Sandy, I'm pleased that comments by myself and Ken Fisher (kjf) have encouraged you to rent and see "The Searchers," and, yes, I agree with you that John Ford ranks with Alfred Hitchcock, though the two masters were very different in approach. But allow me to amend, slightly, my comment that in the last scene of "The Searchers" Ethan (John Wayne) is looking out into the desert, symbolically. He does this, of course, but I believe that in the last frame he has turned and is looking back at the] house, which is to say back toward the camera. At this moment, he places his left hand on his right elbow. I'd like for you to realize that his gesture is loaded with meaning. He (John Wayne, not Ethan Edwards, the character) is saluting Harry Carey Sr., his old friend who had made that gesture famous. Carey had died when "The Searchers" was made in 1956, but the film included his son, Harry Carey Jr. This gesture was Wayne's dramatic way of saying: Goodbye old friend. All that is chill-bumpy aplenty, I know, but wait till you see Wayne grab a frightened, trembling young Natalie Wood, holding her over his head like a ragdoll, and says ... well, no, I won't tell you. See it for yourself. Ernie.