- Menu
Disc #1 -- High Plains Drifter
Chapter List
Bonus Materials
Production Notes
Cast and Filmmakers
Clint Eastwood as the Stranger
Verna Bloom as Sarah Belding
Mariana Hill as Callie Travers
Directed by Clint Eastwood
Theatrical Trailer
Language Selection
Spoken Language
Spoken Language: English
Spoken Language: Français
Captions & Subtitles
Captioned for the Hearing Impaired: English [Close-Caption]
Subtitles: Español
Subtitles: None
Play
Disc #2 -- Destry Rides Again
Scenes
Subtitles
English SDH
Subtitles: Español
Subtitles: Français
Subtitles: Off
Play
Disc #3 -- Winchester '73
Scenes
Subtitles
English SDH
Subtitles: Español
Subtitles: Français
Subtitles: Off
Bonus
Interview with Jimmy Stewart
Theatrical Trailer
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- Chapters
Disc #1 -- High Plains Drifter
1. Main Titles: The Stranger [7:12]
2. Encounter at the Saloon [6:16]
3. The Stranger Gets Aquainted [4:47]
4. A Dream [4:53]
5. A Hot Bath [3:17]
6. The Town Council [3:16]
7. Anything You Want [8:50]
8. Volunteers [11:22]
9. The Gunfighter Stays [5:38]
10. Remembering [8:39]
11. The Church Meeting [6:50]
12. A New Room [7:28]
13. The Ambush [8:12]
14. Trouble Rides to Town [6:19]
15. The Stranger Returns [9:46]
16. The Name on the Grave (End Titles) [2:01]
Disc #2 -- Destry Rides Again
1. Main Titles [5:14]
2. A Card Game [4:21]
3. Sheriff Keogh [3:24]
4. The Chanteuse [2:29]
5. The New Sheriff [4:55]
6. Tom Destry, Jr. [8:03]
7. An Understanding [2:33]
8. Frency vs. Lilly Belle [5:13]
9. "No Guns" Destry [7:28]
10. The Claggett Ranch [2:40]
11. Being Neighborly [1:52]
12. No Pants Callahan [4:56]
13. Destry Meets the Mayor [8:25]
14. See What the Boys in the Back Room Will Have [1:43]
15. Looking for Keogh [1:38]
16. The Cattle Toll [7:05]
17. The Jury [3:09]
18. Saying Goodbye [4:44]
19. Destry Takes Charge [6:03]
20. End Titles [7:49]
Disc #3 -- Winchester '73
1. Main Titles [1:38]
2. Dodge City [4:04]
3. Dutch Henry Brown [2:13]
4. The Shooting Contest [8:24]
5. The Winner [2:49]
6. The Gun's New Owner [2:46]
7. The Indian Trader [8:10]
8. The Winning Hand [3:11]
9. A Gun for Young Bull [4:12]
10. Indian Raiders [4:50]
11. Shelter for the Night [3:37]
12. Young Bull Attacks [7:04]
13. The Chief's Gun [4:51]
14. Waco Johnny Dean [4:11]
15. Johnny's Gift [9:32]
16. Tension in Tascosa [5:49]
17. The Bank Robbery [5:09]
18. Brother Against Brother [1:47]
19. The Rightful Owner [6:27]
20. Cast of Characters [1:06]
- Features
Winchester '73
Interview with James Stewart
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Directors
George Marshall
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Producers
Joe Pasternak
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Composers (Music Score)
Frank Skinner
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Editors
Miton Carruth
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Screen Writers
Felix Jackson
Henry Myers
Gertrude Purcell
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Set Designers
Russell A. Gausman
Others
Art Director - Martin Obzina
Art Director - Jack Otterson
Book Author - Max Brand
Cinematographer - Hal Mohr
Composer (Music Score) - Frank Skinner
Costume Designer - Vera West
First Assistant Director - Vernon Keays
Musical Direction/Supervision - Charles Previn
Sound/Sound Designer - Bernard B. Brown
"Destry Rides Again" was a huge critical and box-office success in 1939, a year that had many critical and box-office successes and that is often considered to have produced more great films than any other year of the 20th century.
Max Brand, the author of the source novel, is little remembered today, but in his era he was a prolific and popular writer who created such memorable screen successes as the Doctor Kildare series. Sadly,
Brand was killed at the height of his career, while serving as a war correspondent in Italy during World War II.
Brand's story was considerably changed for the screen, and as a result there are occasional inconsistencies of characterization for Destry, who sometimes seems a bit too inclined to fight for a pacifist. Yet, in Tom Destry,
James Stewart creates one of the screen's most likable characters, and the film's success revived the career of
Marlene Dietrich, who had been dumped from her studio contract by Paramount because of her temperamental behavior and perceived weak box-office appeal. The problem, though, proved to be not that audiences had tired of
Dietrich but that they had tired of her in the melodramatic films that Paramount put her in. Free of Paramount,
Dietrich found a broader range of work and once again became a bankable star. ~ Richard Gilliam, Rovi