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  1. Rooster recognizes the voice of Emmet Quincy, an associate of Ned Pepper's. LaBoeuf throws his coat over the chimney, and the occupants are forced to leave the dugout. In the melee Rooster shoots the other occupant, Moon, in the leg. Rooster questions Moon and Emmet Quincy. Emmet refuses to talk but the injured Moon begins to weaken.

  2. Charles Portis. True Grit: Chapter 6 Summary & Analysis. LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in True Grit, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work. Mattie, Rooster, and LaBoeuf ride long past “dinnertime,” but Mattie tries hard not to complain. Finally, they stop at a small store on the river, where they have ...

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    Emmett Quincy is played by Jeremy Slate in the 1969 film adaption of True Grit, and by Paul Rae in the the 2010 version.

    He is apparently a criminal, with some history with Rooster.

    In True Grit Quincy and Moon are staying at a dugout and getting ready to give Ned Pepper,Mexican Bob, Old Hayes, and Tom Chaney horses so they can be used in a robbery. Rooster Cogburn, Mattie Ross, and La Boeuf stake out the dugout, but when Quincy refuses to let Rooster in Rooster smokes them out leading to a shootout and Moon and Quincy getting shot by Rooster. Rooster then questions them. Quincy won't talk and threatens Moon when he begins to talk. Moon finally breaks and Quincy cuts off Moon's fingers then stabs him. Rooster draws his gun and shoots Quincy in the face, killing him instantly. Rooster then hides Quincy's body until Ned is gone then he takes it back to McAlester where Quincy is buried.

  3. LaBoeuf. A hard-drinking, one-eyed U.S. marshal known for his “grit.”. Rooster fought for the Confederacy during the Civil War, though Mattie learns that he was part of Quantrill’s Raiders, a group of guerilla soldiers who used ruthless tactics to fight the Union and devolved into gangs of outlaws that included Frank and Jesse James.

  4. Mar 11, 2023 · He’s not as game as Beau, but Stonehill says he can jump a four rail fence.”. Mattie: “You are too old and fat to be jumping horses.”. Rooster: “Well, come see a fat old man some time ...

  5. After reading True Grit by Charles Portis, John Wayne was enthusiastic about playing the part of Rooster Cogburn, but as production got closer, Wayne got jumpy — he did not have a handle on how to play Rooster Cogburn. He was, of course, nervous because the part was out of his comfort zone and had not been specifically tailored to his screen character by one of his in-house screenwriters.

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  7. July 1, 1969. 4 min read. There is a moment in “True Grit” when John Wayne and four or five bad guys confront each other across a mountain meadow. The situation is quite clear: Someone will have to back up or die. Director Henry Hathaway pulls his telephoto lens high up in the sky, and we see the meadow isolated there, dreamlike and fantastic.

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