| Index | 7 reviews in total |
5 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
Roseanna, Roseanna, the hills call your name..., 2 August 2009
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Author:
mbking-2 from United States
Call it a guilty pleasure, but I find this movie satisfying on several levels. I was hooked from the opening shot with Lee Garmes' cinematography capturing writer John Collier's evocation of the mysticism of the mountains, enhanced by the choral version of Frank Loesser's theme song. The fact that Joan Evans was a complete unknown discovered in a New York City High School worked for me. She seemed confused and overwhelmed much of the time, which was natural, given Farley Granger's heavy breathing and bodice-ripping efforts in her direction. As previously discussed, the supporting cast is terrific, with Raymond Massey and Charles Bickford as the patriarchs of the opposing families. They clearly enjoyed chewing up the scenery in their respective roles. Aline MacMahon is wonderful as Ma Hatfield, working tirelessly to end the hostility between the families, to little avail. Mention must be made of the youngsters, played by Gigi Perreau, Peter Miles and William Mauch (formerly Billy of the Mauch twins), for whom I felt concern whenever the bullets started to fly. I was most fortunate to view a beautiful 16mm print of the film. Lee Garmes' lighting and compositions are stunning indeed.
11 out of 18 people found the following review useful:
Romeo and Juliet in the Ozarks: interesting but unconvincing, 11 December 1999
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Author:
Robert Keser (rfkeser@ix.netcom.com) from Chicago, IL
For this big, classy production, Sam Goldwyn transposed the Capulet/Montague conflict to the Hatfield/McCoy story. John Collier concocted a quirky screenplay with eccentric details of mountain magic, as well as some droll humor at the expense of the rustics ["Don't talk with your knife in your mouth!"] These efforts sink under the ploddingly literal direction of Irving Reis and the disastrous casting of Joan Evans in the title role [only marginally competent even as an ingenue]. Farley Granger has the appropriate dash for Romeo, but seems too squeaky clean for the squalid Hatfield family. It's still interesting for the exceptionally fine supporting cast and the graceful location camerawork of old master Lee Garmes.
3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Roseanna and Johnse, 17 April 2010
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Author:
bkoganbing from Buffalo, New York
Probably Samuel Goldwyns's Roseanna McCoy a story based on the real
life Hatfield/McCoy feud would be better known and received today if
Paramount had not beaten Goldwyn to the hillbilly saga. Their films,
The Trail Of The Lonesome Pine and Shepherd Of The Hills cover the
subject far better and are in color.
It's Romeo and Juliet once again in a different setting in this film.
During a county fair Johnse Hatfield played by Farley Granger meets and
flips for young Roseanna McCoy played by newcomer Joan Evans. A hornet
stings her and Granger with some first aid with amorous overtones saves
her from infection. After that true love will try to win out even over
a pair of families who have been feuding for generations.
The clan patriarchs are Charles Bickford and Raymond Massey for the
Hatfields and McCoys respectively a pair of actors who could convey
merciless hate better than most. The women are pretty good to in that
department with Aline McMahon for the McCoys and Hope Emerson for the
Hatfields. But the guy to watch in this film is Richard Basehart who
did a fine line of psychotics in many of his film roles. He just loves
being a Hatfield because it gives him an excuse to kill. A McCoy is
just someone he's got permission to shoot at will, they're in 365 day
hunting season as far as Basehart is concerned.
Color would have been nice, but some of the rural area of California
substituted nicely for the Appalachins. Roseanna McCoy is not a bad
film, but I prefer the ones I cited already from Paramount.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
The Hatfields and the McCoys, 19 April 2010
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Author:
wes-connors from Earth
Out picking flowers, pretty Joan Evans (as Roseanna McCoy) gets stung
by not only a hornet, but also handsome Farley Granger (as Johnse
Hatfield). Guess you could call it love at first bite. Of course, their
feudin' families ("The Hatfields and the McCoys") are against the young
duo getting hitched... The meeting of the hillbilly "Romeo and Juliet"
is one of the couple's few good scenes, with Mr. Granger leaping to Ms.
Evans' aid, and sucking insect poison from her arm. The original
casting idea, to star Cathy O'Donnell from Granger's "They Live by
Night" (1948), might have worked. Richard Basehart (as Mounts Hatfield)
easily goes to the head of a strong supporting cast. Little Peter Miles
(as Randall McCoy) has a memorable shooting scene. And, many of the
locations, by Lee Garmes, are beautiful.
***** Roseanna McCoy (8/18/49) Irving Reis ~ Joan Evans, Farley
Granger, Richard Basehart, Peter Miles
Somewhat unbelievable saga of the Hatfields and McCoys, but what a cast., 24 September 2011
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Author:
mark.waltz from New York City
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Roseanna McCoy (Joan Evans) has come of age to attract boys, and her
over-protective family is determined to make sure she stays virtuous.
Papa Raymond Massey and mama Aline MacMahon are God-fearing country
folk whose feud with the no-good Hatfields goes back generations. When
Roseanna meets Johnse Hatfield (Farley Granger), the son of Pa McCoy's
worst enemy (Charles Bickford), he bewitches her like Heathcliff did
Cathy in "Wuthering Heights". Sucking out the poison in Roseanna from
the sting of a hornet, Johnse finds he can't release her from his soul,
and no matter how she fights, he is now in her soul as well. Johnse
takes her to meet his parents, and while Bickford isn't at all in favor
of a Hatfield/McCoy romance, ma Hope Emerson (the year before she got
hisses as the nasty matron in "Caged") is little more receptive, even
though she tries to hide it. Johnse is determined to prove to the
McCoys that he doesn't have the killer instinct they assume all the
Hatfields have, but once one of the nastier Hatfields (played by
Richard Basehart) shoots Roseanna's younger brother (Marshall
Thompson), the war is back on.
This is an attractive film to look at, extremely well acted by a bunch
of pros, yet there is little explanation to convince me why these two
families hate everybody in the other family with such vengeance. The
ending, too (SPOILER ALERT), had me cold, as a sense of good will comes
out of nowhere. I don't think in real life, such peace would erupt so
quickly out of violence, although there may be some cheering for the
way one of the film's villains is dealt with. I longed for a reunion
between the matriarch and patriarch of each of the clans, to give
further detail to why these families are so reluctant to declare a
truce, but they never appear together, except in different shots of the
fathers during the final battle.
1 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
Unlikeable Protagonists Ruin This Movie, 17 April 2010
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Author:
dollpenguin from United States
I really expected to like Roseanna McCoy because it had a really good
premise and fine actors. Unfortunately, the way the characters were
developed left much to be desired. Johnse Hatfield is introduced as a
stalker, which may have been acceptable in 1949. However, I have
watched many movies from that era and the way Johnse behaved
(supposedly)out of desire for her would never have been acceptable.
Johnse's actions concerning Roseanna McCoy may have been begrudgingly
tolerated after a long courtship. But from his first several meetings
with her, it is made clear that Johnse is a loathsome and dumb, albeit
handsome, brute. I understood Roseanna McCoy was supposed to be
extremely naive, but some of the ridiculous choices she made left me
wanting to see bad things happen to her. It did not seem like Roseanna
cared about anything or anyone, including herself.
The lovers' families were feuding just like in Romeo and Juliet, but
that is where the similarities end. Johnse was certainly no Romeo and
Roseanna was definitely not Juliette. The love story seemed very
forced, and not just because Johnse takes what he wants, world be
damned. In the third act, the movie tries to create sympathy for the
two characters but it is far too late. Johnse and Roseanna were the two
characters I cared about least in the movie.
As other reviewers have stated, the cinematography was excellent in
Roseanna McCoy. I just wish the rest of the film had been as fine as
the camera-work.
1 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
Unimaginative Story of Star-Crossed Lovers., 17 April 2010
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Author:
Robert J. Maxwell (rmax304823@yahoo.com) from Deming, New Mexico, USA
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
In the wilderness of Appalachia of the 1890s, the Hatfield clan and the
McCoy clan hate each other. A long-time feud is reignited when young
Roseanna McCoy runs off with Johnson Hatfield. A battle ensues.
It's Romeo and Juliet in the woods, far more than it's Montagues and
Capulets or Hatfields and McCoys. It begins with a cloying love song.
Here are some lyrics: "Roseanna, Roseanna, the wind breathes your
name." (It's a good thing she wasn't named Betsy.) The focus is on Joan
Evans as Roseanna and Farley Granger is Johnse. There is a surprising
scene suggestive of rape. Granger has kidnapped Evans and they stand
among the pines in the middle of the night. He kisses her forcefully,
despite her objections, and pushes her back into a thicket. Dissolve to
a glorious sunrise and heavenly music as the two ride a horse in
tandem. For all that, Farley Granger is no Sheik of Araby, and Evans is
no more than blandly pretty.
This is Hollywood's version of the 19th-century backwoods. Appalachia,
you will be surprised to know, was actually sunny and pleasant and had
many of the kinds of live oaks found in California. Flowers abounded.
You can find other examples of this stylized milieu in "Sergeant York"
and "Young Mr. Lincoln," two far better films. I wonder if Central
Casting didn't send over the same wrinkled, bearded, tobacco-chewing,
old men in battered hats.
The irony is that this movie pretty much sucks and yet has a fine
supporting cast. With Hope Emerson and Aline McMahon as the competing
matriarchs, it can't be all bad. And the writers, mostly, I would
guess, John Collier, have included a subdued but tense scene between
Richard Basehart (his hair shellacked in the traditional 1941 Hollywood
fashion) and Joan Evans. The room is dark, the only light is from a
flickering fire. She holds an empty pistol on him. He is caressing a
knife -- and he's mad.
The tale itself -- the senseless, murderous feud between two extended
families in a classic Appalachian backwoods culture -- has a great deal
of promise. The place names alone evoke the proper atmosphere -- Pike
County, The Big Sandy, Kentucky, Pikeville, The Tug Fork. Those names
are hardly ever used in the film. Maybe that's one of the reasons this
all adds up to one of the dullest movies ever made.
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