3:10 to Yuma Reviews

3:10 to Yuma Review
by =?ISO-8859-1?Q?Prestonag=E9?=
The western genre has been in a steady decline in recent years. It hasn't spawned near as many good films as it used to. But 3:10 to Yuma should be a revival of the genre and please the many Cowboy fans disappointed with other current westerns. The...more

3:10 to Yuma Review
by Homer Yen
When I describe "3:10 to Yuma" as a classic story of good and evil in post-Civil War west, I can use the word 'classic' because this is a remake of a film that was originally seen in the 1950s. Back then, this type of story featuring men with various...more

3:10 to Yuma Review
by [email protected]
Contrary to popular belief The Great American Western--cowboy movies, if you will--isnâeTMt/arenâeTMt really dead or even dying out for that matter, since thereâeTMs always at least one ballsy filmmaker around willing to take a crack at one,...more

3:10 to Yuma Review
by Mark R. Leeper
CAPSULE: A very short Elmore Leonard story, much broadened to make a classic western with Glenn Ford, is expanded again to make a bigger and more powerful version. A needy farmer agrees to put a notorious bandit on a train...more

3:10 to Yuma Review
by samseescinema
Director: James Mangold Cast: Christian Bale, Russell Crowe Screenplay: Halsted Welles, Michael Brandt, Derek Haas (based on the short story by Elmore Leonard) MPAA Classification: R more

3:10 to Yuma Review
by Steve Rhodes
3:10 TO YUMA, director James Mangold's remake of Delmer Daves's 1957 film starring Glenn Ford and Van Heflin, is a very disappointing western snoozer. Underacted and underwritten, the movie drags along, coming alive only in the traditional gunfights,...more