Find, Compare, Read Reviews & Buy
Want to see your products in Yahoo! Shopping? Build your own online store or Advertise with us. Current Advertisers Sign In
Help improve Yahoo! Shopping by participating in our user studies - View RSS Feed
Make money with Yahoo! Shopping APIs, now powering Yahoo! Tech. Learn more about our paid syndication program.
Copyright ©2009 Yahoo! Inc. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - Copyright Policy - Security and Disclaimer.
Information about prices, products, services and merchants is provided by third parties and is for informational purposes only. Yahoo! does not represent or warrant the accuracy or reliability of the information, and will not be liable for any errors, omissions, or delays in this information or any losses, injuries, or damages arising from its display or use.
Wyatt Earp
Pros: Great depth in characters
Cons: missing accuracy of period
This was a great movie in it's own rite but Tombstone was more realistic in that the characters were humanized and the details were more accurate. Although, I love this movie for the depth of the characters.. I wondered if Doc really meant "I'm your Huckleberry" as in [Tom sawyer and Huckleberry Finn] because Mark Twain was a popular author during the time of the Historical shoot out. I looked them up, the shoot out was Oct. 21, 1881 and Mark Twain published the first of several Tom Sawyer books starting in 1876, so Tom and Huck were well known by then. Because Doc was an avid reader, I would think he used "Huckleberry" from the books, meaning I'm your guy, I'm the one that fills the bill. (Although Mark Twain' character was probably named after the term hucklebearer).
...
In Tombstone:
To reference "Huckleberry"
As far as being a "daisy" when Doc said "You're no Daisy, you're no Daisy at'all". I think he meant, "You're not the big deal you thought you were, I beat you". A Daisy was a flower that was used a lot because it was sturdy and lasted long in a vase and a person who was a Daisy would be "steadfast" or "sure" or would have been a "done deal" as the expression in the South was used.
Val Kilmer did a great job on the Gentile South (Ga, Kentucky, etc) southern accent. Very Human portrayals by all the actors.