Top 100 Movies Of The 1990's: #42 Tombstone

Box Office: $56.5 Million

Oscar Nominations: None

Oscar Wins: None

MovieRankings.Net: 83/100

Available To Stream: YouTube

The story the movie Tombstone tells is pretty strong. The Earps comes to a small Arizona town to settle down and end up in a war with another family in town. As interesting as that all is, the behind the scenes of the movie is almost as compelling. 

The screenwriter was a man named Kevin Jarre and going into Tombstone had been very successful. He was only 39 and had already written Rambo: First Blood Part II, Glory and Navy Seals. Rambo made $150 million domestically and Glory won three Oscars. Because of this success, Jarre had been hired as director of Tombstone in addition as the screenwriter. Things went wrong instantly.

SOURCE:  "I knew from the third day Kevin couldn't direct," actor Sam Elliott said. "He wasn't getting the shots he needed."

The studio was concerned Jarre was shooting it like an old Western from the 1950's. Not only that but the script was far too long. Jarre was fired as director about four weeks into shooting. If you watch the Charlton Heston scenes in the movie, those were directed by Jarre.

Moviestore. Shutterstock Images.

A new director was hired in George P. Cosmatos. But even how much he actually did is under debate. Kurt Russell says that it Cosmatos was used as a sort of placeholder and it was Russell himself who actually directed the movie. Val Kilmer didn't disagree and said Russell should have gotten a producer credit between all of that work as well as re-writing Jarre's far too long script. 

Regardless of who directed or should get credit, Tombstone wound up being a movie with a good story but iconic individual scenes and performances that make it far better better than it should be. Jarre wound up never directing again. He did write The Mummy but never worked again after 2004. He would become a Hollywood cautionary tale of sorts. He wound up with a DWI in 2009 and died two years later of heart failure at only 59. He is now a notable example of someone who could write but not direct. Just because you can do one thing really well, doesn't mean you are good at something else.

Giphy Images.

The movie itself is led by Kurt Russell and Val Kilmer. Kilmer should have gotten an Oscar nomination for the role but the movie was not viewed in that way when it came out. It was thought of as a generic western or action movie when it was released and it's much more that. There aren't many supporting performances in the entire decade as iconic as Kilmer as Doc Holliday. In a cast that's filled with a lot of very good actors, Kilmer puts on a clinic.

Giphy Images.

Kurt Russell is fantastic as Wyatt Earp and really is one of the best actors to never get a Oscar nomination (along with Donald Sutherland and Kevin Bacon). It's especially impressive when you know the behind the scenes stuff going on as well as trying to race to beat the Kevin Costner movie Wyatt Earp to the theaters. Tombstone did beat it by six months. Wyatt Earp did get an Oscar nomination for Best Cinematography but it was Tombstone that made more than twice as much money and is still remembered today.

I went to the actual Tombstone, AZ a couple years after the movie was released. It was pretty incredible. They reenact the OK Corral shooting and the area is set up like the old town looked in the 1880's. But I had no real idea about that area before seeing Tombstone years earlier. The movie and rich characters made me care. Tough to ask much more from a movie that when it came out was only thought of a generic action/western.

42. Tombstone

43. Ransom

44. Wayne's World

45. The Insider

46. Back To The Future Part III

47. A Bronx Tale

48. The People Vs. Larry Flynt

49. Eyes Wide Shut

50. The Sandlot

51. Happy Gilmore

52. Contact

53. The Green Mile

54. Man On The Moon

55. Boyz N The Hood

56. Grosse Pointe Blank

57. Independence Day

58. The Rainmaker

59. Go

60. The Firm

61. Magnolia

62. The Talented Mr. Ripley

63. Tommy Boy

64. The Usual Suspects

65. In The Line Of Fire

66. My Cousin Vinny

67. Awakenings

68. JFK

69. Toy Story

70. Home Alone

71. Jerry Maguire

72. Titanic

73. Billy Madison

74. Apollo 13

75. Braveheart

76. Edward Scissorhands

77. Cape Fear

78. The River Wild

79. What's Eating Gilbert Grape?

80. 12 Monkeys

81. Stir Of Echoes

82. Mission: Impossible

83. Total Recall

84. Quiz Show

85. For Love Of The Game

86. Being John Malkovich

87. Men In Black

88. Scream

89. Alive

90. Three Kings

91. Glengarry Glen Ross

92. Die Hard With A Vengeance

93. The Blair Witch Project

94. Twister

95. Dirty Work

96. Election

97. Tremors

98. Any Given Sunday

99. The Wedding Singer

100. Clerks