Jubilee Trail (1954) Poster

(1954)

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7/10
Slow but colorful and entertaining Western with emphasis on lavish sets and costumes.
Slim-421 November 1999
I like this movie. The slow pace is an asset rather than a liability. Although the cast is not particularly well-known, there is a delightful mix of characters in this better-than-usual Western. The movie is rather faithfully based on Gwen Bristow's romantic novel about early California.

The interior sets are the real stars of this film. From 1845 New Orleans to pre-Mexican War Santa Fe and Los Angeles the sets are very colorful and lavish. Joan Leslie, Vera Ralston and the rest of the cast work hard to brighten up the sets.

There is an aura of pleasant reality about this film. The characters generally are dressed in period clothing and carry vintage weapons. There is a refreshing variety in the clothing worn by the male characters, particularly in the hats. The wardrobes of Leslie and Ralston are as lavish as the sets. The only disappointment is the standard backlot Western town set which pretends to be Los Angeles. This set has appeared in countless Westerns and it looks oddly inappropriate here.

Much of this film occurs indoors. There is also little action. However, the great sets and script more than compensate. The acting is generally very good and the cast does a wonderful job with the characterizations. Vera Ralston does justice to her role as Florinda, a woman with an awful memory in her past. Joan Leslie's performance as a woman stranded in California by the untimely death of her husband is also far above standard. Forrest Tucker's role as John Ives is uneven. In some scenes he speaks his lines with a whisper. However, he more than compensates by handling himself well in the film's action scenes. Jack Elam has a bit part as a bad guy. Although he says only three words, he exudes evil in his brief appearance.

Normally, a slow pace is the kiss of death for a Western, but in this case the glacial pace works in its favor. Rather than hoping that something will happen, the viewer may find himself or herself wishing it won't end. This is a film that seems longer than it really is, and I wish it had been a little longer. I'm always sorry to see the end credits.

Victor Young's score is rich and vibrant. Although far from his best work, songs like "Jubilee Trail" are very enjoyable. The music for this film is not as overpowering as the music in Westerns like "The Big Country" and "The Magnificent Seven". In one scene the haunting melody of "Jubilee Trail" is played with strings and is almost inaudible as the mule train crosses the desert toward California. The brief cue which heralds the arrival of the pack train from California in Santa Fe effectively communicates the excitement of the moment. The only really loud song is Vera Ralston's song in the Los Angeles saloon. In this case the loud song is appropriate, because they are celebrating the expected birth of Garnet's (Joan Leslie) baby. As Western scores go this one stands out because it is different.

This film is now available on video and is well worth watching. You might find yourself watching it over and over again as I do.
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7/10
Warm & Fuzzy in the Saddle
5November17 December 2006
I have a poster of Jubilee Trail on my wall and at the top it says, "The Greatest American Drama Since Gone With the Wind." Now that's a howler and yet I've always liked this unusual western. Nothing quite like Jubilee Trail on a rainy Saturday afternoon with cookies and milk. It's about the settling of California but is short on action and long on dialogue... not for the typical western watcher perhaps. It kind of reminds me of "Johnny Guitar" (made the same year by the same studio) with two women as the leads. Here they are not protagonists but great, supportive friends. Top-billed is Vera Ralston (married to the studio head) but the real star is the always-enchanting Joan Leslie and this is one of her finest moments. Forrest Tucker, John Russell, Jim Davis, Buddy Baer and others who have worked with Leslie and Ralston before make this film look like a happy working experience for all. We couch cowboys are the winners.
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5/10
Unusual and Charming Colorful Western Romance
susanctoo6 August 2016
Unusual and charming western, though it is really more of a romantic costume film. The sets and costumes are glorious, as others have noted. Very unusual color combinations for the ladies. Great authenticity to the sets. Lots of Spanish being spoken, without translation. The acting is good and the story is not at all the usual wagon train picture. I did not care so much for all of the singing. It was a little distracting. Filler if you will. But the romance was good. It was kind of an old fashioned melodrama actually. Well just watch it, but do not have expectations ahead of time because it is not at all what you would expect.
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strong women
hipthornton26 December 2002
Lavish Republic western with good female cast.Joan Leslie and Vera Ralston are most effective as two women heading to California to make a new life.Joan's husband is killed,Vera finds work as an entertainer,barkeeper.There's a load of familiar faces in the character parts.The costumes are nice.The settings lavish.Republic made alot of strong women films with a western setting.It was nice seeing women finally being more than just dutiful wives and saloon girls.Republic had a way of making realistic settings,costumes.The men in the story actually look dusty after a long ride.The Victor Young score is very nice,including the title song.This film is usually dismissed as just another Vera Ralston film but it's Joan Leslie's story.
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7/10
Good movie; want to read the novel now
charcas6718 January 2019
Republic pictures put out all the stops for them for this adaptation of the Gwen bistrow novel; class production values despite the backlot early Los Angeles set; good depiction of the friendship between Garnett and Floridan; their bond despite how opposite they are driven the story; Joan Leslie is very touching and sympathetic as Garnett; Vera ralston as Floridan isn't subtle or nuanced in her part but her flamboyance is lively and works well-too bad she didn't get more parts like this as she works well in such roles; I've a feeling a lot of the book was left out but the picture makes me want to read it; all in all a solid well produced and entertaining republic picture
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4/10
More Soap Opera Than Horse Opera
bkoganbing31 July 2006
Jubilee Trail represented one of the last attempts of Herbert J. Yates to get the American movie public to accept his wife Vera Hruba Ralston as a star. Again she didn't score with the public and pretty soon Vera and Republic Pictures were history.

Actually Republic Pictures really ended the day that John Wayne got shed of his long term contract with Republic. Yates made more money loaning him out to other studios than he did with the films that actually starred the Duke. After all, Duke's loanout services were pure profit, no overhead expenses involved in producing high budget epics that befit his growing star status.

John Wayne couldn't have saved Jubilee Trail because the central characters here are two women, Vera and Joan Leslie. Vera's running from a mysterious past in New York and she hooks up with Joan and her new husband John Russell. Russell is traveling west with a pack train of supplies for he and his brother Ray Middleton. Russell also has a past himself that involves some kanoodling with the owner of a local ranchero and a small bundle of joy he only finds out about just as he's starting west.

Middleton's real upset about the marriage as they've ruined plans for a merger between the two families. He takes an unreasoning dislike to Joan Leslie and is determined to gain control of the child she's carrying now after Russell is killed.

It really is more soap opera than horse opera. There's an Indian attack sequence, but I'm sure it's in there so western fans can have a little action. There's also a nice gun battle between Forrest Tucker and two bad guys in Middleton's employ looking to steal Leslie's child after it's born. Middleton is the kind of villain you are more likely to see on daytime soaps.

Tucker has the hero role, but he really does little between the action sequences but look solemn and declare his love for Leslie. Pat O'Brien has a supporting part as a cashiered army surgeon who drinks to forget his troubled past. And presiding over it all once they reach California is Vera at Jim Davis's saloon.

Vera's got the Marlene Dietrich part here, but Jubilee Trail would have been a whole lot better if Yates had gotten Marlene Dietrich for the part.
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3/10
When a Producer Loves His Wife Too Much..
churei5 January 2005
JUBILEE TRAIL is close to a disaster, and it particularly distressing to see lovely and very talented JOAN LESLIE reduced to a namby-pamby secondary role to the awful Vera Ralston. Ralston, of course, was a stellar Olympic figure skating champion who arrived in Hollywood to skate her way into a couple of films for Republic Pictures' boss Herbert J. Yates (who fell in love with her, married her, and spent years and money on trying to convince the public that she could act.) Ralston's acting was poor but less annoying in those films in which she was surrounded by professionals (e.g. MURDER IN THE MUSIC HALL and ANGEL ON THE AMAZON). But Yates kept pushing the envelope, and Republic's expensive western JUBILEE TRAIL is one of the nadirs. Lots of money obviously spent on the film, but Ralston, as a 'dance hall' performer (hmmm) is all over the place with shrieky acting techniques, an overabundance of makeup, and a plump-ish body. It is truly one of the lowest acting exercises. Photography, though, is quite good, and Yates' money expenditures are obvious in other facets of the production. John Russell is the best in a large supporting cast. Joan Leslie remains the central character around whom the plot is moved along. She is beautiful and tries to do the best with some of the awful dialog. (She plays a nice newlywed who, for some unfathomable reason, befriends Ralston.). What a waste!!! If life were fair, Leslie, by this time, would have been an appreciated talent whose abilities were growing with her own maturity.
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3/10
Shoot the casting director!!!
mainerose8 March 2009
I was unfortunate enough to see this last week. The book has long been a favorite of mine; the movie is a disaster.Garnet, Florinda, and Oliver were completely miscast---poor Gwen Bristow must still be whirling in her grave after seeing what Hollywood had done to her wonderful saga. Some of the minor roles (John Ives, the Handsome Brute) were adequate as were the sets and costumes. However,the main characters completely failed to resemble their literary counterparts, and their acting was wooden and totally unconvincing. The book is a wonderful story brimming with action and should have made an exciting and colorful movie. Instead, it is incredibly boring and tedious. What a shame!
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8/10
Jim Davis is among the compelling cast in the enjoyable western Jubilee Trail
tavm10 July 2012
In once again reviewing a movie or TV appearance of a cast member of the original "Dallas" in chronological order, I'm now at 1954 where Jim Davis is once again in a Republic production directed by Joseph Kane. He plays Silky, a bar owner who's friends with the main characters played by Joan Leslie, Vera Ralston, Forrest Tucker, and Pat O'Brien. The story moves along briskly with occasional stops for action and music. The Trucolor scenery is nice to look at. Victor Young's music score is also enjoyable to listen to. Really, I don't have a thing to complain about. I do wonder if the novel this movie was based on had even more that happened that they couldn't show here due to time constraints...
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2/10
Poor reflection of a wonderful, prize winning book.
talitha99-15 March 2005
This is a wonderful story which was the most poorly cast movie I've ever seen. I've read the book 20+ times in my life (obviously a favorite!) but the casting person obviously didn't waste their time doing the same even once. The book has rich characters which the movie didn't bring out. Overall, terribly disappointing.

Florinda was the blonde, not Hispanic. Garnet had the black hair (I guess in the movies in those days, blondes were the good girls and dark hair was the bad...kind of like the white hat/black hat cowboys!

A perfect cast (impossible because of age differences) would have Gary Cooper as John, William Shatner as Oliver, Kirk Douglas as Texas and James Cagney as Oliver's brother, to name a few! That's just part of my dream cast.

My advice is to go get the book from the library!
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The friendship of pioneer women
jarrodmcdonald-11 March 2014
Warning: Spoilers
The film is a combination of several genres and features Vera Ralston in a starring role. Miss Ralston, for those who don't know, was a former Czech figure skater who'd competed in the Olympics in the late 1930s. She came to America in the early 1940s as part of an Ice Capades revue that toured the U. S. From there she was cast in an ice skating musical at Republic Pictures and caught the eye of the studio's boss, Herbert Yates.

Yates would eventually marry Vera Ralston in the early 1950s, a short time before THE JUBILEE TRAIL was made. During the intervening period, Yates built Ralston up as more than just a skating star. She was put into a series of high profile, big budget vehicles in a variety of genres. Sometimes Yates would hire people like Maria Ouspenskaya, a renowned acting teacher, to coach Ralston so that her performances would improve.

By the time we reach this picture on Vera Ralston's filmography, we get a much more confident and assured actress. She was never going to be the next Katharine Hepburn or Bette Davis, but part of her ability to connect with costars and moviegoing audiences was her obvious charm and sincerity. Ralston never played a false note in any genre.

In THE JUBILEE TRAIL she gets to dance, cry and ride horses. The story is part musical, part melodrama and part western. There are a few action sequences, which are quite good, plus there is humor, too. Ralston plays a dance hall girl trying to escape a shady past. She entertains men alongside a gal played by Joan Leslie. They forge a strong bond in New Orleans, then decide to head west to find a better life.

Leslie's character has a wealthy husband (John Russell). But he fathered a child with another woman, before they were wed. The baby causes complications but becomes a catalyst for change.

The film is based on a bestselling book by Gwen Bristow, and its script is written by Bruce Manning (Bristow's husband). Even if you haven't read the book, it is obvious that the finished picture has omitted key chunks of the narrative, presumably to keep costs down since the story is rather epic in scope. Of course, Yates wanted to keep the focus on his wife, not the other characters which means Miss Leslie functions by and large as a supporting player, though her role is technically just as important as Ralston's.

Some of the omissions cause the film to feel less cohesive than it might otherwise have been. In fact, several liberties have been taken while transferring Bristow's tale to the big screen. First, a New York prologue is eliminated which would have focused solely on Leslie's character, before she went to New Orleans and met Ralston. Second, we do not see the death of the woman that gave birth to the illegitimate child, who kills herself and the baby (which was most likely prevented by the production code).

Third, a Russian character is introduced at a southwestern ranch, not in San Francisco where he initially appears in the book. And fourth, the film spends its final half hour in Los Angeles, not San Francisco.

There are other omissions. For example, we do not get a scene in which Joan Leslie's character learns she's pregnant. At one point, she has her arm in a sling, though we have no idea why she's been injured that way. And one action sequence seems to be entirely missing, because in the book, there's an earthquake. But those scenes were either edited out or were not filmed at all. My guess is those scenes weren't filmed to keep the production from going over budget.

Despite the imperfections, THE JUBILEE TRAIL is more enjoyable than we might expect it to be. It is told from the point of view of new western females. At its heart, the story celebrates the friendship of pioneer women.
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1/10
Jubilee Trail
gamay927 October 2009
TCM is going crazy. First, 'Beat the Devil,' worst Bogart film ever made. When I get to Heaven and meet Bogie, I will not bring this title up for fear he'll send me to hell.

Next, they air 'Jubilee Trail,' not a western; rather a bad soap opera(was there ever a good one)? I wrote TCM about their frequent repeats, concentrating too much on 'stars,' and failure to air 'cult' films, black (dark) comedies and sexy foreign movies, with stars such as Judy Geeson ('....round the Mulberry Bush), Brigitte Bardot (anything), Nicole Aubrey (Seven Deadly Sins - which I have on DVD). Also, what about 'Montenegro,' best dark comedy I have ever seen.

If TCM airs movies uncut, let's see some sex and nudity, not the American version of foreign films.

As for 'Jubilee Trail,' thumbs w-a-a-a-a-a-y DOWN!
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10/10
Wonderful Movie
kaaih77 March 2009
Vera Ralston is wonderful in all her films. She adds character and a radiance to all her parts. Her accent is delightful. Charles Reichenthal, who left a previous comment criticizing Vera Ralston should be ashamed of himself. I was always taught that, "if you have nothing good to say about a person, don't say anything at all." There is nothing better than the old movies. Today's actors don't know the meaning of the word. Vera Ralston and all the others were wonderful in the movie and it's a movie well worth your time. I suppose "Charles" would say the same about Oscar winner Norma Shearer since she had Irving Thalberg.
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River boat cabaret western
searchanddestroy-113 August 2023
If we can call this movie a western. Me, I hardly call it a western; nothing to do with THE SEARCHERS, BATTLE AT APACHE PASS, or any other real western. It takes place in the secOnd part of the nineteenth century and in America, that's all. But Republic pictures already gave us such items, music hall, burlesque "westerns" with a bit of intrigue, gun duel not far from the Mississippi river or on San Francisco harbor. Universal pictures also made such movies in the late forties, and not only: MISSISSIPPI GAMBLER for instance, or RAWIDE YEARS, which was however a bit tougher than this one. Not my favourite from Jospeh Kane, from wich I prefered BRIMSTONE, MAVERICK QUEEN...Real westerns this time.
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