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IMDbPro

Une aventure de Buffalo Bill

Titre original : The Plainsman
  • 1936
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 53min
NOTE IMDb
6,8/10
2,6 k
MA NOTE
Gary Cooper and Jean Arthur in Une aventure de Buffalo Bill (1936)
Wild Bill Hickok attempts to stop an Indian uprising that was started by white gun-runners.
Lire trailer2:22
1 Video
99+ photos
Western classiqueDrameOccidental

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueWild Bill Hickok and Buffalo Bill Cody attempt to stop an Indian uprising that was started by white gun-runners.Wild Bill Hickok and Buffalo Bill Cody attempt to stop an Indian uprising that was started by white gun-runners.Wild Bill Hickok and Buffalo Bill Cody attempt to stop an Indian uprising that was started by white gun-runners.

  • Réalisation
    • Cecil B. DeMille
  • Scénario
    • Waldemar Young
    • Harold Lamb
    • Lynn Riggs
  • Casting principal
    • Gary Cooper
    • Jean Arthur
    • James Ellison
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,8/10
    2,6 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Cecil B. DeMille
    • Scénario
      • Waldemar Young
      • Harold Lamb
      • Lynn Riggs
    • Casting principal
      • Gary Cooper
      • Jean Arthur
      • James Ellison
    • 33avis d'utilisateurs
    • 14avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 3 victoires au total

    Vidéos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:22
    Trailer

    Photos128

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 120
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    Rôles principaux99+

    Modifier
    Gary Cooper
    Gary Cooper
    • Wild Bill Hickok
    Jean Arthur
    Jean Arthur
    • Calamity Jane
    James Ellison
    James Ellison
    • Buffalo Bill Cody
    Charles Bickford
    Charles Bickford
    • John Lattimer
    Helen Burgess
    Helen Burgess
    • Louisa Cody
    Porter Hall
    Porter Hall
    • Jack McCall
    Paul Harvey
    Paul Harvey
    • Yellow Hand
    Victor Varconi
    Victor Varconi
    • Painted Horse
    John Miljan
    John Miljan
    • Gen. George A. Custer
    Frank McGlynn Sr.
    Frank McGlynn Sr.
    • Abraham Lincoln
    Granville Bates
    Granville Bates
    • Van Ellyn
    Frank Albertson
    Frank Albertson
    • A Young Trooper
    Purnell Pratt
    Purnell Pratt
    • Capt. Wood
    Fred Kohler
    Fred Kohler
    • Jake - A Teamster
    • (as Fred Kohler Sr.)
    Pat Moriarity
    Pat Moriarity
    • Sgt. McGinnis
    • (as Pat Moriarty)
    Charles Judels
    Charles Judels
    • Tony - The Barber
    Harry Woods
    Harry Woods
    • Quartermaster Sergeant
    Anthony Quinn
    Anthony Quinn
    • A Cheyenne Indian
    • Réalisation
      • Cecil B. DeMille
    • Scénario
      • Waldemar Young
      • Harold Lamb
      • Lynn Riggs
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs33

    6,82.5K
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    Avis à la une

    9theowinthrop

    Lincoln's advice

    After the failure of "The Crusades" at the box office, Cecil B. DeMille stopped doing films about non-American history. His films for the next thirteen years were about our history from Jean Lafitte to World War II (Dr. Wassell). The first in order of production was this film, starring Gary Cooper as Wild Bill Hickok, with Jean Arthur as Calamity Jane. James Ellison was Buffalo Bill, John Miljan (not a villain as usual) was General George A. Custer, and Anthony Quinn was one of the Indians who fought at Little Big Horn. The villains were led by Charles Bickford (selling arms to the Indians) and Porter Hall as Jack McCall (who killed Wild Bill Hickok).

    Basically the film takes up the history of the U.S. after the Civil War. Lincoln is shown at the start talking about what is the next step now that Lee has surrendered. Lincoln talks about the need to secure the west (more about this point later). Then he announces he has to go to the theater. That April 14th must have been very busy for Abe - in "Virginia City" he grants a pardon to Errol Flynn at the request of Miriam Hopkins on the same date.

    Actually, while Lincoln was concerned about the West, his immediate thoughts on the last day of his Presidency were about reunifying the former Confederate states and it's citizens into the Union as soon as possible. It was Reconstruction that occupied his attention, not the west (except for the problems of Maximillian and his French controlled forces in Mexico against Juarez). But he had been involved in actual problems with the West. In 1862 he sent disgraced General John Pope, the loser at Second Manassas, to Minnesota to put down a serious Indian war by the Sioux (the subject of McKinley Kantor's novel, "Sprit Lake". Pope, incompetent against Lee and Jackson, turned out to be quite effective here, and the revolt was smashed.

    However, with all Lincoln's actual attention to western problems, it is doubtful that he says (as Cooper repeats at least once), "The frontier should be secure." There is nothing to say he could not have said it, but it is hardly a profound pronouncement by a leading statesman. Like saying, Teddy Roosevelt said, "Eat a good breakfast every morning for your health." It is not a profound statement of policy. It is, at best, a statement of recognizable fact. Cooper turning it into a minor mantra, like Lincoln's version of the Monroe Doctrine, is ridiculous...typical of the way DeMille's scripts have really bad errors of common sense in them.

    However, this is not a ruinous mistake. "The Plainsman" is an adventure film, and as such it has the full benefit of DeMille the film creator of spectacle. As such it is well worth watching. But not as a textbook on Lincoln's political ideas or his quotable legacy.
    5claudio_carvalho

    Greed and Indian Annihilation

    With the end of the North American Civil War, the manufacturers of repeating rifles find a profitable means of making money selling the weapons to the North American Indians, using the front man John Lattimer (Charles Bickford) to sell the rifles to the Cheyenne. While traveling in a stagecoach with Calamity Jane (Jean Arthur) and William "Buffalo Bill" Cody (James Ellison) and his young wife Louisa Cody (Helen Burgess) that want to settle down in Hays City managing a hotel, Wild Bill Hickok (Gary Cooper) finds the guide Breezy (George Hayes) wounded by arrows and telling that the Indians are attacking a fort using repeating rifles. Hickok meets Gen. George A. Custer (John Miljan) that assigns Buffalo Bill to guide a troop with ammunition to help the fort. Meanwhile the Cheyenne kidnap Calamity Jane, forcing Hickok to expose himself to rescue her.

    The dated "The Plainsman" is a great deception, with a pretentious and shallow story without historical accuracy, "politically incorrect" in the present days and a terrible screenplay that wastes Gary Cooper and Jean Arthur. Their performances are below average with awful characters. The best part is the beginning, with the inception of the lobby of the greedy manufacturers of weapons using the repeating rifles to provide Indian (and also "white man") annihilation in the name of the pockets full of money. My vote is five.

    Title (Brazil): "Jornadas Heróicas" ("Heroic Journeys")
    6Steffi_P

    "Crookeder than a rattlesnake"

    There were not a lot of Westerns in the 1930s, at least not in the A-budget bracket. So why would that canny marketeer and bandwagon-hopper Cecil B. DeMille decide to make one in 1936? The answer is simple. After the failure of his few dramas in the early talkie period, he vowed to make only "big" pictures, and the Old West was simply another historical arena for grand heroic exploits, just like the crusades or the high seas.

    This being DeMille, the idea seems to have been to do a kind of definitive take on the setting. Waldemar Young and Harold Lamb, DeMille's current hacks-du-jour, along with "Oklahoma" playwright Lynn Riggs have created a screenplay that is not so much a cliché-fest as a cosy, sanitised and highly anachronistic snapshot of Western mythology. So we get Wild Bill Hickok, Calamity Jane, Buffalo Bill and General Custer all cheerfully rubbing shoulders like an Old West version of The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, and banding together against the common enemy (the injuns, of course). DeMille's penchant for historical accuracy may give the sets and costumes a look of authenticity, but does not extend as far as actually portraying Calamity as a drunken prostitute, and Hickok as a kind of 19th-century Lemmy from Motorhead.

    The two leads may not look like their historical counterparts, but at least Gary Cooper and Jean Arthur have the rugged demeanour of frontierspeople. They are also good enough performers to do a decent job despite a lack of coaching from DeMille. But as is often the case, the most interesting players are the villains. Charles Bickford looks as if he was chiselled from the buttes of the plains themselves, and gives a performance comparable to Walter Huston's Trampas in the 1929 version of The Virginian. Victor Varconi, once a handsome lead man in the silents, now thanks to his accent and looks reduced to playing all manner of swarthy baddies, is compellingly menacing as Painted Horse. And finally a young Anthony Quinn makes a short but impressive appearance as a Cheyenne warrior, lending a degree of dignity to the natives that is woefully absent in the rest of the picture.

    DeMille himself though does not appear to have "got" the genre. Despite the title, we don't really get to see those plains, and there is none of the romance of the outdoor lifestyle that makes classic Westerns what they are. But looking at DeMille's style you can see he is not a fan of empty spaces. Bigness for him means fullness. He really goes to town on the steamboat boarding scene, conjuring up an image of lively bustle with people moving across the frame in layers receding in depth. This is a very effective way of making a place look crowded without having to place the camera too far back or hire out every extra on the books. In other scenes, such as the one where the townspeople threaten to tar and feather Jean Arthur he uses extras to build walls around the action, filling every spare space with people. Even in simpler scenes there tends to be a degree of complexity to the shot, like a classical painting that tries to cram every aspect of an idea onto the canvas. And DeMille's images are often beautiful in a painterly way, but still the lack of "west" on display stops this from feeling like a Western.

    Think of this then more as an adventure yarn than a horse opera. It may be silly as silly can be (my favourite daft moment is in the opening scene, when Abe Lincoln's wife bursts into a meeting to remind him he's going to be late for the theatre, followed by a doom-laden chord in the background score), but it is not bad as far as no-brainer entertainment goes. The action scenes are exciting and punchy, largely thanks to the dynamic editing of Anne Bauchens. This is by no means essential DeMille, and certainly not essential Cooper, but is good fun if you happen to catch it.
    6FightingWesterner

    Silly Fun

    Wild Bill Hickock, Buffalo Bill Cody, and Calamity Jane fight alongside General Custer and expose a scheme by greedy arms manufacturers to sell repeating rifles to renegade Indians.

    This somewhat gratuitous exercise in wild west name-dropping is pretty silly but also fairly entertaining as well, though it's a bit too long and runs out of steam near the end.

    Also, it might be off-putting to many modern viewers due to it's politically incorrect, stereotyped treatment of Indians.

    The feisty Jean Arthur is extremely cute as Calamity Jane and easily runs away with the picture.

    Recognizable cameos include iconic western sidekick George "Gabby" Hayes as a wounded scout and director Cecile B. DeMille's future son-in-law Anthony Quinn as the Cheyenne brave who relates the news of Custer's last stand to Cody and Hickock.
    discount1957

    64 pistols from De Mille's collection

    Conceived and executed with all the brio typical of a De Mille epic - all the 64 pistols used in the film came from his personal collection - 'The Plainsman', for all its attention to petty historical detail (De Mille was insistent that the Phrase 'Go West, Young man' be correctly attributed to John B. Searle, the Editor of The Terra Haute Express) plays fast and loose with history.

    Cooper is the austere Hickok, Ellison (a regular in the Hopalong Cassidy series, loaned to De Mille by 'Pops' Sherman)a boyish Buffalo Bill, Arthur a breezy Calamity Jane and Miljan a heroic Custer to whose defence all three come. Bickford is the smooth gun running villain. De Mille's well-practised abilities in handling big budgets, big casts and big stories overcame the doggedly domestic drama of Cooper and Arthur's relationship. Slow moving and overly romantic by modern standards in its depiction of Westward expansion, 'The Plainsman' remains an entertaining spectacle.

    In 1966, Universal remade the movie as a vastly inferior telefilm.

    Phil Hardy

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      John Wayne very much wanted the role of Wild Bill Hickok, which he felt certain would make him a star, but director Cecil B. DeMille wanted Gary Cooper instead.
    • Gaffes
      On the evening of Lincoln's assassination Van Ellyn and his associates are discussing the supposedly then current John Soule editorial, "Go West, Young Man." Lincoln was murdered in 1865. Soule wrote that famous line in 1851.
    • Citations

      Calamity Jane: Tip your hat when you speak to a lady!

      Wild Bill Hickok: I will... when I speak to a lady.

    • Versions alternatives
      The UK DVD is cut by 2 secs to remove a horsefall.
    • Connexions
      Featured in The Hollywood Collection: Anthony Quinn an Original (1990)
    • Bandes originales
      When Johnny Comes Marching Home
      (1863) (uncredited)

      Written by Louis Lambert

      Played as background music for the first scene, Washington, D.C.

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    FAQ18

    • How long is The Plainsman?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 7 mai 1937 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • The Plainsman
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Cheyenne Indian Reservation, Lame Deer, Montana, États-Unis(Custer's massacre)
    • Société de production
      • Paramount Pictures
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 1 000 000 $US (estimé)
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 53min(113 min)
    • Couleur
      • Black and White
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.37 : 1

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