ÉVALUATION IMDb
5,7/10
1,9 k
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA Quaker colony tries to save the giant sequoias from a timber baron.A Quaker colony tries to save the giant sequoias from a timber baron.A Quaker colony tries to save the giant sequoias from a timber baron.
Mel Archer
- Ole
- (uncredited)
John Barton
- Lumberman
- (uncredited)
Arthur Berkeley
- Lumberman
- (uncredited)
Lilian Bond
- Daisy's Girl
- (uncredited)
Chet Brandenburg
- Lumberman
- (uncredited)
Sue Casey
- Young Lady
- (uncredited)
William Challee
- Brother Williams
- (uncredited)
Lane Chandler
- Brother Dorn
- (uncredited)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesAccording to Kirk Douglas in his autobiography "The Ragman's Son", he agreed to act in this film for free, in order to end his contract with Warner Bros. He later said, "It's a bad movie."
- GaffesWalter 'Yukon' Burns has come from the Yukon gold rush, supposedly in Alaska. Although the gold fields of the Yukon Gold Rush of 1897 were predominately in Canada, the Yukon Territory is (and was) completely landlocked, accessibly only by traveling through Alaska on routes such as the Chilkoot Trail, the White Pass Trail, or the Klondike River. It is appropriate to regard 'Yukon' Burns as coming from Alaska.
- Citations
Daisy Fisher: [to Frenchy] You stye on the eye of a flea on a thigh of a nit on the neck of a gnat!
- ConnexionsReferenced in The Dick Cavett Show: Kirk Douglas (1971)
- Bandes originalesThe Soubrette on the Police Gazette
(uncredited)
Music by M.K. Jerome
Lyrics by Jack Scholl
Sung and Danced by Patrice Wymore
Commentaire en vedette
So routine it's a bore, but it's really not at all terrible.
The Big Trees (1952)
There might be some value in seeing this movie as a sign of another environmental time. There is a fight back and forth over a stand of big, valuable trees, and the owner of them at one point is the U.S. government. But even that will not save them. The movie feels like a Wild West genre film, but set in the big woods of the coast instead of the deserts or Monument Valley. But there are all the simple good folk (in this case, Quakers), the sheriff and buddies, the good guy with issues, and the general mischief of any cowboy town. In general, substitute lumberman for cowboy.
And substitute Felix E. Feist for John Ford as director. Feist made a series of B-movies, sports movies, and other genre flick, and this really is one of them, even though Kirk Douglas, the main actor, was coming off of two major movies elsewhere. It condemns both the movie and the reviewer to admit I had to skip parts of it, it just got so boring. Even Douglas couldn't lift it up. Even fistfights and gunfights and a huge explosion of a timbered railroad bridge couldn't save it. It isn't a terrible movie, but just routine to the point of "don't bother." Naturally it's better than a lot of dreck on television, and that's where you ought to catch it, some night when nothing better looms, by accident. It might actually be fun if it catches you by surprise.
Two things I noticed that were great. One, there is a legal trick pulled where the judge uses the criminal code to get away with cutting some giant trees legally, sort of. And the other is where some women folk (Quakers, who are famous for their pacifism) swarm a man with a gun, knock him down, and then, with relish, one of the women smacks him with a large rock.
There might be some value in seeing this movie as a sign of another environmental time. There is a fight back and forth over a stand of big, valuable trees, and the owner of them at one point is the U.S. government. But even that will not save them. The movie feels like a Wild West genre film, but set in the big woods of the coast instead of the deserts or Monument Valley. But there are all the simple good folk (in this case, Quakers), the sheriff and buddies, the good guy with issues, and the general mischief of any cowboy town. In general, substitute lumberman for cowboy.
And substitute Felix E. Feist for John Ford as director. Feist made a series of B-movies, sports movies, and other genre flick, and this really is one of them, even though Kirk Douglas, the main actor, was coming off of two major movies elsewhere. It condemns both the movie and the reviewer to admit I had to skip parts of it, it just got so boring. Even Douglas couldn't lift it up. Even fistfights and gunfights and a huge explosion of a timbered railroad bridge couldn't save it. It isn't a terrible movie, but just routine to the point of "don't bother." Naturally it's better than a lot of dreck on television, and that's where you ought to catch it, some night when nothing better looms, by accident. It might actually be fun if it catches you by surprise.
Two things I noticed that were great. One, there is a legal trick pulled where the judge uses the criminal code to get away with cutting some giant trees legally, sort of. And the other is where some women folk (Quakers, who are famous for their pacifism) swarm a man with a gun, knock him down, and then, with relish, one of the women smacks him with a large rock.
utile•94
- secondtake
- 19 déc. 2009
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- How long is The Big Trees?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
- Durée1 heure 29 minutes
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1
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