
Punishment comes one way or another.
Following the murder of her father by a hired hand, a 14-year-old farm girl sets out to capture the killer. To aid her, she hires the toughest U.S. Marshal she can find—a man with 'true grit'—Reuben J. 'Rooster' Cogburn.
- 7.3
- 2010
- Released
- 1h 50m

Jeff Bridges
Rooster Cogburn
Hailee Steinfeld
Mattie Ross
Matt Damon
LaBoeuf
Josh Brolin
Tom Chaney
Barry Pepper
Lucky Ned Pepper
Dakin Matthews
Col. Stonehill
Jarlath Conroy
Undertaker
Paul Rae
Emmett Quincy
Domhnall Gleeson
Moon (The Kid)
Elizabeth Marvel
40-Year-Old Mattie
Roy Lee Jones
Yarnell
Ed Corbin
Bear Man
Leon Russom
Sheriff
Bruce Green
Harold Parmalee
Candyce Hinkle
Boarding House Landlady
Peter Leung
Mr. Lee
Don Pirl
Cole Younger
Joe Stevens
Cross-examining Lawyer
David Lipman
First Lawyer
Jake Walker
Judge Parker
Orlando Storm Smart
Stableboy
Ty Mitchell
Ferryman
Nicholas Sadler
Repentant Condemned Man
Scott Sowers
Unrepentant Condemned Man
Jonathan Joss
Condemned Indian
Maggie A. Goodman
Woman at Hanging
Brandon Sanderson
Indian Youth at Bagby's
Ruben Nakai Campana
Indian Youth at Bagby's
James Brolin
Frank James (uncredited)
J.K. Simmons
J. Noble Daggett (voice) (uncredited)
Vivian Kalinov
Frontier Woman (uncredited)


Released
en
$38,000,000.00
$252,300,000.00
- #bounty hunter
- #based on novel or book
- #father murder
- #loss of loved one
- #texas ranger
- #arkansas
- #alcoholism
- #remake
- #betrayal
- #eye patch
Reviews

There's not much point in comparing this to John Wayne's version from 1969. In may ways it's similar - especially the dialogue - but in most it's a completely different telling of the story of the determined young "Mattie" (Hailee Steinfeld) whose father has been slain by "Chaney" (Josh Brolin) and who has now engaged the services of the curmudgeonly US Marshal "Rooster" (Jeff Bridges) to track hi
Some people have said that this film followed the book better than the original one with John Wayne. I have not read the book but I must say that I did not feel that there was that much difference between the John Wayne version and this one. Sure, there was a difference in the details but the main elements was pretty much the same. There was an epilogue on the end which was a tad more sad, but cer
Over their storied career, the Coen Brothers have made some of the most original, most iconoclastic, and most critically-acclaimed films of all time. They've tackled adaptations (No Country for Old Men, O Brother, Where Art Thou?) and remakes (The Ladykillers) before, of course, but even these films have borne the brothers' unmistakable mark of originality, their skewed vision of the world, and th











