Category: Directed by John Sturges

  • The Capture (1950, John Sturges)

    Given its problems, The Capture’s better than it should be. It’s also never quite as good as it could be—director Sturges starts doing a fantastic chase scene in the third act, but then it quickly peters out, which is too bad because the third act needs something. But the film manages to overcome its weird…

  • The Great Escape (1963, John Sturges)

    While The Great Escape runs nearly three hours, director Sturges and screenwriters James Clavell and W.R. Burnett never let it feel too long. Part of the quick pace comes from the first half hour being told in something like real time and another big part of it is the aftermath of the escape taking up…

  • Bad Day at Black Rock (1955, John Sturges)

    My reaction to Bad Day at Black Rock is a guarded one. It runs eighty-one minutes and is frequently long when it should be short and short when it should be long. The conclusion, for instance, is something of a misfire. Ironically, after abandoning him for fifteen minutes near the beginning, the film sticks with…

  • The Magnificent Seven (1960, John Sturges)

    Apparently, no director has ever needed a good script more than John Sturges. His work in The Magnificent Seven is static, the camera as disinterested in the film’s goings-on as the majority of the cast. He lets the camera sit and stare, cutting when it wakes up from its nap. He also appears not to…

  • Escape from Fort Bravo (1953, John Sturges)

    Outstanding Civil War Western with William Holden as the hard-ass Union prison camp captain who falls for visiting Eleanor Parker. Only her ex is Confederate captain John Forsythe, who breaks out while she’s there and she lambs it out with him. So Holden goes after them only for an Indian tribe to ambush them. Great…

  • The Eagle Has Landed (1976, John Sturges), the extended version

    We all know Winston Churchill wasn’t kidnapped or assassinated during World War II–except maybe President Bush, but he’s still waiting for John Rambo to call with info on Osama–so The Eagle Has Landed‘s ending is a bit of a give-away. The film succeeds–to some degree–since it presents the audience with characters they care so much…