Westerns don’t need to be complicated to become iconic, and in fact, that might be what makes a Western a true Western. That’s especially true of this latest movie, 73 years later, as it hits streaming and prepares to wow audiences for the latest time, the first time, or perhaps even the last time. Even if you’ve never seen it, you’ve almost definitely seen movies influenced by it. Now, one of the most important Westerns ever made is back.
Shane arrives on Paramount+ June 1, and the film remains one of the genre’s most adored entries, currently holding a 94% score on Rotten Tomatoes. More than seven decades after its release, its influence is still everywhere. The film follows Shane, a mysterious drifter and gunfighter who rides into a Wyoming valley and becomes involved with a family of homesteaders being threatened by a ruthless cattle baron. As tensions build between settlers and ranchers, Shane tries desperately to avoid using violence, but the world around him keeps pulling him back toward the gun.
The cast includes Alan Ladd (This Gun for Hire) as Shane, Jean Arthur (Mr. Smith Goes to Washington) as Marian Starrett, Van Heflin (3:10 to Yuma) as Joe Starrett, Brandon De Wilde (Hud) as Joey Starrett, Jack Palance (City Slickers) as Jack Wilson, and Emile Meyer (Paths of Glory) as Rufus Ryker.
Was ‘Shane’ Successful?
Where to begin? Shane was very successful, both commercially, critically and perhaps more importantly, culturally. The film cost around $1.5 million to produce, earning $9 million in domestic theatrical rentals, so it was a huge commercial hit for Paramount. Some box office trackers list its domestic gross as around $20 million, but either way, the result was strong for the era. In today’s money, those theatrical rentals would be worth $108.4 million (based on the $9 million figure), but as much as $240.8 million going off the $20 million figure.
Critically, it was also a major success. Shane earned six Academy Award nominations, including Best Picture, Best Director, and two Supporting Actor nominations for Brandon De Wilde and Jack Palance. It won Best Cinematography, Color. But the enduring power of the movie is perhaps even more important than how it did theatrically, because the film was selected for preservation in the National Film Registry in 1993 for being “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant,” and the AFI later ranked it among the greatest American films and one of the greatest Westerns ever made.
Shane streams on Paramount+ in June.
- Release Date
-
August 14, 1953
- Runtime
-
118 Minutes
- Director
-
George Stevens