In this action-filled western, John Wayne stars as Big Jake McCandles, a husband who hasn't seen his wife (Maureen O'Hara) in over 18 years. But he returns home after his grandson is kidnapped by a vicious outlaw gang. While the law gives chase in rickety automobiles, Jake saddles up with an Indian scout (Bruce Cabot) and a box of money - even though paying a ransom isn't how Jake plans to exact good old frontier justice. Spiced with humor and first-class gunfights, this is a vivid depiction of the last days of the wild frontier. Wayne's oldest son produced Big Jake and two other sons, Patrick and John Ethan, appear in it. The film also marks the second time Richard Boone and John Wayne worked together and the fifth time Wayne worked with Maureen O'Hara.
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This novelization is somewhat different than the film. I am not a fan of the film, finding it one of the lesser John Wayne films--too jokey and has the look of a made for television movie. This novelization reads much more seriously. When I took another look at the film after converting this, I was surprised to see how brightly lit the film is. The book comes across as 'darker' in every aspect--it reads more like HIGH PLAINS DRIFTER than the PG-rated family film the movie turned out to be. The violence is more realistic, and Wayne's character is tougher in a more realistic way. The absence of the jokey music score also helps change the tone. Additional work was done to the script, as the final film is a great deal more sentimental than this book is.
Worth reading.

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