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3:10 to Yuma   — 4K

by Glenn Erickson Feb 09, 2026

Stunning in HD, this A+ western is a total knockout in crisp 4K. Glenn Ford and Van Heflin’s performances as a ruthless outlaw and a reluctant deputy take Elmore Leonard’s raw-boned shotgun ordeal to the top of the genre, circa 1957. Those Arizona locations look amazing, with all that dramatic break o’ dawn lighting. Plus Richard Jaeckel, Leora Dana, Henry Jones and (swoon) Felicia Farr.


3:10 to Yuma
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray
The Criterion Collection 657
1957 / B&W / 1:85 widescreen / 92 min. / available through The Criterion Collection / Street Date February 3, 2026 / 49.95
Starring: Glenn Ford, Van Heflin, Felicia Farr, Leora Dana, Henry Jones, Richard Jaeckel, Robert Emhardt, Ford Rainey, Richard Devon, Dorothy Adams, Buzz Henry.
Cinematography: Charles Lawton Jr.
Art Director: Frank Hotaling
Film Editor: Al Clark
Costume Design: Jean Louis
Music Composer: George Duning & Ned Washington
Screenplay by Halstead Welles from a story by Elmore Leonard
Produced by David Heilwell
Directed by
Delmer Daves

This uncontested western classic lacks ‘classic earmarks.’ It’s not about the glorious winning of the West, turning the desert into a garden, or legendary gunmen exercising their professional skills. The source story plays like a contemporary crime tale. It’s from the celebrated Elmore Leonard, then a pulp fiction writer trying to earn a living. In a tense, compressed span of time, a rancher struggling to subsist must undergo a harrowing ordeal with a very dangerous man. There’s nothing glamorous about the violence angle, either. The law-abiding rancher-deputy finds himself making a grave threat:

 

“I want you to understand one thing. If you start across this eight feet between us, I’m gonna pull both triggers at once.”
 

When genre film criticism had its first flowering in the late 1960s, critics in the U.K. argued the relative merits of the Old Guard John Ford and Howard Hawks, against later specialists Anthony Mann, Budd Boetticher and the newly crowned genius writer-director Sam Peckinpah. Omitted from the accolades was writer-director Delmer Daves, who didn’t specialize in westerns until the 1950s, when he wrote four and directed eight.

A product of the studio system at Warner Bros., Daves had made his name writing and directing in a variety of styles. His first western  Broken Arrow in 1950 was a big hit for 20th Fox. His best were written by screenwriter Halstead Welles: 1959’s The Hanging Tree and the practically perfect western gem  3:10 to Yuma, released by Columbia in 1957. Starring Glenn Ford and Van Heflin, the film was also writer Elmore Leonard’s first movie sale, when he was a specialist in western tales. That was an auspicious beginning, even if Leonard spent another 15 years establishing himself as a screenwriter.

 

Hard times have come to the tiny Evans homestead. A drought has caused several neighbors to fail. Barely holding his ranch together, Dan Evans (Van Heflin) and his young sons witness the robbing of a stage outside the town of Bisbee. Two men are killed. The thieves pass through town to put the marshal on the wrong scent, but their leader Ben Wade (Glenn Ford) lingers behind to court young bartender Emmy (Felicia Farr), and is arrested. In desperate need of money, Dan takes on the perilous task of escorting Wade to Contention, there to catch the train to the penitentiary at Yuma. He’s armed only with a shotgun, and his one helper is the town drunk, Alex Potter (Henry Jones). If Wade’s gang catches up with the deputy and his prisoner, Dan hasn’t got a chance.

The atmospheric 3:10 to Yuma knows exactly what it’s doing, from its initial B&W image of the dry, cracked earth of Dan Evans’ ranch. The Ned Washington – George Duning title tune is sung by Frankie Laine, whose style made an impact in another hit western of 1957,  Gunfight at the O.K. Corral. Mel Brooks would famously lampoon/celebrate Frankie Laine for his Blazing Saddles, yet the rendition of the song ‘3:10 to Yuma’ so perfectly matches the images that nobody would think of laughing. The basic setup of one man ‘alone against the odds’ draws comparisons with Fred Zinnemann’s  High Noon. But Yuma is a tale of pragmatic survival, not social criticism.

Elmore Leonard and Halsted Welles present Dan Evans as a good man faced with grinding realities. If it doesn’t rain soon his little ranch will be finished. Dan’s loyal wife Alice (Leora Dana) reluctantly agrees that he must take the job of escorting Ben Wade to justice, as the money offered by the stage line owner Butterfield (Robert Emhardt) will buy needed water for their cattle. But Dan has to babysit Wade for hours with little or no help. Locked together in a tiny hotel room to await the 3:10 train, Dan must listen to Ben Wade’s arguments for letting him go. As time drags on, Wade’s reasoning gains in credibility.

 

Early on, Dan has trouble convincing his kids that he’s in no position to oppose a gang of armed outlaws. The theme runs through a number of 1950s pictures — as if insecure in his masculinity, father figures must do the extra mile to convince their kids that they’re not cowards, not the boss of the family. Good examples are the crime stories  Violent Saturday and  Suddenly, in which little boys expect their fathers to be men of action.  Dan Evans defuses his boys’ concern, but finds himself forced to take the violent male role anyway.

In terms of simplified politics, Howard Hawks’  Rio Bravo is always cited as a rebuttal to the defeatist civics lesson presented in Carl Foreman’s High Noon. Delmer Daves’ 3:10 to Yuma presents a much more reasoned response. Both films conclude with the hero’s wife rushing to his side. Grace Kelly decides to ease up on her rigid pacifist principle, so as not to abandon Gary Cooper. Dan’s wife simply wants to reinforce her support. She’s not weighing religious or moral issues, just hoping that her family is not obliterated. Alice earlier declared that when faced with trouble, “we must be able to do more than just stand by and watch.”

 

Is doing this damn job really necessary?
 

When Dan Evans ponders ‘the right thing to do,’ he’s concerned with his personal code. Ben Wade makes a generous offer to buy his freedom, but Dan has already given his word to his peers. Neither can Dan put an end to his hazardous ordeal by simply killing the outlaw, and telling Butterfield that Wade tried to rush him. When things seem hopeless, even the banker Butterfield offers Dan an easy out. But refuses to quit out of sheer principle: another good man has already died in the stand-off. Doing the right thing is never an easy row to hoe; some of the best westerns offer moral dilemmas, instead of shoot-first-and-laugh escapism.

Van Heflin will always be remembered for his straight-arrow homesteader in George Stevens’ handsomely produced sodbuster western  Shane. The actor was better when playing characters caught in a moral gray zone, as seen in his excellent portrayal of a ‘terrorist’ Southern officer committed to burning a Vermont town in Hugo Fregonese’s Civil War tale  The Raid. In 3:10 to Yuma Van Heflin gets to play a character regaining his sense of self-worth and integrity.

 

Glenn Ford may not have been as versatile an actor as Van Heflin, but he was second to nobody when it came to projecting star charisma. The actor’s heroic persona was so well established, that the writers must billboard his outlaw ruthlessness right up front. Ben Wade shoots two men in cold blood during the stage holdup — one of them is his own gang member, who foolishly let himself be taken hostage. Ben’s gang, headed by the no-nonsense killer Charlie Prince (Richard Jaeckel) wouldn’t dream of questioning his judgment, even when it comes to shooting a confederate.

It’s entirely possible that a script adjustment was made to insure that every female in the movie sees Ford’s character as attractive. Alice knows about Ben Wade’s murderous quality, and she still finds him interesting. Ben clicks almost immediately with Felicia Farr’s dreamboat bartender Emmy. As soon as their eyes meet, he’s willing to risk his neck for the privilege of spending some time with her.

3:10 to Yuma is a modern western, less concerned with the winning of the West than the non-epic reality of the hard life on the frontier. Shane sticks close to the romantic western tradition, from its Technicolor scenery to Alan Ladd’s nearly-superhuman hero. It upholds the stock formula that making the West a decent place to live requires a Manichean conflict between good and evil. By contrast, the drama in 3:10 to Yuma is personal, not political. Ordinary people are just trying to subsist with a modicum of dignity. The film reaches its satisfying conclusion without resorting to a single western formula cliché. The drunken Alex Potter isn’t used as comedy relief, and the rich owner of the stagecoach line is not set up to be a capitalist villain.

Charles Lawton Jr.’s splendid B&W cinematography flatters the Arizona desert. The rocky landscape is not just the same arid wasteland: at the finale one can almost smell the freshness of the desert rain. We’ll believe that the production timed its schedule to grab a breathtaking master shot right at dawn, when the sun low in the sky brings out the desert’s beauty. Delmer Daves’ sensitive direction earned critical praise. The only grousing came from critics that took exception to his over-use of crane shots to give this small-scale show a ‘big country’ epic feel. But for the dramatic final confrontation, Daves keeps his camera down close to the action.  *

 

 

The Criterion Collection’s 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray of 3:10 to Yuma is ready to fill the biggest screen one has … the B&W images have definition and clarity that makes us ask if color was ever necessary. The new digital restoration enlarges better than the old Blu-ray. The widescreen framing focuses our attention on the characters’ eyes as they read each other’s expressions. Glenn Ford and Felicia Farr’s terrific scene in the lonely saloon is driven by glances that reveal intimate feelings.

The extras are the same as on the older Blu-ray. Author Elmore Leonard remembers his pressing need to make a film sale, as the western fiction pulps he was writing for paid only two cents a word. He was pleased by the movie adaptation, and praises new scenes added by screenwriter Halstead Welles. He has fewer kind words for the  2007 remake with Russell Crowe and Christian Bale, which ends with Ben Wade pointlessly shooting all of his own men. When Leonard asked why the character would do such a thing, the writers of the remake replied, “That’s what the director wanted.”

A second interview is with Peter Ford, the author of a  career biography of his actor father. Ford candidly describes Glenn Ford as a good judge of his own limitations, who frequently cut down his scripted dialogue because he ‘only had one speed’ of line delivery. At the time of Yuma Ford was one of the most popular stars in town. He had recently impressed his Hollywood peers by acting opposite Marlon Brando in Teahouse of the August Moon, and earning more flattering reviews than his intimidating co-star.

Reviewed by Glenn Erickson


3:10 to Yuma
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray rates:
Movie: Excellent
Video: Excellent
Sound: Excellent Alternate 5.1 surround soundtrack
Supplements, from 2013:
Interviews with author Elmore Leonard and Peter Ford, actor Glenn Ford’s son and biographer
Insert pamphlet with an essay by critic Kent Jones.
Deaf and Hearing-impaired Friendly? YES; Subtitles: English (feature only)
Packaging: One 4K Ultra HD disc + one Blu-ray with insert in Keep case
Reviewed:
February 4, 2026
(7468yuma)

*  Director Daves really goes overboard with crane shots in his dramatic western The Hanging Tree, using them so much that the film could have had a credit, ‘Camera by Otis Elevator.’  The film is so good that the bad habit can’t hurt it.CINESAVANT

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Text © Copyright 2026 Glenn Erickson

About Glenn Erickson

Screen Shot 2015-08-24 at 6.51.08 PM

Glenn Erickson left a small town for UCLA film school, where his spooky student movie about a haunted window landed him a job on the CLOSE ENCOUNTERS effects crew. He’s a writer and a film editor experienced in features, TV commercials, Cannon movie trailers, special montages and disc docus. But he’s most proud of finding the lost ending for a famous film noir, that few people knew was missing. Glenn is grateful for Trailers From Hell’s generous offer of a guest reviewing haven for CineSavant.

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Jenny Agutter fan

I didn’t even know that the 2007 movie was a remake of something.

Vince

The ending to the 2007 version is more interesting, but sort of ridiculous too.

Eric Nagamine

will you be doing a review of the new limited edition of Excalibur?

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