Flaming Star
1960 -
Not Rated
Release Date: 08/13/2002
Features:
DVD Features:
Region 1
Keep Case
Full Frame - 1.33
Widescreen - 2.35
Audio:
Mono - English, Spanish
Stereo - English
Subtitles - English, Spanish - Optional
Additional Release Material:
Trailers:
1. Theatrical Trailer
2. Portuguese Trailer
3. Fox Flix Trailers
Time:
101
mins.
J&R Item # 1007514_3
UPC # 024543048107
Label: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
|
Buying Info
|
|||||
|
Flaming Star
1960 -
Not Rated
Release Date: 02/28/2006
Features:
DVD Features:
Keep Case - Sensormatic
Full Frame - 1.33
Widescreen - 2.35
Audio:
Mono - English, Spanish
Stereo - English
Subtitles - English, Spanish - Optional
Additional Release Material:
Trailers:
1. Theatrical Trailer
2. Portuguese Trailer
3. Fox Flix Trailers
Time:
101
mins.
J&R Item # 1007514_4
UPC # 024543048114
Label: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
|
Buying Info
|
|||||
| Plot Credits Reviews Related Shipping |
|
Elvis Presley stars as Pacer Burton, son of a white father (John McIntire) and Native American mother (Dolores del Rio) who finds his loyalties tested in a war of attrition between a fierce Indian tribe, the Kiowas, and a group of racist white settlers on the Texas frontier in 1870. Although his parents attempt to remain outside the fray, his father is eventually killed in an Indian attack on the settlement. A white man, enraged over the Indian attacks, kills Pacer's mother. Shunned by white society after the Indian attacks, Pacer elects to fight on the side of the Kiowas while his brother, Clint (Steve Forrest), stays with the settlers. When Clint rides into the Kiowa camp alone and kills their chief to avenge his father's murder, Pacer fights off the entire tribe to protect his brother, and Clint barely escapes with his life. After Pacer's girl, Roslyn Pierce (Barbara Eden), has tended to Clint's severe wounds, she's unsuccessful in trying to stop him from going off to try to save his brother's life. Presley gives his finest performance as the sensitive Pacer, supported by an excellent cast in what is likely his best film. The strong, uncompromising script on the tragic cost of racism is superbly directed by Don Siegel.
"...This is on most lists of Presley's top movies, along with JAILHOUSE ROCK and KING CREOLE..."
-- Mike Clark
, (USA Today)
"[A] superior cowboys'n'injuns caper..." -- Simon Goddard , (Uncut) |