Alan Ladd interpreta a un ganadero de Kansas que lucha contra los elementos y los compradores de ganado corruptos para construir un ramal ferroviario al Río Grande justo después de la Guerra... Leer todoAlan Ladd interpreta a un ganadero de Kansas que lucha contra los elementos y los compradores de ganado corruptos para construir un ramal ferroviario al Río Grande justo después de la Guerra Civil de los Estados Unidos.Alan Ladd interpreta a un ganadero de Kansas que lucha contra los elementos y los compradores de ganado corruptos para construir un ramal ferroviario al Río Grande justo después de la Guerra Civil de los Estados Unidos.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Bob Cole
- (sin créditos)
- Singer
- (sin créditos)
- Foster
- (sin créditos)
- Barfly
- (sin créditos)
- First Bartender
- (sin créditos)
- Singer
- (sin créditos)
- Barfly
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
Again, Ladd plays a quiet man who is tired of killing. Here, though, he is not a gunfighter, but rather an experienced soldier who learned to use a hand gun very well.
The real star of this film, though, isn't either hero Ladd or heroine Virginia Mayo, but Edmond O'Brien.
O'Brien's character becomes a parallel to the Stonewall character of Elisha Cook, Jr. in Shane. The similarities are more in what happens with the character than in the character.
However, unlike Stonewall, who is simply a pathetic doomed soul with little input in SHANE, O'Brien is given a chance to eat the scenery here, going from drunk to respected architect to manager of a new town to peace keeper for the town.
The story is his. We even get to see him with family. He begins at the low end of the totem pole, then rises to great achievement, only to find himself in a situation where he must make a terrible decision.
In ways, this film is superior to SHANE, and SHANE is a classic. The bad guys, however, were cloned too much after Jack Palance's Wilson, and therein lies the weakness. There are two sadistic bad men here, and their characters just aren't fresh, and too much like Wilson.
Still, it's got a lot of character, and a lot of characters who make this a top Western.
This sets up an interesting conflict at the beginning. Almost as quickly, the movie drops this idea and moves away. Morgan needs to stay in that town and fight back against Brog. The good early tension is lost and it never truly recovers. The Billy Tyler character is idiotic and he flips so quickly. Alan Ladd is a low energy lead. The story is a lot of little jumps and it feels jumpy. The story is too long and the slow pacing feels the length. Brog is a fine villain, but the other cattle buyers should be more hardened. It's not their first time tangling with Brog. The climatic gunfight is so short that it feels anti-climatic. This western story is too big for its own good.
Ladd travels to a nearby town and is treated pretty poorly by the locals since he's a Southerner and the Civil War just ended. However, he stumbles into a relationship with Edmond O'Brien--an alcoholic who has a long history of screwing up his life. Ladd is able to help this new friend find a sense of direction and clean up his life, as they both hit on a scheme to build a town in Kansas that will make cattle drives closer AND they won't need to deal with Caruso. Of course, Caruso made it a habit of playing evil jerks in Westerns during the 50s, so it's pretty certain that he won't just sit back and watch as this new cattle town is created. And when he does behave in a naughty fashion, guess who's the guy to bring justice to this new town?
The film is helped by two excellent leads--Ladd and O'Brien. While story elements are often quite familiar here (the tough boss, the hero that is slow to act, John Qualen with his Swede routine, etc.), the film is handled well and is enjoyable throughout.
It's interesting that in this film O'Brien plays an alcoholic (a pretty familiar role for him actually, as he played this type character in several films) but in reality Alan Ladd was destroying himself with alcohol. He looks pretty lean in the film, but in subsequent films he became puffy and sometimes slurred his lines. It's really sad to see when you are a fan--fortunately, there isn't much evidence of this decline in THE BIG LAND.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaFinal film of Julie Bishop.
- ErroresChad takes the all-metal coffee pot out of the campfire with his bare hands.
- Citas
Chad Morgan: What's the matter?
Joe Jagger: I've been eating so much rabbit, when I sleep at night, I keep dreaming about carrots.
- ConexionesReferenced in Stage Struck (1958)
- Bandas sonorasI LEANED ON A MAN
Written by Leonard Rosenman and Wayne Shanklin
Sung by Bonnie Lou Williams (uncredited) dubbing for Virginia Mayo
Selecciones populares
- How long is The Big Land?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 32min(92 min)