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Post by wmcclain on Mar 11, 2020 12:32:49 GMT
The Red Badge of Courage (1951), directed by John Huston. A more sensitive, detailed treatment than is usual for war pictures. Finely photographed. The center of the story is uncertain young soldier Henry, who worries that he will cut and run in his first battle. Which he does, but after a day and night of wandering, comes back and is extra fierce in battle the next day. Often in this sort of film the soldiers just appear on the line, ready for the action scenes. Here we see the tedious movements to get into position on the dusty terrain. Also with glimpses of camp life, with the rumor mills working overtime. A favorite bit: Henry is on sentry duty in the moonlight. A rebel voice from across the river: "Hey, Yank, would you mind stepping back into the shadows? Be a shame to shoot you on a fine night like this". The voice-over narration from the book is unnecessary and distracting. The highly decorated Audie Murphy is the lead. His fellow infantryman and two-time Pulitzer winning cartoonist Bill Mauldin plays his best friend. Many recognizable character actors of the period: - Royal Dano, Andy Devine
- Arthur Hunnicutt, who had a career playing backwoodsmen
- John Dierkes as "Jim Conklin - the Tall Soldier". I knew his face but not his name.
- Whit Bissell, William Schallert -- both uncredited
- voices of James Whitmore and Strother Martin -- uncredited
Although liked by critics at the time it did not find much of an audience. Huston's work was done after he delivered his version; he left the country to make The African Queen (1951) and had no more to do with it. After two poor sneak previews the studio trimmed it down to 69 minutes and added the narration. The whole story is told in Picture by Lillian Ross, an acclaimed "inside Hollywood" account. She seems snide to me, a literary figure finding that movies are made by shallow sycophants. It was true even then: young people determine what movies get made. Films need audiences and if teens aren't interested in a topic then neither are the studios -- for very long. Available on DVD.
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Post by bravomailer on Mar 11, 2020 13:43:51 GMT
Haven't seen it in a while but recall being impressed with its style and storytelling. John Dierkes was the guy who shot Shane from the staircase and he was with the Duke at the Alamo.
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Post by mattgarth on Mar 11, 2020 13:50:16 GMT
My favorite Dierkes role -- the thoughtful scientist in THE THING FROM ANOTHER WORLD.
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Post by politicidal on Mar 11, 2020 16:22:14 GMT
Found it dull.
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Post by london777 on Mar 12, 2020 5:12:46 GMT
Is Huston's "full-length" version without the voice-over extant?
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Post by wmcclain on Mar 12, 2020 10:55:30 GMT
Is Huston's "full-length" version without the voice-over extant? I don't think so. IMDB.com has a large Triva page (https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0043961/trivia) with these selections:
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Post by london777 on Mar 12, 2020 12:51:14 GMT
Thanks, Mac. I should have looked on IMDb but I was posting late at night and should have been in bed already. But good to have all that info here. What a shame about Huston's own "favorite child".
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Post by nutsberryfarm 🏜 on Mar 15, 2020 16:34:27 GMT
only read the book about the making of it...good reading:
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