(1955)
Kirk Douglas, Jeanne Crain, Claire Trevor, William Campbell, Richard Boone,
Mara Corday, Jack Elam, Sheb Wooley, Jay C. Flippen, Frank Chase, Eddie C.
Waller, Roy Barcroft, Millicent Patrick, Casey MacGregor, Jack Ingram, Ewing
Mitchell, George Wallace, William Challee, James Hayward, William Phillips,
Malcolm Atterbury, Paul birch, Myron Healey, Mark Hanna, Lee Roberts, Myrna
Hansen;
Directed by: King Vidor; Color |
| Star is a big, sprawling, beautifully
photographed Western with an age-old theme--a range war--with barbed wire as
an interesting focal point at which the small ranchers are provoked against
the "big spread". Thanks to a script by Borden chase who also wrote
Red River, there are enough twists and turns to keep the viewer
involved. Kirk Douglas portrays Dempsey Rae, a
wandering cowpoke hired as foreman at a ranch owned by a most captivating
woman with a heart of stone (played to perfection by Jeanne Crain) who has
moved in with the intention of building her own little empire. When
greed for land overtakes her to the point of starving out her neighbors,
Kirk becomes repulsed, in spite of having fallen prey to her charms.
He dumps her like a hot tater and joins sides with the other ranchers.
Sit back and enjoy a lively, spry, offbeat
performance by Douglas who just chews up the screen with his tough-as-nails
character softened (only slightly) by his singin' and banjo-pluckin', a
smoky-hot performance by Crain as sort of an evil Ben Cartwright, a
pre-Paladin Richard Boone, William Campbell as "The Ropin' Kid"doing what
amusingly seems to be a film long impersonation of "The Scarecrow" from
The Wizard of Oz, and another classy Frankie Laine theme
song...................... |