Ride Lonesome, Kirk Ellis
Ride Lonesome, Kirk Ellis
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Ride Lonesome

Author: Kirk Ellis

Narrator: Justin Price

Unabridged: 5 hr 53 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 01/30/2024


Synopsis

Ride Lonesome, the fifth film in the "Ranown cycle," is both the best and most representative of the whole series, which has been called "the most remarkable convergence of artistic achievement in the history of low-budget moviemaking." Director Bud Boetticher captures the alienation and loneliness of an America faced with the Cold War and the daily threat of nuclear annihilation. Shot in seventeen days for under a half-million dollars, Ride Lonesome is a masterpiece of cinematic minimalism.

Veteran screenwriter Kirk Ellis brilliantly unpacks the themes, narrative, visual language, and editing in this seminal film. In Ride Lonesome Ellis not only shows how this one film embodies a turning point for the Western, but he also explores the unique vision and contributions of director Boetticher and his writing partner Burt Kennedy.

About Kirk Ellis

Kirk Ellis is a two-time Emmy Award and two-time Humanitas Prize-winning writer/producer who wrote and produced the acclaimed event series John Adams. Among his many other credits are the Emmy-nominated Into the West and the Emmy Award-winning Anne Frank: The Whole Story. Formerly cogovernor of the writers' branch of the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences and past president of the Western Writers of America, Ellis splits his time between Santa Fe, New Mexico, and Palm Springs, California.


Reviews

Goodreads review by David on April 11, 2023

This is what film criticism should be: researched, wide ranging, insightful, lucid, and well written.......more

Goodreads review by John on December 18, 2024

I first saw Ride Lonesome on a late night showing on cable TV maybe thirty years ago. The little B-movie was such a concise, stripped-down example of pure storytelling power that I was transfixed. This book offers an elegant examination and analysis of what makes this low budget, 73-minute, 1957 wes......more