IMDb RATING
7.1/10
3.1K
YOUR RATING
Wyoming, 1892: Monte's been cowboy for ranchers all his life but he's no longer young and big business is taking over the ranches.Wyoming, 1892: Monte's been cowboy for ranchers all his life but he's no longer young and big business is taking over the ranches.Wyoming, 1892: Monte's been cowboy for ranchers all his life but he's no longer young and big business is taking over the ranches.
- Nominated for 1 Primetime Emmy
- 1 win & 1 nomination total
Marshall R. Teague
- Wallace 'Dally' Johnson
- (as Marshall Teague)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaA remake of the 1970 version starring Lee Marvin & Jack Palance
- GoofsWhen Fighting Joe rides his horse off the cliff, the horse jumps into mid-air. No horse would consent to this. They have brains and they make judgments. The horse would make every effort to stop and not go over the cliff.
- Quotes
Monte Walsh: Rudy, you can't have no idea how little I care.
- ConnectionsRemake of Monte Walsh (1970)
Featured review
The TNT remake of "Monte Walsh" is a wonderfully detailed character study of aging cowboys and their struggle with the decline of the old west.
Tom Selleck, Keith Carradine, William Devane, James Gammon and Barry Corbin are the last of a dying breed and they don't accept the inevitable change that progress brings. "I won't do anything I can't do from a horse" is the condition Monte Walsh demands for accepting a job at a corporate ranch.
There is more than a little humor in this film as the cowboys deal with their own mortality as well as the end of their way of life. William Saunders small but engaging turn as the trail cook Skimpy provides some welcome comic relief to an otherwise wistful and touching story.
This film has great acting, beautiful photography, gorgeous music and a wonderfully understated style of direction by Simon Wincer.
Worth the time and commercial breaks.
Tom Selleck, Keith Carradine, William Devane, James Gammon and Barry Corbin are the last of a dying breed and they don't accept the inevitable change that progress brings. "I won't do anything I can't do from a horse" is the condition Monte Walsh demands for accepting a job at a corporate ranch.
There is more than a little humor in this film as the cowboys deal with their own mortality as well as the end of their way of life. William Saunders small but engaging turn as the trail cook Skimpy provides some welcome comic relief to an otherwise wistful and touching story.
This film has great acting, beautiful photography, gorgeous music and a wonderfully understated style of direction by Simon Wincer.
Worth the time and commercial breaks.
- TSMChicago
- Jan 17, 2003
- Permalink
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