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Der Teufelshauptmann

Originaltitel: She Wore a Yellow Ribbon
  • 1949
  • 6
  • 1 Std. 30 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,2/10
20.311
IHRE BEWERTUNG
John Wayne, John Agar, and Joanne Dru in Der Teufelshauptmann (1949)
Theatrical Trailer from RKO
trailer wiedergeben1:48
2 Videos
99+ Fotos
Klassischer WesternDramaWestlich

Am Vorabend seines Ruhestandes unternimmt Captain Nathan Brittles eine letzte Patrouille, um einen bevorstehenden massiven indischen Angriff zu stoppen. Brittles muss Frauen evakuieren und d... Alles lesenAm Vorabend seines Ruhestandes unternimmt Captain Nathan Brittles eine letzte Patrouille, um einen bevorstehenden massiven indischen Angriff zu stoppen. Brittles muss Frauen evakuieren und die Mission droht zu scheitern.Am Vorabend seines Ruhestandes unternimmt Captain Nathan Brittles eine letzte Patrouille, um einen bevorstehenden massiven indischen Angriff zu stoppen. Brittles muss Frauen evakuieren und die Mission droht zu scheitern.

  • Regie
    • John Ford
  • Drehbuch
    • James Warner Bellah
    • Frank S. Nugent
    • Laurence Stallings
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • John Wayne
    • Joanne Dru
    • John Agar
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,2/10
    20.311
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • John Ford
    • Drehbuch
      • James Warner Bellah
      • Frank S. Nugent
      • Laurence Stallings
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • John Wayne
      • Joanne Dru
      • John Agar
    • 138Benutzerrezensionen
    • 57Kritische Rezensionen
    • 87Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • 1 Oscar gewonnen
      • 2 Gewinne & 1 Nominierung insgesamt

    Videos2

    She Wore A Yellow Ribbon
    Trailer 1:48
    She Wore A Yellow Ribbon
    She Wore A Yellow Ribbon
    Trailer 1:48
    She Wore A Yellow Ribbon
    She Wore A Yellow Ribbon
    Trailer 1:48
    She Wore A Yellow Ribbon

    Fotos134

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    + 126
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    Topbesetzung40

    Ändern
    John Wayne
    John Wayne
    • Capt. Nathan Cutting Brittles
    Joanne Dru
    Joanne Dru
    • Olivia Dandridge
    John Agar
    John Agar
    • Lt. Flint Cohill
    Ben Johnson
    Ben Johnson
    • Sgt. Tyree
    Harry Carey Jr.
    Harry Carey Jr.
    • Second Lt. Ross Pennell
    Victor McLaglen
    Victor McLaglen
    • Top Sgt. Quincannon
    Mildred Natwick
    Mildred Natwick
    • Abby Allshard
    George O'Brien
    George O'Brien
    • Maj. Mac Allshard
    Arthur Shields
    Arthur Shields
    • Dr. O'Laughlin
    Michael Dugan
    • Sgt. Hochbauer
    Chief John Big Tree
    Chief John Big Tree
    • Chief Pony That Walks
    Fred Graham
    Fred Graham
    • Sgt. Hench
    George Sky Eagle
    George Sky Eagle
    • Chief Sky Eagle
    • (as Chief Sky Eagle)
    Tom Tyler
    Tom Tyler
    • Cpl. Mike Quayne
    Noble Johnson
    Noble Johnson
    • Chief Red Shirt
    Rudy Bowman
    Rudy Bowman
    • Pvt. John Smith - aka Rome Clay
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Lee Bradley
    • Interpreter
    • (Nicht genannt)
    Nora Bush
    • Party Guest
    • (Nicht genannt)
    • Regie
      • John Ford
    • Drehbuch
      • James Warner Bellah
      • Frank S. Nugent
      • Laurence Stallings
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen138

    7,220.3K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    7ecjones1951

    This is my father's favorite film,

    and he has easily seen it over 200 times. He got me hooked on it when I was a young girl by pointing out all the gentle humor and the repeated comedic bits that separate it from many other westerns. I still love it for those reasons and more.

    "Yellow Ribbon" is not John Ford's best movie, but it may be John Wayne's. Capt. Brittles is -- needless to say -- the antithesis of Henry Fonda's Col. Thursday in "Fort Apache." When the film opens, it is obvious Capt. Brittles has earned the respect of his troops and won their loyalty, and by the fade-out they have come to love him like devoted sons.

    For someone who was allegedly so difficult to work with, John Ford put together a truly remarkable stock company of actors and technical personnel. They appeared in his films time and again, and there was more or less a core group of professionals on screen and off that gave all of Ford's westerns color, excitement and realism. But "Yellow Ribbon" has something less expected: warmth. And there's not a thing wrong with that.

    "She Wore A Yellow Ribbon" is also arguably the most sentimental movie John Ford ever made, and there's nothing wrong with that, either.
    8hitchcockthelegend

    The army is always the same. The sun and the moon change, but the army knows no seasons.

    The second instalment of the acclaimed John Ford cavalry trilogy had a lot to live up to after Fort Apache (1948). So it may not be too controversial to state that "Yellow Ribbon" doesn't quite achieve the potential promise that Fort Apache's foundation building had provided. However, here is still a mighty Western of many joys.

    The lead theme here is the passing of time, of time and love lost, lest we forget indeed. These themes give the film a strong emotional heartbeat from which to work from - even if on proviso it's noted that elsewhere there is not much in the way of an adrenalin pumping action extravaganza. Accepting it as an affecting character piece is something of a requisite if you want to get the most out of the viewing experience, and of course simultaneously getting wrapped up in the gifted art of film making in the process.

    John Wayne gives a top notch performance in what is obviously one of the first out and out serious roles that Ford gave him. His ageing Captain Nathan Brittles requires him to put in a very fallible human type of performance, something that he achieves in spades. He's a believable leader who is ruing the calling of time on his career in the service. Yet even Wayne's affecting turn is trumped by some of the most gorgeous cinematography you could wish to see from the 1940s.

    Winton Hoch clashed with Ford on the shoot about various perfections (both parties equally to blame of course), but the final result is incredible. Witness a scene as Brittles visits his dead wife's grave, the backdrop is all purple and red, a storm is imminent, metaphorically and in reality. Has shooting in the desert ever been so colourfully lush? The locations are breath takingly brought to vivid life, Monument Valley in all its glory.

    Picture leaves an indelible mark on the conscious for the art and performances (Joanne Dru, Ben Johnson, Victor McLaglen & Harry Carey Jr bring their "A" game), but temper that slightly for as a story it just about gets by for dramatic purpose. Yet of course John Ford knows his onions and structures it accordingly, bringing precision and a genuine love of the genre and the material to hand. 8/10
    7NewEnglandPat

    An American classic by John Ford and John Wayne

    This film is the second entry in John Ford's "cavalry trilogy" and may be the best of the three with John Wayne's performance being one of the best of his career. The picture is an ode to the U.S. cavalry in the wake of the Custer debacle with the threat of more Indian uprisings on the frontier. Wayne's escort patrol is the film's focal point which also has an on-going romantic squabble between two young officers and a woman which explains the movie's title. The wonderful lensing captures the natural beauty of Monument Valley, and the scenes of the patrol crossing the wide expanses during a thunderstorm with lightning streaks against the dark clouds are among the picture's best moments. Ben Johnson stands out as an ex-Confederate soldier and point man and other Ford stock regulars such as Harry Carey Jr. and John Agar have supporting roles.
    9bkoganbing

    "...wherever they rode, whatever they fought for, that place became the United States."

    The second of John Ford's cavalry trilogy that deals with the life of the professional soldier is the only one that was photographed in color. Lucky are we, the cinema fans two generations away.

    She Wore A Yellow Ribbon has John Wayne the embodiment of the thirty year army man. The year of the action of the film which is 1876 has Wayne mentioning in passing that he was at the Battle of Chapultepec in the Mexican War which started in 1846. Wayne's Nathan Brittles was by his account a dirty shirt tailed runaway from his father's Ohio farm when he joined the army. And now he's reached mandatory retirement. He's married and has had a family who he's lost for reasons John Ford doesn't explain in the film. But Wayne dutifully, "makes his report" at their gravesides every night he's at the post.

    Wayne's seen a lot of military history and a lot of tragedy. With no family left, the United States Cavalry is his home and family. He doesn't like the idea of retiring at all. In a later Ford film, The Long Gray Line, Martin Maher says that all he knows and holds dear is at West Point. Wayne could have said that line himself here.

    Even though George O'Brien is the commanding officer at Fort Stark, Wayne is the father figure for the whole post. And not like some of the others don't behave like children. The whole romantic rivalry between John Agar and Harry Carey, Jr. over Joanne Dru seems pretty childish. Cute while in the safety of the post, but when out on a mission downright dangerous and Wayne like the good father scolds his kiddies.

    With some makeup to grey his hair and wrinkle him a might, Wayne turns in one of his finest performances on the screen. Harry Carey, Jr. wrote what is probably the most evenly balanced portrayal of the Duke in his memoirs In the Company of Heroes. They didn't always get along, but Carey says Wayne was an inspiration to him and the other younger cast members. In fact during the scene with the gunrunners Paul Fix and Grant Withers being killed in the Indian camp while Wayne, Carey, and Agar watch on the ridge, the whole idea for the chaw of tobacco bit came from Carey himself, but that Wayne encouraged the improvisation as he was wont to do.

    Other than the Duke, my favorite portrayal in the film is that of Ben Johnson as Sergeant Tyree. Wayne recognizes in him a younger version of himself. In fact Tyree is a former Confederate Army captain, a fact brought out in the death scene of "Trooper Smith" another former Confederate who in fact was a general in that army. Ben Johnson was a real cowboy, a horse wrangler who John Ford gave a chance to act. He graced many a film with his presence and won himself an Oscar to cap his career in The Last Picture Show.

    Like in Fort Apache and Rio Grande, She Wore a Yellow Ribbon is the story of the professional soldier and the sacrifices he makes when he gives up his civilian status to serve his country. It's a universal theme, not just confined to the USA. No one embodied that theme better than did John Wayne as Nathan Brittles in She Wore a Yellow Ribbon.
    8lastliberal

    You got a breath on you like a hot mince pie.

    One of the best written westerns and an Oscar winner for cinematography, this John Ford western, some 10 years after Stagecoach, shows a different side of Wayne.

    It is the middle film in John Ford's (and actor John Wayne's) U.S. Cavalry trilogy, which includes Fort Apache (1948) & Rio Grande (1950. It is the best of the three as we see Wayne, just short of retirement, trying to mature a couple of Lieutenant's to take his place.

    Comic relief is provided by Victor McLaglen, as Top Sergeant Quincannon, especially where he single-handedly whips eight men between drinks. His presence can certainly light up a movie.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      John Wayne, who was 41 when the film was made, won great acclaim for his portrayal of 60-year-old Capt. Nathan Brittles.
    • Patzer
      The narration refers to the Battle of Little Bighorn, which took place in June of 1876. It also states that one of the ways the news of this was spread was via the Pony Express. The Pony express was founded in April of 1860 and ceased operations a year and a half later, in October of 1861. This was 15 years before the battle.
    • Zitate

      Captain Nathan Brittles: Never apologize. It's a sign of weakness.

    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Kampf am roten Fluß (1954)
    • Soundtracks
      She Wore A Yellow Ribbon
      (uncredited)

      Heard over opening credits, in score and sung by troopers

    Top-Auswahl

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 5. Februar 1954 (Westdeutschland)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Spanisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • La legión invencible
    • Drehorte
      • Monument Valley, Arizona, USA
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Argosy Pictures
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

    Ändern
    • Budget
      • 1.600.000 $ (geschätzt)
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 5.919 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 30 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.37 : 1

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