| Page 1 of 2: | [1] [2] |
| Index | 18 reviews in total |
21 out of 27 people found the following review useful:
DVD EXTRAS ARE OUTSTANDING!, 12 July 2003
![]()
Author:
blue-7 from Salt Lake City
Fox's epic telling of one a America's greatest pioneering efforts comes to DVD with some truly outstanding "Extras". BRIGHAM YOUNG (The "Frontiersman" was added for the European release), telling the story the great pioneer leader, who under inspiration brought members of the Mormon faith (Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints)out to the Salt Lake Valley in 1847, after mobs murdered their prophet/leader, Joseph Smith (played by Vincent Price), was brought to the screen in 1940, just as America was about to enter World War II. It was a daring move on Fox chief, Darryl F. Zanuck and it was a breath of fresh air to the Mormon people, as this was the first film attempt to favorably show their faith on the screen. Now Fox, working with James D'Arc, curator of the excellent Motion Picture Archives at Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah, has brought this film to the DVD format in an outstading edition. Mr. D'Arc, who some years ago did his doctoral dissertation on the film, has provided one of the most in depth commentary tracks ever done for a DVD. He seperates the fact from the fiction and lets listeners understand why this films was so much appreciated by Church Leaders even though embellishments to the truth run throughout the film. One of the fun bits of information deals with Dean Jagger, the actor who plays the title role. Many years after the film he married a Latter-saint woman and was eventually converted to the LDS faith. There is much to be learned from D'Arc's knowledge and it is great to have this as part of the DVD! There are over 100 pictures from the Fox & BYU Archives included on the disc, plus newsreel footage of the incredible premiere at seven theatres in Salt Lake City. Thanks FOX for another outstanding DVD -- and thank you, James D'Arc for your great commentary!
16 out of 18 people found the following review useful:
A good movie--Heber J. Grant's thoughts, 27 July 2000
Author:
rbr2 from Provo, Utah
I just saw the movie Brigham Young (1940) at a screening at Brigham Young
University. I found the movie to be entertaining and worthwhile as a
film,
although the historicity is basically a skeleton on which Hollywood drapes
their story--which is what Hollywood did all the time anyway. At least it
is a positive portrayal.
It may interest readers to know what Heber J. Grant, President of The
Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints from 1918 to 1945 had to say about
the
movie. This is taken from the LDS Conference Report, Sunday October 6,
1940, page 96.
"I am thankful beyond expression for the very wonderful and splendid
moving
picture that has been made of Brigham Young. I have heard some little
criticism of it, but we cannot expect the people who do not know that
Brigham Young was in very deed the representative of God upon this earth,
who do not know his wonderful character, to tell the story as we would
tell
it. We know that he was a prophet of the living God and the
representative
of the Lord here upon the earth. There is nothing in the picture that
reflects in any way against our people. It is a very marvelous and
wonderful thing, considering how people generally have treated us and what
they have thought of us. Of course there are many things in the picture
that are not strictly correct, and that is announced in the picture
itself.
It is of course a picture and we could not hope that they would make a
picture at their expense, running into a couple of million dollars, to be
just as we would like it. We know that Brigham Young was a powerful and
wonderful man, the greatest man of his day, and one of the great things
about Brigham Young was that he always gave credit to Joseph Smith for
everything that he did. He claimed that he was simply building upon the
foundation laid by the prophet of God, who had seen God and conversed with
Jesus Christ. He never doubted for one minute the final triumph of the
people here in Utah. He was a man of God, and the people thought the
world
and all of him."
18 out of 24 people found the following review useful:
Good acting, socially fair, but very inaccurate, 21 February 2003
Author:
J B Thackery from Atlanta
Mormons like myself generally love this movie for three reasons: 1) It
does not persecute us; 2) It shows the historic significance of the
Mormon movement; 3) The film itself is superbly acted and directed.
HOWEVER, there are some major historical inaccuracies. For one thing,
Joseph Smith never got a trial. He was murdered in jail by a mob of
nearly 200. He turned himself in, despite false charges, in order to
prevent a battle between the persecuting mobs and the persecuted
Mormons. The young (pre-ghoulish)Vincent Price does a good job
portraying the humble and kind Joseph Smith. For the most part, Dean
Jagger portrays Brigham Young wonderfully. However, he was not in
Illinois when Joseph and Hyrum Smith were martyred. He was serving a
mission in Boston. But he and Joseph had long discussed that they would
one day go to the Rockies, and that Brigham (an Apostle) would one day
replace Joseph as Prophet.
The film, for dramatic purposes, portrays Brigham as struggling for
inspiration and revelation. All historic accounts of him reveal that he
was one of the most inspired religious and social leaders of all time,
and that he had perfect confidence in what he was doing.
There is also an overemphasis on desenters within the thousands of
Mormons who went west to Utah. There were some, but the majority loved
Brother Brigham and felt inspired in what they were doing, which was
leaving to build a home for peace and religious freedom.
Also, the Mormons did not flee the day Joseph Smith was killed, nor did
they leave in a hail of bullets. It was nearly two years before they
actually left Illinois for Utah. They were also not a scruffy bunch as
portrayed by a few of the actors, but for the most part were refined
and benevolent people, not given to rowdiness.
Despite all this, you still find the film on sale in Mormon
bookstores.This is because it is overall a well-made film about an
important part of America's make-up. By the way, Dean Jagger became a
Mormon later in life. Actor Moroni Olson was a Mormon all his life,
born in Utah, appearing in 100 feature films.
11 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
Mormons: what do you think? I liked this picture., 31 January 2000
![]()
Author:
Alan Jacobs (alanjj@sprintmail.com) from New York, New York
I rented this film because of my interest in American history, and
especially the somewhat weird story of the Mormons. This movie attempts
to
make some sense out of how Joseph Smith could turn his "vision" into a
major
world religion. It first focuses on the troubles the Mormons had in their
settlement at Navuoo, Illinois. It portrays the trial of Joseph Smith.
Within the course of that trial, Brigham Young stands up to tell of his
conversion to Mormonism, and of his belief in the spiritual message of
Smith. Then Smith is assassinated, and Young must deal with his own
doubts
about whether he has been chosen to lead the Mormons to a new land.
Despite
his grave doubts, he perseveres, and finally has a vision (that Utah is
the
place for his colony) that gives him confidence in the rightness of his
leadership. Later, as crops are destroyed by crickets, he again doubts
that
he has truly been chosen--however, a miracle occurs, which cements his
place
in history.
I found the performances to be moving, and the story to be convincing and
interesting. I would love to know whether Mormons believe that this is an
accurate portrayal. Polygamy is a part of the story, but the reasons why
this is central to LDS are not raised. The issue is not
emphasized.
I'm sure people stay away from this movie because of its religious
subject-matter, but it has a great cast and will hold your interest
throughout.
9 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
Where Did Those Seagulls Come From?, 20 February 2006
![]()
Author:
bkoganbing from Buffalo, New York
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
The completed product of Brigham Young was not the film Darryl F.
Zanuck envisioned. Originally the film was to have been an actual
Hollywood biography of Brigham Young starring Walter Huston. Huston
would have been grand casting in the role. But he backed out and Zanuck
was stuck without a leading man. He decided to use Dean Jagger who he
had under contract, but who was not a leading man. Zanuck then had the
roles of the young farmer and his gentile sweetheart upgraded and cast
Tyrone Power and Linda Darnell in them who had done so well in several
films and built those parts up.
Several LDS reviewers have pointed out the glaring inaccuracies of the
story so I won't repeat them. Nevertheless Henry Hathaway does a fine
job making this motion picture move. He certainly captures the grit and
determination of the early Mormon settlers in Utah after they are run
out of Illinois.
Two of the minor characters in the film that I liked are Marc Lawrence
as the prosecuting attorney of Joseph Smith and John Carradine as
Mormon scout Porter Rockwell. Though Joseph Smith was not tried for
anything before he was murdered, Lawrence's attorney is quite typical
of the demagogic politician who made the Mormon residency of wherever
they settled so much grist for their propaganda mill.
As for Carradine, part frontier scout and part religious zealot, he
fits the conception I have always had of Rockwell. A truly colorful
character, he was as well known as Brigham Young himself in his day.
He'd be a good subject for a biographical film himself.
One of the great enigmas of the last two centuries coming down to this
one is the fact that there still has never been one shred of
archaeological evidence to prove the existence of that western
hemisphere civilization that the Book of Mormon speaks of. Yet for a
people that built their faith on a myth there is no denying the
civilization they created in Utah. And in the climax when those
seagulls came and ate the locusts destroying the crop the Saints
planted that first year. No seagulls have ever been in the state of
Utah before or since. That was indeed something of a miracle.
And from the LDS reviewers here I see they are well pleased with this
film.
9 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
Comments from a Mormon about Brigham Young-Frontiersman, 18 June 2002
Author:
Scott A. Stevens (drache385@charter.net) from Reno, Nevada
I enjoyed Brigham Young-Frontiersman immensely, however, I would not
characterize the movie as an accurate portrayal of the personalities in the
film. Although the events are accurate enough, the film does not do justice
to the historical figures. Immediately noticeable is the positive light
that Mormons are cast in, and I think this is necessary to make the film
work given the subject matter and historical events portrayed. Nevertheless,
being a card carrying Mormon, and having read a great deal of history and
biography on the leaders of the Church, I cannot say that the personalities
are true to history. I thought that Vincent Price cast as Joseph Smith was
very strange, though my reaction to him in the role was heavily tainted by
his later roles in the Roger Corman adaptations of Edgar Allan Poe's works
(The Pit and the Pendulum, The Raven, etc.). Still, I felt that Price was
not charismatic enough, and did not have the forceful presence that Joseph
Smith surely had in life. Dean Jagger cast as Brigham Young was more
tolerable, but not really as convincing as say Brian Keith in the Wind and
the Lion, or George C. Scott in Patton. Furthermore, Brigham Young had a
very powerful, direct, yet unrefined manner of speech that had it been
carefully followed or mimicked, would have made the character much more
convincing. His manner of speech is entirely unique and really gets a
reader's attention. It is often very humorous as well. Hearing it in the
film would have greatly improved the script, but the writers would have
needed to immerse themselves thoroughly in his discourses and writings to
carry it off.
Moreover, there are a host of perspectives or ways of looking at things that
are unique to Mormons, not to mention a very distinctive manner of speech
and phraseology regarding religious matters that the film failed to capture.
As an active Mormon, I would have to say that as I watched the film I felt
like an insider observing a film written by outsiders who had not properly
done their homework. The film has many fine qualities and I give it a good
rating. If the writing had been more true to Mormon thinking, speech
patterns and their leaders unique personalities, it would have been all that
was necessary to raise the film from good to great. All of this aside, I
give the film three stars out of a possible four.
6 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
Vincent Price as Joseph Smith, 9 September 2009
![]()
Author:
Spoon-5 from New England, United States
I noticed that a few of the comments above mentioned that Vincent Price
was a strange pick, or "over the top," or whatever, as Joseph Smith.
Before seeing the film, I also thought that seeing Vincent Price as
Joseph Smith was a bit odd, but as others have said, this is because of
the many *later* horror/thriller films he appeared in.
"Brigham Young," by IMDb's count, was only Price's *seventh* film, and
at the time, I'm confident that he had not yet cemented his "creepy"
persona.
Generally, though, I echo what has been written-- not completely
accurate (what historical film is?) but characters are portrayed fairly
and the film was entertaining.
7 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
The Passion is in the Message and not in History, 4 August 2005
![]()
Author:
chinojim from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Henry Hathaway was daring, as well as enthusiastic, for his love of the
people of the early days in US history. However, to critique historical
inaccuracies of his film about Brigham Young and the Mormon people are
not necessary or useful in commenting for this film. In my opinion,
Hathaway did superb direction that conveys what a Mormon people were in
the early history of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints
during the time period beginning with the martyrdom of Joseph Smith to
the date of film release. In often subtle filming and dialog delivery,
he covered Mormon philosophies and teachings in many of the segments
and scenes.
I remember watching this movie on many Saturday mornings during my
youth in the early 1950's. That was just over 10 years after the films
release and before the Los Angeles Temple was completed, which I
watched being constructed and instilled more curious wonder of who
Mormons were. I recently purchased this film and will enjoy the
following messages that Hathaway interpreted in his film.
1. Love for all people, regardless of their personal beliefs, 2.
Charity to those in need or not, 3. Family is high in importance, 4.
Listen respectfully and carefully, because even opposing messages have
important points to consider and adopt, 5. Work hard, both individually
and in community, 6. Prepare and store for future days of need, 7. Hope
is a binding link to a higher being, and for our daily lives, 8. And,
that there is a unique quality to any group, and appreciate those that
are identified as beneficial.
9 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
It's inaccuracies aren't that inaccurate, 28 June 2004
Author:
dmblanch from provo, utah
As another LDS viewer, I also like the film and find its hollywoodization of facts far less disturbing than say those of Stone's JFK. That said, I feel inclined to re-correct three facts that another LDS viewer pointed out. 1) While Joseph Smith was falsely imprisoned many times during his life, at the time of his murder he was under arrest, pending trial, for an offense he DID commit -- namely his ordering the destruction of the press of an opposition newspaper in Nauvoo. 2) While the slender 2/3rds majority of Nauvoo mormons did side with Brigham after Joseph's murder, roughly a third did not and scattered to the winds. And the issue of succession was by no means decided upon Joseph's death. It was nip and tuck, with several contenders vying for the crown, until Brigham's legendary 'immaculate impersonation' speech at conference. 3) I thought Vincent Price's portrayal of Joseph Smith was pretty good -- charismatic and visionary, somewhat other-worldly, but what do you expect.
6 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Powerful film, but Ty is just in it for box office, 25 September 2005
![]()
Author:
blanche-2 from United States
This is a wonderful movie about the struggle of the Mormons and their
final settlement in Salt Lake, Utah. The beginning and the ending are
especially powerful, and the message is one we all have to be reminded
of - God doesn't talk, but he communicates, if we would only listen. As
I am writing this in the midst of the horrors going on in New Orleans
and the surrounding area due to Katrina, I was especially moved by the
Mormons having to leave everything behind and move on after Joseph
Smith was assassinated. People came to this country to escape religious
persecution, and yet they could not. The struggle of the Mormons to
cross the country, the cost in lives, the hardship they suffered was
truly awe-inspiring, demonstrating their tremendous strength. As far as
the actual beliefs of Mormons, this is not heavily gone into, and
polygamy is mentioned but is not a centerpiece of the film at all.
The cast is top-notch, though others who have commented know more about
the actual characters and can talk about how true the portrayals were.
But as actors, Dean Jagger, Mary Astor, Brian Donlevy, John Carradine,
Jane Darwell all do excellently with the script they were given.
Though the film could have easily stood on its own (and certainly does
today) Tyrone Power and Linda Darnell were added to the cast to get the
crowds into the movie theaters to see a film about the Mormons. Power
is magnificently handsome as a young Mormon, and Darnell, as Zina, is
not a Mormon but stays on with the family after her father is killed.
Power does not have much to do until the end of the film, when he has a
big scene, and Darnell (still a teenager at the time of the filming)
has even less, though they make a lovely couple. Their fate is left
unclear regarding her conversion, and one does wonder about the
polygamy in their case. You can't beat either one for eye candy,
however.
| Page 1 of 2: | [1] [2] |
| Plot summary | Ratings | External reviews |
| Parents Guide | Plot keywords | Main details |
| Your user reviews | Your vote history |