- Source: Many Rivers to Cross (film)
Many Rivers to Cross is a 1955 American colonial Western film shot in CinemaScope directed by Roy Rowland and starring Robert Taylor and Eleanor Parker.
Plot
Kentucky, the late 18th century: A traveling preacher's coming to town, but Miles Henderson is upset because Cissie Crawford seems reluctant to marry him. She seems more interested in a handsome trapper who has just arrived in the territory, Bushrod Gentry.
Cissie's life is saved by Bushrod after she is attacked by Shawnee tribesmen, but he is a confirmed bachelor who lets her down gently. While traveling on his own, Bushrod is wounded by the Indians and in danger until another woman, Mary Stuart Cherne, saves his life.
Feeling love at first sight, Mary takes him home to her Scottish-born father, Cadmus, and their Indian servant, Sandak, to heal. Her longtime suitor Luke Radford is unhappy about this interloper.
Bushrod again declines a chance to settle down, whereupon an angry Mary ends up keeping him there against his will. With her four brothers keeping a gun on him, Bushrod is forced to marry Mary.
He punches a justice of the peace and gets 30 days in jail. Another trapper, Esau Hamilton, has a sick child whose life Bushrod ends up saving. He slips away and intends to be on his own again, but Bushrod comes across Indians who are trying to scalp Mary. He saves her life this time, then accepts his fate as a man in love...
Cast
Opening dedication
"We respectfully dedicate our storyto the frontier women of Americawho helped their men settle theKentucky wilderness. They weregallant and courageous, and withouttheir aggressive cooperation – few ofus would be around to see this picture."
Production
MGM bought the rights to a story by Steve Frazee published in Argosy magazine. Jack Cummings was assigned to produce. Janet Leigh was originally intended to be the female lead.
Reception
According to MGM records the film earned $2,084,000 in the US and Canada and $1,748,000 elsewhere, resulting in a profit of $533,000.
The review in the February 24, 1955 issue of The New York Times panned the film: “as inane, raucous and clumsy an attempt at Western satire as has snaked out of the Hollywood brush in a long time. Photographed in color and CinemaScope, for no discernible reason, it co-stars Eleanor Parker and Robert Taylor. The story tells how a husband-craving tomboy of the Kentucky frontier literally exhausts a bold frontiersman into marriage and, after what seems years later, true love.The heavy-handed writing, directing and acting, especially that of Miss Parker and Victor McLaglen, as a hillbilly patriarch, all but nudges the customer into the aisle, in poking fun at buckskin horseplay, shotgun weddings and, as a climax, Shawnee warfare. James Arness and Rosemary DeCamp are effective in the picture's one thoughtful interlude, and Mr. Taylor looks miserable about the whole dismal cartoon.”
See also
List of American films of 1955
References
External links
Many Rivers to Cross at IMDb
Many Rivers to Cross at AllMovie
Many Rivers to Cross at the TCM Movie Database
Many Rivers to Cross at the AFI Catalog of Feature Films
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Marilyn Monroe
- Sig Ruman
- William Haade
- Ibnu Batutah
- Globalisasi
- Academy Awards ke-87
- Hari Kasih Sayang
- Victor McLaglen
- Daftar julukan kota di Amerika Serikat
- Cher
- Many Rivers to Cross (film)
- Many Rivers to Cross
- The African Americans: Many Rivers to Cross
- Cross River gorilla
- Kiss the Girls (1997 film)
- Cross-dressing in film and television
- Into the Wild (film)
- The Bridge on the River Kwai
- Shoes on the Danube Bank
- Jimmy Cliff
No More Posts Available.
No more pages to load.