I Married Wyatt Earp ( 1983 Western TV Movie) Marie Osmond
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I Married Wyatt Earp ( 1983 Western TV Movie) Marie Osmond
- Publication date
- 2012-08-05
- Topics
- Mono, TV Movie, Western, Drama, US Marshal, Wyatt Earp, Bride, Doc Holliday, Gunslingers, Gun battle, Violence, Shootout, Music, Singing, Tombstone, Arizona territory, Gunfight at the O.K Corral, Funeral, Filmed in 1981, Sonoita Arizona, Broadcast in 1983 by NBC
- Language
- English
- Item Size
- 316.1M
IMDb User Review: CoastalCruiser (August 05, 2012) Two Surprises in this telling of the Wyatt Earp Myth
I came into this movie with low expectations, and that is exactly
what I would recommend to anyone viewing 'I Married Wyatt Earp'.
Temper your expectations, and be prepared for some nice
surprises.
You must know that this is a made-for-TV-movie, and
thus is shot in a made-for-TV-movie frame (no Panavision here), and
makes use of a made-for-TV-movie musical score. And, it stars Marie
Osmond. But having said all that I was quite delighted to find the
film has a fair amount if gravitas, and worth recommending.
In
fact this version of story of Wyatt Earp might be a good entrée for
men wishing to entice a wife or girlfriend to sit through a Western.
There's something for both sexes here. Marie Osmond's version of
performer Josie Marcus, who goes on to marry Wyatt Earp, is that of a
strong woman. But not the
''I-can-karate-chop-your-head-off-even-though-I'm-half-your-weight''
strong woman of today's Hollywood. No, she's got moxy, and she's not
afraid to grab the reigns of a team of horses or pick up a rifle to
hold the bad guys at bay... even though she knows nothing of either.
For the men there are a number of tense moments of drama between the
good guys and the bad guys, not only with firearms but with up close
and personal stare down confrontations that rank as some of the best
I've seen in all the Earp movies (I' can't believe I'm actually
saying this).
In terms of how accurate this movie was in
portraying the actual events, I must confess that I have given up on
that game. In going through the many Earp films I came to realize
that the Wyatt Earp myth is just that... myth. It's become folklore.
Sure, there were the original events in 1881, but that story soon
became a legend, which evolved into a myth. Every telling of that
myth is drawing from the 'template' or 'archetype' of the original
circumstances, and each of these tellings in my view stands on its
own. I watch a Wyatt Earp movie now for both entertainment as well as
the lessons brought out. And believe me, each telling has its own
lessons. It's great that all the Wyatt Earp movies are not the
same.
Whereas some Earp movies focus on, say, the relationship
between Wyatt and Doc Holiday (My Darling Clementine, 1946 or
Gunfight at the OK Corral, 1957), or the relationship between Earp
and Ike Clanton (Hour of the Gun, 1967), I Married Wyatt Earp focuses
on Josie Marcus as she reacts to the very unfamiliar environment she
has placed herself in, and the very different kind of men pursuing
her (along with a sub-theme based on the conflict between Earp and
Sheriff Behan).
The rendering of events in this movie leaves
no ambiguity regarding the Earps. They are cast as solid good guys
with few if any shades of gray. We watch as Josie iterates from
bad-guy Behan, whom she somehow does not recognize his slimy
character for some time, to good-guy Wyatt, who must contain his
desire for Josie due to his married status (like I said, pure good
guy).
As we approach the climax of the movie Josie attempts to
be a voice of reason to the testosterone-fired men who see a gunfight
to the death as the only viable solution. I liked they way they
played this here because you get to see both sides of the coin. The
idea of a group of men standing a few yards apart and shooting led
into each other is arguably an insane act. It should be stopped! But
on the other hand we're dealing with evil personified here, and the
only way to be sure these bedeviled men won't hunt you and your
family down however long it takes it to place each and every one of
the bastards 6' below the surface of the earth.
In other
respects we get a standard issue telling of the story with the
obligatory walk down Main St. to the OK Corral, and once there the
shootout is staged more accurately than other renderings. The
shootout itself is placed about 3/4 of the way through the film
(unlike some other versions where it occurs at the very beginning or
very ending of the movie).
The ending of I Married Wyatt Earp
is different form any version I've seen. This is actually great
because here is where the second surprise is delivered (the first
being a much higher caliber film then anticipated); it's a very
satisfying ending! See for yourself.
- Addeddate
- 2020-09-02 20:07:59
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