garden? In The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance, John Ford depicts a world where everyone has got everything they wanted, but nobody seems happy with it sound familiar to anyone? Senator Ransom Stoddard (James Stewart) arrives to Shinbone on a train with his wife Hallie (Vera Miles) to visit the funeral of an old friend named Tom Doniphon (John Wayne, remarkably the film opens where this iconic star is dead). The newspaper men have never heard of him, so why would such a powerful political figure visit the town to attend this funeral of a "nobody"? Through the use of a flashback, Stoddard tells us the tale of how he came to the town as a young lawyer but was immediately attacked by the psychotic villain Liberty Valance (terrifyingly played by Lee Marvin) who teaches him "Western law". The rest of the film tells the tale of how the man of books eventually defeated the race of the gunslinger and what sacrifices had to be made for that to happen.
In truth, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance is more of a melodrama than a Western. Gone are the vibrant landscapes of Ford's landmark movie The Searchers six years earlier, which was so proudly promoted as being in VISTAVISION WIDESCREEN COLOR and instead the film has given way to a bleak, claustrophobic black and white tale, with so many enclosed sets and not one shot of Monument Valley.
There's a lack of a real bar scene, lack of shots of the landscape, lack of horses, lack of gunfights. It's a psychological Western, probably unlike anything ever filmed until maybe Clint Eastwood's Unforgiven.
Why is this movie so good then? In basic terms, it's about the sadness of progression and without giving way too much away the film tells a remarkable tale which truly does examine what Ford's view of the West as promoted in his earlier work truly meant. It's a tragic and pessimistic movie but it's a rewarding one, with huge replay value and one that leaves you with so many more questions than it does answers.
Do we prefer the legendary tale of our heroes or the truth? Are tales of people such as 'The Man With No Name' just more interesting than Wyatt Earp? Is living a lie as a successful guy better or worse than quietly dying as a hero? The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance is one of the most complex Westerns that has ever been put on film and is a remarkable film when you consider it was directed by a guy who made his living telling grandeur tales of the American West. Well acted, very well written and is one of the most rewarding Westerns for replay value in the history of the genre.
Matt Holmes
www.obsessedwithfilm.com