10 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :- A great biographical movie., 14 April 2002
Author:
var-1 from Midwest
I have always admired Fredric March as an actor. This roll showed
his
great versatility. The writing and editing of Mark Twain's life
into
this movie makes it one of the finest biographical movies of all
time.
The soliloquy by the chancellor of Oxford, played by C. Abrey Smith,
encapsulates the life of Twain, better than any I've heard or read since.
This movie is a must for any student of American literature.
11 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :- Wildly Inaccurate but Still Loving Tribute..., 6 November 2003
Author:
Ben Burgraff (cariart) from Las Vegas, Nevada
THE ADVENTURES OF MARK TWAIN is one of my favorite films. Even as the years
pass, and I discover an ever-increasing number of biographical errors, it
still possesses a kind of magic that is captivating. It may not be the
historic Twain on the screen, but it's a Twain we all would have liked to
know!
How can you criticize a film when, at the beginning of the story, the lead
character threatens, in writing, to 'shoot you' if you look for a higher
moral? As the camera pans back while a hand signs a name to the document
with a flourish, we are 'introduced' to the spirit of Samuel Langhorne
Clemens, himself, the living embodiment of the white-haired rascal we've all
seen in his many 'turn of the century' photographs, with a twinkle in his
eye and his tongue firmly 'in cheek'. Fredric March bears an astonishing
resemblance to the author (thanks, in large measure, to Perc Westmore's
extraordinary make up), and, more importantly, portrays him with a sense of
irreverence and fun. His Twain is a man who loves the 'Mighty Mississippi',
writes from his heart, and observes life with the eye of a born humorist,
seeing all of Man's foibles as part of a giant Cosmic joke he is privy
to.
In the fanciful biography, Clemens is delivered as Haley's Comet streaks
overhead, as scores of black slaves listen to his father call the celestial
event a "jubilation in Heaven". As a child, he plays with Huck Finn, Tom
Sawyer, and the slave, Jim, then escapes to the river after writing a
far-fetched tale, which gets his older brother, a printer, in hot water.
Despite the boy's total ineptitude, a riverboat pilot swears to teach him
his profession, and in a few years, the adult Clemens masters the
Mississippi, successfully guiding his riverboat through the dangerous waters
at night, until the cry of "Mark Twain...Safe Water" is heard. While
dazzling naive passengers with tales of how alligators 'hitch rides' on the
paddlewheel, Clemens sees a cameo with the image of young Libby Langdon
(Alexis Smith), and announces to her brother that she would be the girl he'd
marry.
Heading west with friend Steve Gillis (the always wonderful Alan Hale) to
strike it rich where the "gold is on the ground waiting to be picked up", he
fails spectacularly, and ends up a reporter at a frontier newspaper. He
writes an account of a leaping frog competition, and the sad fate of
novelist Bret Harte (John Carradine, perfectly cast!) and his prize jumper.
Not thinking the story very good, he signs 'Mark Twain' as the author's
name...then decides to throw the manuscript away. Fortunately, his editor
retrieves it from the garbage, and sends the story back east, where, to a
public overwhelmed by Civil War news, it provides welcome relief, creating a
sensation. Mark Twain becomes a national celebrity! When finally tracked
down, Clemens sees a way to win his ladylove, and plays both himself and
Twain at a packed New York lecture. Libby is dazzled by him, he goes
courting and 'moves in' to her home (much to the bemusement of her father),
and, with her inspiration, his fabulous career as 'America's Voice'
begins.
Chronicling Clemens' eventful life with unforgettable scenes of spectacular
success as well as tragedy and failure, THE ADVENTURES OF MARK TWAIN is the
tale of a legendary man, told in 'larger than life' terms. While most of the
story is fictitious (the real Clemens' biography would require a Ken Burns
documentary to do it justice), the film is never less than entertaining.
Fredric March is superb in the lead, and, as Haley's Comet returns, ending
his time on earth, you may find it hard to hold back a tear, especially when
his spirit says to his grieving daughter, "The reports of my death have been
GREATLY exaggerated..."
He was absolutely correct...Mark Twain will never really die!
9 out of 10 people found the following comment useful :- As great a film biolography as Mark Twain, himself, 10 February 2001
Author:
ronaldlaporte (ronaldlaporte@hotmail.com) from Baltimore, Maryland, USA
If you love Mark Twain, then you will adore this great biographical
film. The movie is not just the run of the mill biography made in the
1930's and 40's, but an amusing comedy, drama, and romance as one can
imagine. Frederic March is so marvelous as Mark Twain, if Mark Twain was
alive to have seen this movie...he would have definitely had said, "It
seems
that the news of my death has been greatly over exaggerated".
You will find that the art of movie making, great acting, and a superb
story is, The Adventures of Mark Twain.
7 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :- The Rumors of His Death Are Slightly Exaggerated, 15 October 2005
Author:
theowinthrop from United States
He's now been physically dead all of 95 years, but Samuel Langhorne
Clemens (a.k.a. Mark Twain) is still the most popular novelist and
writer in American history, and one of the few great American writers
to merit his own film biography. There is no film (at the very least no
remembered films) about Charles Brockden Brown (our first major
novelist), Washington Irving, Fenimore Cooper (whom Twain hated
reading), Hawthorne, Melville, Howells, James, Crane, Dreiser, Wharton,
Alcott, Cather, Fitzgerald, Lewis, Hemingway, Faulkner, Steinbeck,
Wouk, Salinger, Vonnegut, or Bellow. You have to go back to Edgar Allen
Poe (the subject of several films, including a silent one (THE AVENGING
CONSCIENCE) by D.W. Griffith) to find another major American writer who
is a subject of biography. There is also a film on the life of Jack
London made in the 1940s. But the key is that Poe, London, and Twain
had interesting lives meriting filming.
The film is true in its outline but the fleshing out is questionable.
For example, Twain did go into the mining fields of California and
Nevada in the late 1860s, but he probably did not win the jumping frog
contest that was the basis of his first literary success, "The Jumping
Frog of Calaveras County". Nor was his literary rival, Francis Bret
Harte (John Carridine), the man who lost that contest. But there was a
contest he apparently witnessed in 1865, and he expanded on it for his
classic short story.
Some aspects of the story I am surprised to find in the film. The
infamous Whittier Birthday Speech fiasco (although still debated) did
occur in 1876, and somehow hurt his acceptance by the eastern literati
whose "gods" (Emerson, Holmes, and Longfellow) were somewhat laughed at
in it. Also there is the frightening story of the Paige Typesetter that
helped bankrupt Twain (forcing him to go lecturing and writing around
the world in the 1890s.
The fact is, the film is actually better in presenting Twain's literary
and private life than the average movie biography of that period or
even now. March looks like his subject (and his make-up ages him
properly). He knows how to do the delivery of the comic lectures
perfectly. Note how at one point when he says to the audience, "The
last time I went south....", March points quietly but prolonged
downward, so the audience realizes he means "the last time I went to
Hell...." We are used today to Hal Holbrook's "MARK TWAIN TONIGHT"
performances, with his southern delivery, but March is just as
effective in his way.
The other performances are good, with Walter Hampden lecturing March
about what gentlemen of his class consider REAL literature, or with
Percy Kilbride as a typesetter who trains Twain, and who later claims
he helped make Clemens Mark Twain. Alexis Smith manages to portray Livy
(Olivia) Twain as the perfect love match she was. The film does not
hesitate to show Twain's career had as many missteps as successful
peaks. It does avoid his attack on American Imperialism, and it does
not detail the series of family deaths that plagued his last decade
(two daughters and a nephew followed Livy to the grave before Sam
followed her in 1910). But for getting the general outline correct, and
for casting the film correctly and producing it very well I can say it
deserves a "10" out of "10".
7 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- A great biography, 5 August 1998
Author:
Matthew Ignoffo (mermatt@webtv.net) from Eatontown, NJ, USA
Frederic March has a wonderful time playing the great author with all his
humor and wisdom. This film is often overlooked, but it is one of the great
bio-flicks. The settings, cast, Max Steiner score, and magic of the
adventures add up to a funny and touching movie.
With a film like this available, I can report that the rumors of Mark Twain's
death are indeed exaggerated.
5 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :- The Art of Exaggeration, 24 October 2007
Author:
krdement from United States
Like Samuel Clemens, himself, this film is a great illustration of the
Art of Exaggeration. The rough outline of Twain's life is retained as a
foundation for greater elaboration. The Calaveras County episode is a
perfect example. Would it have had the same impact on us if Twain
(Fredric March) had been a mere bystander? Absolutely not! We have a
stake in its outcome because HE has a stake in it. Would it have been
as funny if Twain's partner, Steve Gillis (Alan Hale) hadn't been
responsible for filling the opposing frog full of buckshot? No way;
Gillis' responsibility involves us. That Twain has bet on the frog of
the opponent, Bret Harte (John Carradine), and lost all their money
serves the interests of justice. More importantly, however, it is one
more example of the ironic failings of Twain's early life. Having Bret
Harte be the owner of the opposing frog is pure genius - a clever
homage to another great American author, who was Twain's contemporary.
He is played with aplomb by John Carradine, a wonderfully versatile
performer, whose earlier career as a character actor is sadly
overshadowed by his later career as a stereotypical ghoul.
As other commentators have noted, March is phenomenal in capturing the
legendary Mark Twain. March is one of the greatest actors in American
film history. His performance here is typically nuanced, capturing the
dry wit of Twain with understated charisma, and also the pathos of the
man in his private life. Brilliant!
Alexis Smith is wonderful, too. She had the ability to capture loving,
devoted women with a realistic warmth that is never over-sentimental.
Besides, she is very easy to look at. (At a similar age, Jody Foster
bears an uncanny resemblance to Alexis Smith in this movie. The cameo
could easily have been of Foster.)
The very personification of the Art of Exaggeration is Alan Hale, here
portraying Steve Gillis, Twain's sidekick out west. Somehow in roles
such as Gillis he is capable of the greatest of acting paradoxes -
delivering exaggerated performances that NEVER seem overacted or hammy.
His characters always appear natural, yet larger than life. Offhand it
is difficult to think of another actor who accomplished this incredible
balance. I would watch ANY movie in which Hale appears.
Likewise, comedies of this era seem to be able to strike that same
balance - natural, yet larger than life. That is what sets them apart.
Later films don't seem to be able to capture the same balance. In
attempting to do so, actors just come across as hammy. The Art of
Exaggeration in American film, got lost some time in the late 40's.
What a shame. Movies like this are the quintessence of that fine art.
5 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :- A look at the life of a down home author., 30 June 2005
Author:
Michael O'Keefe from Muskogee OK
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Irving Rapper directs this biopic of the beloved American author Sam
Clemens, better known as Mark Twain. Fredrick March is excellent in his
portrayal of Clemens from his early 20's to his death at age 75. The
story goes that Sam's birth was ushered by Halley's Comet. This
entertaining tale may not be accurate enough to be a serious biography,
but is good enough to sustain Twain's legacy. Alexis Smith plays
Twain's wife Olivia, who understands that her husband may always be a
boy at heart. His tales of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn remain
enduring as the day he introduced them. The prolific writer had a major
financial reversal due to bad investments and his struggle to publish
the memoirs of Ulysses S. Grant. Twain would go on a world wide
speaking tour to pay off his debts before his death. Most memorable is
the film's finale with spirits of Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn urging the
spirit of Twain to join them in heaven...just at the time Halley's
Comet streaks the sky. In supporting roles are: Donald Crisp, John
Carradine, Percy Kilbride, Alan Hale and William Henry.
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- A wonderful movie about a wonderful man., 2 July 2006
Author:
thomas-johnston from United States
Mark Twain has always been my favorite author since I was a boy. I read
voraciously but I always return to Mark Twain and if I was stranded on
the proverbial deserted island and had to choose to take only books by
one author, those books would be by Mark Twain.
This movie is wonderful although it takes great liberties with Twain's
real life story. I have seen it several times over the years and, in
fact, I am writing this review now because I just saw the last 20
minutes of it on a classic movie channel. The ending has to be the
corniest tear-jerker of all times but it is also wonderful. Being a
big, tough male, I have a total aversion to touchy-feely things and I
am not one to cry even at funerals but the ending of this movie always
makes me cry like a baby. It is shamelessly emotional but it is gets to
me every time. If you haven't seen this movie, do so. The only problem
is that I believe it is out-of-print on VHS and I don't think it has
been released on DVD. Perhaps your local video store or your library
has it. Don't confuse it with two more recent movies of the same name.
One of those stars James Whitmore and I have not seen that one so I
cannot comment on it. The other one is a claymation movie, presumably
for kids.
Like another reviewer of this movie, Mark Twain changed my life. In
fact, in many ways, he shaped my personality. That reminds me that I
have not read any Twain works in a couple years so when I finish this
review, I am going to start reading one again from my library. Those
who only think of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn when they think of
Mark Twain are missing so much. Many consider Twain to be the greatest
American author of all time. I agree with those people. The world is a
better place because of Twain.
5 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :- Very enjoyable biography, 24 December 2002
Author:
gagrice from San Diego, CA
In spite of the discrepancies it was a fine movie. I have read most of
the
biographical works and this gives a wonderful picture of who Mark Twain
really is. It captures his love of his wife & family very nicely. I
recommend it to all that enjoy Mark Twain. The acting was better than
average for that period in movie making.
5 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- A Tribute to Mark Twain, 4 March 2002
Author:
prschwartze from Missouri, USA
In the Adventures of Mark Twain, Frederick March portrays the author as
Sam
Clemmons himself would approve. This film is the most true to life
account
of Clemmons life as any film I have seen on the author. It not only lets
the viewer see the humorous side of Twain, but shows the desperate and
dark
sides as well. This is a film that every Twain "buff" should
view!
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10 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :-

A great biographical movie., 14 April 2002
Author: var-1 from Midwest
I have always admired Fredric March as an actor. This roll showed his great versatility. The writing and editing of Mark Twain's life into this movie makes it one of the finest biographical movies of all time. The soliloquy by the chancellor of Oxford, played by C. Abrey Smith, encapsulates the life of Twain, better than any I've heard or read since. This movie is a must for any student of American literature.
11 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :-

Wildly Inaccurate but Still Loving Tribute..., 6 November 2003
Author: Ben Burgraff (cariart) from Las Vegas, Nevada
THE ADVENTURES OF MARK TWAIN is one of my favorite films. Even as the years pass, and I discover an ever-increasing number of biographical errors, it still possesses a kind of magic that is captivating. It may not be the historic Twain on the screen, but it's a Twain we all would have liked to know!
How can you criticize a film when, at the beginning of the story, the lead character threatens, in writing, to 'shoot you' if you look for a higher moral? As the camera pans back while a hand signs a name to the document with a flourish, we are 'introduced' to the spirit of Samuel Langhorne Clemens, himself, the living embodiment of the white-haired rascal we've all seen in his many 'turn of the century' photographs, with a twinkle in his eye and his tongue firmly 'in cheek'. Fredric March bears an astonishing resemblance to the author (thanks, in large measure, to Perc Westmore's extraordinary make up), and, more importantly, portrays him with a sense of irreverence and fun. His Twain is a man who loves the 'Mighty Mississippi', writes from his heart, and observes life with the eye of a born humorist, seeing all of Man's foibles as part of a giant Cosmic joke he is privy to.
In the fanciful biography, Clemens is delivered as Haley's Comet streaks overhead, as scores of black slaves listen to his father call the celestial event a "jubilation in Heaven". As a child, he plays with Huck Finn, Tom Sawyer, and the slave, Jim, then escapes to the river after writing a far-fetched tale, which gets his older brother, a printer, in hot water. Despite the boy's total ineptitude, a riverboat pilot swears to teach him his profession, and in a few years, the adult Clemens masters the Mississippi, successfully guiding his riverboat through the dangerous waters at night, until the cry of "Mark Twain...Safe Water" is heard. While dazzling naive passengers with tales of how alligators 'hitch rides' on the paddlewheel, Clemens sees a cameo with the image of young Libby Langdon (Alexis Smith), and announces to her brother that she would be the girl he'd marry.
Heading west with friend Steve Gillis (the always wonderful Alan Hale) to strike it rich where the "gold is on the ground waiting to be picked up", he fails spectacularly, and ends up a reporter at a frontier newspaper. He writes an account of a leaping frog competition, and the sad fate of novelist Bret Harte (John Carradine, perfectly cast!) and his prize jumper. Not thinking the story very good, he signs 'Mark Twain' as the author's name...then decides to throw the manuscript away. Fortunately, his editor retrieves it from the garbage, and sends the story back east, where, to a public overwhelmed by Civil War news, it provides welcome relief, creating a sensation. Mark Twain becomes a national celebrity! When finally tracked down, Clemens sees a way to win his ladylove, and plays both himself and Twain at a packed New York lecture. Libby is dazzled by him, he goes courting and 'moves in' to her home (much to the bemusement of her father), and, with her inspiration, his fabulous career as 'America's Voice' begins.
Chronicling Clemens' eventful life with unforgettable scenes of spectacular success as well as tragedy and failure, THE ADVENTURES OF MARK TWAIN is the tale of a legendary man, told in 'larger than life' terms. While most of the story is fictitious (the real Clemens' biography would require a Ken Burns documentary to do it justice), the film is never less than entertaining. Fredric March is superb in the lead, and, as Haley's Comet returns, ending his time on earth, you may find it hard to hold back a tear, especially when his spirit says to his grieving daughter, "The reports of my death have been GREATLY exaggerated..."
He was absolutely correct...Mark Twain will never really die!
9 out of 10 people found the following comment useful :-
As great a film biolography as Mark Twain, himself, 10 February 2001
Author: ronaldlaporte (ronaldlaporte@hotmail.com) from Baltimore, Maryland, USA
If you love Mark Twain, then you will adore this great biographical film. The movie is not just the run of the mill biography made in the 1930's and 40's, but an amusing comedy, drama, and romance as one can imagine. Frederic March is so marvelous as Mark Twain, if Mark Twain was alive to have seen this movie...he would have definitely had said, "It seems that the news of my death has been greatly over exaggerated".
You will find that the art of movie making, great acting, and a superb story is, The Adventures of Mark Twain.
7 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :-

The Rumors of His Death Are Slightly Exaggerated, 15 October 2005
Author: theowinthrop from United States
He's now been physically dead all of 95 years, but Samuel Langhorne Clemens (a.k.a. Mark Twain) is still the most popular novelist and writer in American history, and one of the few great American writers to merit his own film biography. There is no film (at the very least no remembered films) about Charles Brockden Brown (our first major novelist), Washington Irving, Fenimore Cooper (whom Twain hated reading), Hawthorne, Melville, Howells, James, Crane, Dreiser, Wharton, Alcott, Cather, Fitzgerald, Lewis, Hemingway, Faulkner, Steinbeck, Wouk, Salinger, Vonnegut, or Bellow. You have to go back to Edgar Allen Poe (the subject of several films, including a silent one (THE AVENGING CONSCIENCE) by D.W. Griffith) to find another major American writer who is a subject of biography. There is also a film on the life of Jack London made in the 1940s. But the key is that Poe, London, and Twain had interesting lives meriting filming.
The film is true in its outline but the fleshing out is questionable. For example, Twain did go into the mining fields of California and Nevada in the late 1860s, but he probably did not win the jumping frog contest that was the basis of his first literary success, "The Jumping Frog of Calaveras County". Nor was his literary rival, Francis Bret Harte (John Carridine), the man who lost that contest. But there was a contest he apparently witnessed in 1865, and he expanded on it for his classic short story.
Some aspects of the story I am surprised to find in the film. The infamous Whittier Birthday Speech fiasco (although still debated) did occur in 1876, and somehow hurt his acceptance by the eastern literati whose "gods" (Emerson, Holmes, and Longfellow) were somewhat laughed at in it. Also there is the frightening story of the Paige Typesetter that helped bankrupt Twain (forcing him to go lecturing and writing around the world in the 1890s.
The fact is, the film is actually better in presenting Twain's literary and private life than the average movie biography of that period or even now. March looks like his subject (and his make-up ages him properly). He knows how to do the delivery of the comic lectures perfectly. Note how at one point when he says to the audience, "The last time I went south....", March points quietly but prolonged downward, so the audience realizes he means "the last time I went to Hell...." We are used today to Hal Holbrook's "MARK TWAIN TONIGHT" performances, with his southern delivery, but March is just as effective in his way.
The other performances are good, with Walter Hampden lecturing March about what gentlemen of his class consider REAL literature, or with Percy Kilbride as a typesetter who trains Twain, and who later claims he helped make Clemens Mark Twain. Alexis Smith manages to portray Livy (Olivia) Twain as the perfect love match she was. The film does not hesitate to show Twain's career had as many missteps as successful peaks. It does avoid his attack on American Imperialism, and it does not detail the series of family deaths that plagued his last decade (two daughters and a nephew followed Livy to the grave before Sam followed her in 1910). But for getting the general outline correct, and for casting the film correctly and producing it very well I can say it deserves a "10" out of "10".
7 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-
A great biography, 5 August 1998
Author: Matthew Ignoffo (mermatt@webtv.net) from Eatontown, NJ, USA
Frederic March has a wonderful time playing the great author with all his humor and wisdom. This film is often overlooked, but it is one of the great bio-flicks. The settings, cast, Max Steiner score, and magic of the adventures add up to a funny and touching movie.
With a film like this available, I can report that the rumors of Mark Twain's death are indeed exaggerated.
5 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :-

The Art of Exaggeration, 24 October 2007
Author: krdement from United States
Like Samuel Clemens, himself, this film is a great illustration of the Art of Exaggeration. The rough outline of Twain's life is retained as a foundation for greater elaboration. The Calaveras County episode is a perfect example. Would it have had the same impact on us if Twain (Fredric March) had been a mere bystander? Absolutely not! We have a stake in its outcome because HE has a stake in it. Would it have been as funny if Twain's partner, Steve Gillis (Alan Hale) hadn't been responsible for filling the opposing frog full of buckshot? No way; Gillis' responsibility involves us. That Twain has bet on the frog of the opponent, Bret Harte (John Carradine), and lost all their money serves the interests of justice. More importantly, however, it is one more example of the ironic failings of Twain's early life. Having Bret Harte be the owner of the opposing frog is pure genius - a clever homage to another great American author, who was Twain's contemporary. He is played with aplomb by John Carradine, a wonderfully versatile performer, whose earlier career as a character actor is sadly overshadowed by his later career as a stereotypical ghoul.
As other commentators have noted, March is phenomenal in capturing the legendary Mark Twain. March is one of the greatest actors in American film history. His performance here is typically nuanced, capturing the dry wit of Twain with understated charisma, and also the pathos of the man in his private life. Brilliant!
Alexis Smith is wonderful, too. She had the ability to capture loving, devoted women with a realistic warmth that is never over-sentimental. Besides, she is very easy to look at. (At a similar age, Jody Foster bears an uncanny resemblance to Alexis Smith in this movie. The cameo could easily have been of Foster.)
The very personification of the Art of Exaggeration is Alan Hale, here portraying Steve Gillis, Twain's sidekick out west. Somehow in roles such as Gillis he is capable of the greatest of acting paradoxes - delivering exaggerated performances that NEVER seem overacted or hammy. His characters always appear natural, yet larger than life. Offhand it is difficult to think of another actor who accomplished this incredible balance. I would watch ANY movie in which Hale appears.
Likewise, comedies of this era seem to be able to strike that same balance - natural, yet larger than life. That is what sets them apart. Later films don't seem to be able to capture the same balance. In attempting to do so, actors just come across as hammy. The Art of Exaggeration in American film, got lost some time in the late 40's. What a shame. Movies like this are the quintessence of that fine art.
5 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :-

A look at the life of a down home author., 30 June 2005
Author: Michael O'Keefe from Muskogee OK
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Irving Rapper directs this biopic of the beloved American author Sam Clemens, better known as Mark Twain. Fredrick March is excellent in his portrayal of Clemens from his early 20's to his death at age 75. The story goes that Sam's birth was ushered by Halley's Comet. This entertaining tale may not be accurate enough to be a serious biography, but is good enough to sustain Twain's legacy. Alexis Smith plays Twain's wife Olivia, who understands that her husband may always be a boy at heart. His tales of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn remain enduring as the day he introduced them. The prolific writer had a major financial reversal due to bad investments and his struggle to publish the memoirs of Ulysses S. Grant. Twain would go on a world wide speaking tour to pay off his debts before his death. Most memorable is the film's finale with spirits of Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn urging the spirit of Twain to join them in heaven...just at the time Halley's Comet streaks the sky. In supporting roles are: Donald Crisp, John Carradine, Percy Kilbride, Alan Hale and William Henry.
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-

A wonderful movie about a wonderful man., 2 July 2006
Author: thomas-johnston from United States
Mark Twain has always been my favorite author since I was a boy. I read voraciously but I always return to Mark Twain and if I was stranded on the proverbial deserted island and had to choose to take only books by one author, those books would be by Mark Twain.
This movie is wonderful although it takes great liberties with Twain's real life story. I have seen it several times over the years and, in fact, I am writing this review now because I just saw the last 20 minutes of it on a classic movie channel. The ending has to be the corniest tear-jerker of all times but it is also wonderful. Being a big, tough male, I have a total aversion to touchy-feely things and I am not one to cry even at funerals but the ending of this movie always makes me cry like a baby. It is shamelessly emotional but it is gets to me every time. If you haven't seen this movie, do so. The only problem is that I believe it is out-of-print on VHS and I don't think it has been released on DVD. Perhaps your local video store or your library has it. Don't confuse it with two more recent movies of the same name. One of those stars James Whitmore and I have not seen that one so I cannot comment on it. The other one is a claymation movie, presumably for kids.
Like another reviewer of this movie, Mark Twain changed my life. In fact, in many ways, he shaped my personality. That reminds me that I have not read any Twain works in a couple years so when I finish this review, I am going to start reading one again from my library. Those who only think of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn when they think of Mark Twain are missing so much. Many consider Twain to be the greatest American author of all time. I agree with those people. The world is a better place because of Twain.
5 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :-

Very enjoyable biography, 24 December 2002
Author: gagrice from San Diego, CA
In spite of the discrepancies it was a fine movie. I have read most of the biographical works and this gives a wonderful picture of who Mark Twain really is. It captures his love of his wife & family very nicely. I recommend it to all that enjoy Mark Twain. The acting was better than average for that period in movie making.
5 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-

A Tribute to Mark Twain, 4 March 2002
Author: prschwartze from Missouri, USA
In the Adventures of Mark Twain, Frederick March portrays the author as Sam Clemmons himself would approve. This film is the most true to life account of Clemmons life as any film I have seen on the author. It not only lets the viewer see the humorous side of Twain, but shows the desperate and dark sides as well. This is a film that every Twain "buff" should view!
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