| Product Summary | | Publisher: Warner | | Format: Blu-Ray DVD | | UPC: 00883929020843 | | Buy.com Sku: 208043042 | | Item#: V2QEQW | | Category Keywords: Theatrical Release | Rating:  |
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| | | ...and Hell Followed with Him. Features: DVD, Widescreen, Pan and Scan (TV Format) After corporate mining boss Coy LaHood (Richard Dysart) begins a campaign of terror to drive independent pan miners out of the area, a nameless stranger called Preacher (Clint Eastwood) rides into the underdogs' camp. He becomes their avenger. The tycoon then hires a badge-wearing killer and his duster-shrouded deputies, men loyal to whomever pays the most. LaHood pays gold. But in a climactic shootout to remember, Preacher pays in lead. "Rousing entertainment with Eastwood at his best." Gene Shalit, Today/NBC-TV "Eastwood in fine form." Gerry Shamray, Sun Newspapers of Cleveland "A severely underrated western, one of Eastwood's most stylish." James Plath, DVD Town "Well crafted..." Leonard Maltin's Movie & Video Guide "...classical western theme treatment well complemented by excellent photography and a rock-solid cast." VideoHound's Golden Movie Retriever
 Editor's Note
 A girl kneels over the grave of her murdered dog, praying for a miracle, while off in the distance, a man rides toward town on a pale horse. Clint Eastwood's PALE RIDER was the filmmaker's first Western in nearly a decade. It finds a pleasant balance between the mystical revisionism of films such as HIGH PLAINS DRIFTER and the traditional Western. Eastwood stars as the Preacher, who wanders into a dusty California town and tries to rescue a community of gold prospectors that is being terrorized by the local corporate mining operation, which is strip-mining the land. He's taken in by Hull Barrett (Michael Moriarty), who lives with Sarah Wheeler (Carrie Snodgrass) and her 14-year-old daughter, she of the murdered pooch, Megan (Sydney Penny). The Preacher is something of a blend of Eastwood's Man with No Name and the title character of George Stevens's SHANE. The story and treatment are straightforward and entertaining, and the strong performances draw the audience in. The Preacher remains a mysterious character, but in the end, as he takes on the evil mining corporation's hired guns, it's impossible not to root for him.
 Plot Summary
 Clint Eastwood produced, directed, and stars in this intelligent Western tale. Poor gold miners feel they have little choice but to desert their land when some corporate thugs threaten their lives. But one young girl has a better idea: She prays for help--and not too long after, a mysterious stranger comes riding into town, dressed as a preacher. But he's not like all those other preachers....
| Features | Interactive Menus |  | Scene Selection |  | This Is A Blu-Ray DVD Made For Blue-Laser Format Players Which Produce Higher Quality Picture & Sound |
| Technical Info
| Release Information
|  | Studio: Warner |
 | Release Date: 8/26/2008 |
 | Original Release Date: 1985 |  | Catalog ID: 1000038916 |  | UPC: 00883929020843 |  | Number of Discs: 1 | Audio & Video
|  | Original Language: English |  | Available Audio Tracks: English |  | Video: Color | Aspect Ratio |  | Widescreen 2.35:1 |
| Cast & Crew
| Awards | Cannes Film Festival (1985) |  | Clint Eastwood, Nominee, Golden Palm Award |
| Memorable Quotes| "Nothing like a nice piece of hickory."----The Preacher (Clint Eastwood), after dispatching several thugs with an ax handle. |
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| | Professional Reviews | New York Times "...Entertaining, mystical....Extremely well cast, beginning with the star..." 06/28/1985 p.C8Variety "...The Western has returned in fine shape under the strong, knowing guidance of Clint Eastwood in PALE RIDER..." 05/08/1985 Spirituality and Practice 9 of 10 The independent miners barely scratching out a living in a canyon outside LaHood, California, are terrorized by the businessman (Richard Dysart), for whom the town is named. Hull Barret (Michael Moriarty) tries to stand up to this persecution, but his efforts are uninspiring. Megan (Sydney Penny), the 15-year-old daughter of Hull's fiancee Sarah (Carrie Snodgrees), prays for help...Although the mysterious stranger eventually reveals himself to be a gunslinger, his presence compels the main characters to come to terms with the meaing of love, justice, community, and the fight against Evil...Pale Rider is a Western with a religious undertow and as such is entirely appropriate to the 1980s These are the times when the public prefers to see good and evil defined in stark terms. Clint Eastwood conveys the sturdy self-control and cool confidence we like in our leaders. When LaHood realizes he cannot defeat the stranger with his own henchmen, he calls upon Stockburn (John Russell), a ruthless county marshal with six deputies. The outsider has an old score to settle with Stockburn, and the fight to the death turns out to be a Manichaean struggle. Clint Eastwood as both director and protagonist once again proves himself to be a master of stylized drama, depicting the powers of the flesh and the spirit. - Frederic and Mary Ann Brussat Chicago Sun-Times 10 of 10 Clint Eastwood has by now become an actor whose moods and silences are so well known that the slightest suggestion will do to convey an emotion. No actor is more aware of his own instruments, and Eastwood demonstrates that in "Pale Rider," a film he dominates so completely that only later do we realize how little we really saw of him...Instead of filling each scene with his own image and dialogue, Eastwood uses sleight of hand: We are shown his eyes, or a corner of his mouth, or his face in shadow, or his figure with strong light behind it. He has few words. The other characters in the movie project their emotions upon him...One of the subtlest things in the movie is the way it plays with the possibility that Eastwood's character may be a ghost, or at least something other than an ordinary mortal..."Pale Rider" is, over all, a considerble achievement, a classic Western of style and excitement. Many of the greatest Westerns grew out of a director's profound understanding of the screen presence of his actors; consider, for example, John Ford's films with John Wayne and Henry Fonda. In "Pale Rider," Clint Eastwood is the director, and having directed himself in nine previous films, he understands so well how he works on the screen that the movie has a resonance that probably was not even there in the screenplay. - Roger Ebert
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