a5c7b9f00b A successful lawman&#39;s plans to retire anonymously in Tombstone, Arizona, are disrupted by the kind of outlaws he was famous for eliminating. A Hollywood historical account of Tombstone, Arizona&#39;s famed &quot;Shootout at the O.K. Corral&quot; and the events that led up to it. Tension between &quot;the Law&quot; and &quot;the Cowboys&quot; stirsthe Cowboys, led by &quot;Curly Bill&quot; Broscius, accuse the Earps (Wyatt, Virgil, and Morgan) and their outlaw and gambler associate &quot;Doc&quot; Holliday of interfering with their operations inside and outside of town. First of all, I love the movie. Now some may say, &quot;What a moron…&quot; and others will undoubtedly agree with me. But I think it&#39;s great. When I first saw the filmit debuted in theaters eleven or so years back, I came away thinking, Men doing a man&#39;s job. Sounds a little chauvinist, I&#39;ll admit, but there you are. The movie is a tribute to men being men, living their lives on their own terms. The fact that the story is about the Earp saga is almost secondary to the film. To enjoy this movie, I don&#39;t think that it&#39;s so important for it to have historical accuracy to the letter or even have rain falling consistently through the shots. I would only advise viewers to let this Remington-painting-come-to-life wash over them and just go along for the ride. As longwe remember that this is Hollywood, all is well.<br/><br/>Then there&#39;s reality. As real aficionados of Tombstone history will see, the movie sacrifices or distorts some of the facts and compresses time. In the end it&#39;s a shame, really, because the film never realizes its full potential. I&#39;m convinced that if this movie was true to history, it could only have been better. Previous reviews talk about and compare with Costner&#39;s Wyatt Earp. I think elements of both films combined would have made a great movie. For instance, I would have lifted much of WE&#39;s script from when Wyatt arrives in town (the story, not the dialog) and used it in Tombstone. And then get the rest of the facts straight. The true story is compelling on its own, and would still be entertaining.<br/><br/>The special edition DVD includes deleted scenes, that for the life of me, I can&#39;t figure out why they were deleted in the first place. But the scene when Wyatt and Josie rest after their spirited ride still has the payoff of the scene cut out - Josie and Wyatt getting it on. I get tired of directors thinking that the audience is sophisticated so we&#39;ll just let them figure it out on their own. Come on George, some of us didn&#39;t know that Wyatt was cheating on Mattie.<br/><br/>Finally, I&#39;ve got to say that the movie was cast well. And the costumes were true to life - men liked to be colorful and unique in that time and place. The guns were accurate,were the holsters (low slung and quick draw is a Hollywood invention). As for the scenery, I lived in Arizona for a while, and I do miss the big sky.<br/><br/>If you want to be entertained, this is the movie for you. If you want a history lesson, better hit the library… George P. Cosmatos directed this thrilling version of the often filmed account of the real-life gunfight at the O.K. Corral that Occurred in Tombstone, Arizona in 1881. Kurt Russell plays lawman Wyatt Earp, who arrives from a successful stint at Dodge City, and only wants to run his business with his two brothers Virgil(played by Sam Elliot) and Morgan(played by Bill Paxton) along with their wives. Unfortunately, outlaws known&quot;The Cowboys&quot;, and the Clanton family gang in particular, cause trouble and tragedy for them, and with the help of old friend(and renowned gunfighter) Doc Holiday(played by Val Kilmer) go after the outlaws with a vengeance… The best film version of the story is well directed and acted, with exciting action scenes and style to burn. Takes some liberties with history, and is a bit long, but otherwise is a first-rate western, one of the better ones. Doesn't really cut it in the Western genre. John Henry &quot;Doc&quot; Holliday received a Degree of Dental Surgery from the Pennsylvania College of Dental Surgery (now part of the University of Pennsylvania) in 1872 at the age of 20. Doc Holliday had dental offices in Atlanta, Dallas, and often practiced less formally on the side in his travels, most notably in Dodge City where he began his association with Wyatt Earp.<br/><br/>He stopped practicing dentistry after his tuberculosis and resultant coughing worsened. Also it would not have been practical for a man suffering from tuberculosis to be in such close contact with people, whos mouths were wide open only inches from his, a sure way of enabling the disease to spread. Guns in the Land tamil pdf downloadArmageddon It On! tamil pdf downloadBatman Unlimited: Monster Mayhem movie download in mp4Border Wolves download torrentEpisode 1.9 full movie in hindi free download mp4Hot Girl in hindi downloadEl marginal online freeGilgamesh online freefree download WaterworldActivate! Limit Break! full movie online free
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