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Duel in the Sun |  
List Price: $14.95 
Your Price: $13.46 | 
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Reviews | 
 
 Features:
  
 Description:
  Legendary producer David O. Selznick dreamed of another magnum opus like his 1939 production of  Gone with the Wind; he also purposed to make Jennifer Jones, his  ladylove and eventually second Mrs. Selznick, a megastar. Accordingly, he micromanaged the making of Duel in the Sun (Lust in the Dust  to some), an extravagant Technicolor epic about the collision of the old West  with the new, wide-open spaces with railroads and barbed wire, and hot-blooded  outlaws with civilized folk, often wimpy or unwell. Beginning among giant  rocks drenched in a blood-red sunset, with velvet-voiced Orson Welles intoning  the leibestod legend of doomed Pearl Chavez and her demon lover, Duel never  strays far from lush romanticism, spiced with a dash of S/M. Orphaned Pearl (Jones) comes to live at Spanish Bit Ranch, where frail Laura Belle McCanles (Lillian Gish) tries to make a lady of her, despite her questionable origins  and insistent voluptuousness. Sexual license versus law--Pearl's choices--are  symbolized by the McCanles brothers: dark, undisciplined Lewt (a lubriciously  wicked Gregory Peck) and reasonable, forward-looking,  repressed Jesse (Joseph Cotten). The cast is huge  (Lionel Barrymore, Walter Huston, Harry Carey, Herbert Marshall, Charles  Bickford, Butterfly McQueen) and there are unforgettable set pieces: summoned  by a cacophony of bells, the gathering of McCanles cowboys from the four  corners of the earth; Pearl in heat, clutching Lewt's leg and being dragged across the  floor as he makes his getaway to Mexico; and the lovers' final shootout  among those red rocks, as orgiastic a finale as you could ask for. --Kathleen Murphy
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