CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
5.5/10
281
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Agrega una trama en tu idioma1933. A city boy arrives in his late mother's birthplace to discover the locals have been pestered by drought, old fights and a cougar. He turns out to be pivotal in all of these.1933. A city boy arrives in his late mother's birthplace to discover the locals have been pestered by drought, old fights and a cougar. He turns out to be pivotal in all of these.1933. A city boy arrives in his late mother's birthplace to discover the locals have been pestered by drought, old fights and a cougar. He turns out to be pivotal in all of these.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Opiniones destacadas
Hi, Everyone, Lon McCallister shines as a newbie to the Utah drought stricken badlands of the 1930s. He has left his Eastern digs to get away from the Depression. When he meets Peggy Ann Garner he wishes he could get back to the squalor he left. Her jawbone never stops when she is on screen.
This movie is not great by any means, but it has some good moments. There are only a few human actors in this drama. The Big Cat does a good job of hitting his marks and growling. The best scenes by far are the fights. They seem real. Not just the human, but the animal fights are well done for 1949 when George Lucas was not available for a light show or animation.
In one fight scene between Preston Foster and Forrest Tucker you can almost feel the pain. Lon McCallister manages to get into a fight with his two cousins and they don't hold back. The cat has a scrape or two with a beautiful white dog and all of it is photographed to show how rough it is to survive in an environment with limited water and food and money sources.
Lon had a true screen presence that did not last long enough. If they quit using him because of his short stature, it was a loss to the fans. Skip Homeier is good as a rotten kid. Forrest Tucker is easy to dislike and he carries off the villain honors well here. Preston Foster does an excellent job of being a less than likable hero.
The best acting here is by Sara Haden as the mom of Peggy Ann Garner. She reminds me of my aunts of the 1950s. The worst singing in movie history might be the acappella ditty offered up by Irving Bacon as he approaches Lon McCallister who is walking down the road with his suitcase.
Lon McCallister and Skip Homeier both should have had long careers similar to Clint Eastwood and Lee Van Cleef. They had a good hero/villain chemistry. Somehow it just didn't happen.
When you watch this and see Forrest Tucker in 1949, you are seeing F Troop's Sgt. O'Rourke just 16 years before he became known for his comedic fights.
I recommend Stage Door Canteen with Lon McCallister (5'6") and Sunset Carson (6'4"). You will see the same boyish charm of McCallister 6 years before The Big Cat was made.
Tom Willett
This movie is not great by any means, but it has some good moments. There are only a few human actors in this drama. The Big Cat does a good job of hitting his marks and growling. The best scenes by far are the fights. They seem real. Not just the human, but the animal fights are well done for 1949 when George Lucas was not available for a light show or animation.
In one fight scene between Preston Foster and Forrest Tucker you can almost feel the pain. Lon McCallister manages to get into a fight with his two cousins and they don't hold back. The cat has a scrape or two with a beautiful white dog and all of it is photographed to show how rough it is to survive in an environment with limited water and food and money sources.
Lon had a true screen presence that did not last long enough. If they quit using him because of his short stature, it was a loss to the fans. Skip Homeier is good as a rotten kid. Forrest Tucker is easy to dislike and he carries off the villain honors well here. Preston Foster does an excellent job of being a less than likable hero.
The best acting here is by Sara Haden as the mom of Peggy Ann Garner. She reminds me of my aunts of the 1950s. The worst singing in movie history might be the acappella ditty offered up by Irving Bacon as he approaches Lon McCallister who is walking down the road with his suitcase.
Lon McCallister and Skip Homeier both should have had long careers similar to Clint Eastwood and Lee Van Cleef. They had a good hero/villain chemistry. Somehow it just didn't happen.
When you watch this and see Forrest Tucker in 1949, you are seeing F Troop's Sgt. O'Rourke just 16 years before he became known for his comedic fights.
I recommend Stage Door Canteen with Lon McCallister (5'6") and Sunset Carson (6'4"). You will see the same boyish charm of McCallister 6 years before The Big Cat was made.
Tom Willett
Just after watching "The Big Cat", I thought to myself....'should I give this one a 5 or a 6?'....but the more and more I thought about it, the more I realized that I WANTED to like the film more....and that I don't think, in hindsight, that it even quite merits a 5.
"The Big Cat" is a coming of age story about a young man from Philadelphia who is trying to live in the west of 1932...but in some ways fails miserably until he ultimately proves himself. Danny (Lon McCallister) is out of place and often makes a nuisance of himself...yet, inexplicably, Tom and Doris (Preston Foster and Peggy Ann Garner) think he's marvelous. It's especially odd with Doris. Perhaps the pickings are slim out in the rural west, but she adores Danny the second she meets him....and it felt like the scriptwriter used this as a plot device to get us to pull for Danny. I, on the other hand, thought he was a bit of a screwup....and was not so impressed by him.
The story is about a cougar who is supposedly huge and very aggressive (the cat they used in the film appeared aggressive though not particularly large). Folks try to shoot it repeatedly without success (why? The cougar was not magical) until eventually the non-violent Danny rises to the occasion.
For me, Danny seemed like a very uncertain and rather wimpy guy and seeing his transformation at the seemed a bit farfetched. Not impossible...but hard to believe. Overall, a film that failed to connect with me....not a bad film but also not a particularly memorable one.
"The Big Cat" is a coming of age story about a young man from Philadelphia who is trying to live in the west of 1932...but in some ways fails miserably until he ultimately proves himself. Danny (Lon McCallister) is out of place and often makes a nuisance of himself...yet, inexplicably, Tom and Doris (Preston Foster and Peggy Ann Garner) think he's marvelous. It's especially odd with Doris. Perhaps the pickings are slim out in the rural west, but she adores Danny the second she meets him....and it felt like the scriptwriter used this as a plot device to get us to pull for Danny. I, on the other hand, thought he was a bit of a screwup....and was not so impressed by him.
The story is about a cougar who is supposedly huge and very aggressive (the cat they used in the film appeared aggressive though not particularly large). Folks try to shoot it repeatedly without success (why? The cougar was not magical) until eventually the non-violent Danny rises to the occasion.
For me, Danny seemed like a very uncertain and rather wimpy guy and seeing his transformation at the seemed a bit farfetched. Not impossible...but hard to believe. Overall, a film that failed to connect with me....not a bad film but also not a particularly memorable one.
Were it not for a rather cheesy romance between the hapless, suit and tie wearing "Danny" (Lon McCallister) and the terribly chintzy "Doris" (Peggy Ann Garner), this might have made for quite an exciting mountain adventure. The former arrives from the city to the area where his late mother grew up. The area is suffering not just from the depression, but from a drought and his welcome is not as warm as he might like. He takes up with "Eggers" (Preston Foster) who is set on hunting down a local cougar that is wreaking havoc on the local farming community, but he is soon embroiled in some local shenanigans with the "Hawks" family - "Gil" (Forrest Tucker) and his two yokel sons. Some of the hunt scenes are quite good fun, though the cougar seemed a little unenthusiastic to me; and there is quite a fun waterside brawl. Sadly, though, there is just way too much sentimental guff (usually with a gently accompanying string score) to sustain the theme for me. There's a bit of a twist at the (really quite implausible) end, but despite some fairly decent, active, photography, I felt it ran just a bit low on gas.
Young Lon McCallister has trouble making ends meet in depression-era Philadelphia, so he returns to his dead mother's rural hometown. There, he becomes involved with the town folk's soap opera past, and catches the eye of Peggy Ann Garner. Due to drought, a menacing cougar is on the scene, making the outdoors very dangerous for the movie's characters...
There is a lot of fighting, with and without the cougar; but, that's not the film's most interesting feature. More interesting is that the movie features a few "child stars" past their "Hollywood Prime." On hand: Lon McCallister, from 1943's "Stage Door Canteen" and others, Peggy Ann Garner from 1945's "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn" and others, Skip Homeier from 1944's "Tomorrow, the World" and others, and Gene Reynolds from 1938's "Boys Town" and others. Mr. Reynolds won huge fame later, as a producer ("M*A*S*H").
"The Big Cat" and the family dog win big acting honors.
**** The Big Cat (4/49) Phil Karlson ~ Lon McCallister, Peggy Ann Garner, Preston Foster, Forrest Tucker
There is a lot of fighting, with and without the cougar; but, that's not the film's most interesting feature. More interesting is that the movie features a few "child stars" past their "Hollywood Prime." On hand: Lon McCallister, from 1943's "Stage Door Canteen" and others, Peggy Ann Garner from 1945's "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn" and others, Skip Homeier from 1944's "Tomorrow, the World" and others, and Gene Reynolds from 1938's "Boys Town" and others. Mr. Reynolds won huge fame later, as a producer ("M*A*S*H").
"The Big Cat" and the family dog win big acting honors.
**** The Big Cat (4/49) Phil Karlson ~ Lon McCallister, Peggy Ann Garner, Preston Foster, Forrest Tucker
**SPOILERS** With the great depression and a disastrous drought all the people in this little area of Southern Utah needed was a deadly mountain lion on the loose killing their cattle to make them forget their troubles.Having a $150.00 reward, a lot of money back in 1933, on it's head everyone in the area were out to get the deadly feline but with no success because the lion was always one step, or paw, ahead of them. Into the mix comes young Danny Turner, Lon McCallister, from Philidelphia looking for a job at the Tom Egger place.
Tom, Preston Foster, sent Danny a letter about three months ago about Danny helping him with his work in the tan bark business but since them Tom's tan bark business went kaput. Since there came on the tan bark market a new and cheaper synthetic tan bark that put poor Tom out of business. Danny shocked at Tom's situation, as well as his own, decides to stay with him and help him gun down the killer mountain lion for the reward money. Money that can give Tom a jump start to fill his orders of tan bark and get him, and Danny, back on his feet again.
Meanwhile Tom had been feuding with his neighbor Gil Hawks, Forrest Tucker, for over twenty years a feud that started over Lucy, Gils's, sister, who Tom wanted to marry. The feud got so out of hand that Lucy soon fled east to get away from both her brother Gil and her lover Tom and to keep from ending up dead by getting caught in the crossfire of these two lunatics.
In Philidelphia Lucy met the man that she married and with whom had Danny but she and Tom secretly carried a torch for each other .Now with both his parents dead and no work to be found Danny could only go west to Utah and Tom for work and for someone who would treat his as if he were his own son.
The fighting in the movie between Tom and Gil is so off-the-wall and outrageous that you wonder how they both survived all that time without ending up dead behind bars or in a loony bin. With guns and axes and chains the two were going at it in what seemed like a crazed daily ritual. The appearance of the killer cat was the only thing that kept the two from really going at it and finishing themselves off for good long before the movie ended.
Danny also got the two Hawks boys Jim & Wid, Skip Homeier & Gene Reynolds, mad at him when pretty Doris Cooper, Peggy-Ann Garner, went wild over the young city boy even before she ever laid eyes on him. This showed how desperate Doris was for a normal young man who wasn't part of the crowd that she had to deal with in that part of of state.
Trying to track down the mountain lion Tom shoots a buck for food and after Danny, who couldn't bring himself to gun down the buck, dragged it back to Tom's place but forgot to take Tom's 30/30 rifle that he used to track down the panther. With the deadly cougar picking up the scent and then trying to eat the hanging buck carcass Tom foolishly tries to shoot the cat with a .22 rifle. A .22 is useless against a large wild animal like a mountain lion and Tom gets killed by it when it ambushes him . Danny feeling guilty about Tom's death, since he left the gun that would have done in the cat back in the woods, goes out on his own and finds it's lions lair. With the unexpected help of a member of the hated Hawk family, their dog Spike, Danny has it out with and finally finishes off the elusive and deadly killer.
Tom, Preston Foster, sent Danny a letter about three months ago about Danny helping him with his work in the tan bark business but since them Tom's tan bark business went kaput. Since there came on the tan bark market a new and cheaper synthetic tan bark that put poor Tom out of business. Danny shocked at Tom's situation, as well as his own, decides to stay with him and help him gun down the killer mountain lion for the reward money. Money that can give Tom a jump start to fill his orders of tan bark and get him, and Danny, back on his feet again.
Meanwhile Tom had been feuding with his neighbor Gil Hawks, Forrest Tucker, for over twenty years a feud that started over Lucy, Gils's, sister, who Tom wanted to marry. The feud got so out of hand that Lucy soon fled east to get away from both her brother Gil and her lover Tom and to keep from ending up dead by getting caught in the crossfire of these two lunatics.
In Philidelphia Lucy met the man that she married and with whom had Danny but she and Tom secretly carried a torch for each other .Now with both his parents dead and no work to be found Danny could only go west to Utah and Tom for work and for someone who would treat his as if he were his own son.
The fighting in the movie between Tom and Gil is so off-the-wall and outrageous that you wonder how they both survived all that time without ending up dead behind bars or in a loony bin. With guns and axes and chains the two were going at it in what seemed like a crazed daily ritual. The appearance of the killer cat was the only thing that kept the two from really going at it and finishing themselves off for good long before the movie ended.
Danny also got the two Hawks boys Jim & Wid, Skip Homeier & Gene Reynolds, mad at him when pretty Doris Cooper, Peggy-Ann Garner, went wild over the young city boy even before she ever laid eyes on him. This showed how desperate Doris was for a normal young man who wasn't part of the crowd that she had to deal with in that part of of state.
Trying to track down the mountain lion Tom shoots a buck for food and after Danny, who couldn't bring himself to gun down the buck, dragged it back to Tom's place but forgot to take Tom's 30/30 rifle that he used to track down the panther. With the deadly cougar picking up the scent and then trying to eat the hanging buck carcass Tom foolishly tries to shoot the cat with a .22 rifle. A .22 is useless against a large wild animal like a mountain lion and Tom gets killed by it when it ambushes him . Danny feeling guilty about Tom's death, since he left the gun that would have done in the cat back in the woods, goes out on his own and finds it's lions lair. With the unexpected help of a member of the hated Hawk family, their dog Spike, Danny has it out with and finally finishes off the elusive and deadly killer.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe cougar and dog actually live together with the handler. They appeared in The Red Rider (1934) and a few other movies.
- Citas
Tom Eggers: Ain't you forgettin' this is my property?
Matt Cooper: [with gun pointed at Tom] Ain't you forgettin' this is my gun?
- Bandas sonorasPolly Wolly Doodle
(uncredited)
Traditional
Selecciones populares
Inicia sesión para calificar y agrega a la lista de videos para obtener recomendaciones personalizadas
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 15 minutos
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
Contribuir a esta página
Sugiere una edición o agrega el contenido que falta
Principales brechas de datos
By what name was Pantera brava (1949) officially released in India in English?
Responda