L'amitié entre trois éleveurs du Texas. Leur ranch fut détruit par Cottrell de l'armée de l'Union et sa bande de pillards hors-la-loi. Le film se voulait à l'origine un témoignage sur les dé... Tout lireL'amitié entre trois éleveurs du Texas. Leur ranch fut détruit par Cottrell de l'armée de l'Union et sa bande de pillards hors-la-loi. Le film se voulait à l'origine un témoignage sur les déserteurs pendant la Guerre de Sécession.L'amitié entre trois éleveurs du Texas. Leur ranch fut détruit par Cottrell de l'armée de l'Union et sa bande de pillards hors-la-loi. Le film se voulait à l'origine un témoignage sur les déserteurs pendant la Guerre de Sécession.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Mexican Townsman
- (non crédité)
- Townsman
- (non crédité)
- Barfly
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
But with the Three-Bell ranch gone, the partners split up. Lee joins the Confederate army. At the urging of saloon singer Rouge de Lisle (Alexis Smith), Kip becomes a gunrunner and Charlie joins him in the gun-running business.
Kip just wants to get enough money to restart the Three-Bell Ranch, however Charlie is more interested in the money than the ranch. Meanwhile,Lee winds up being more interested in Deborah Miller (Dorothy Malone) - the girl Kip planned to marry - than a renewed partnership with his two friends.
Turns out the close bond between the Three-Bell partners is going to be severely tested, during the war and after.
A decent Joel McCrea western highlighting the turbulence that war can cause by splitting three friends apart, but it's the rousing action scenes that drives this fast-paced western splashed in Technicolor. Great stunts, horse riding and gun smoke! Plus you get two hotties Alexis Smith and Dorothy Malone. The performances are great too, especially from McCrea who is an honourable character, something he would continue to play later in his career. Zachary Scott does what it's expected, and sneers in bad guy fashion. So does Victor Jory. It's a well- directed colourful western, but that's what you expect from the director of the superb Coroner's Creek!
The ending was a bit contrived, and everything works out as one might have predicted, though I'm not sure that McCrea got the best girl.
Our three heros -- it's weird seeing Zachary Scott as a hero -- are now kind of shiftless and looking for what to do next. Kennedy decides to join the Confederation and fight in the open. This is kind of different, the movie is set during the Civil War and one of the hero's decides to join the confederation and doesn't feel the need to talk about protecting his way of life. The union army might protect Contrell, but they don't like him much, and the commander offers to buy McCrea a drink after he beats up Contrell -- but McCrea don't drink with Yankees. McCrea and Scott get mixed up in gun running and take to the trade, blockade running guns from Mexico to the confederates.
The romantic sub-plot is that a saloon singer played by Alexis Smith has set her cap for McCrea and McCrea's gal, Dorothy Malone, has followed Kennedy into fighting the good fight as a nurse (the film just never really gets into the nitty gritty of the politics of the civil war). I found the romantic business, usually something of a drag in the avg McCrea feature, to be pretty interesting and not quite so ham handed as is often done.
The production values are not bad, the acting is pretty good, the story interesting and a little different. If you love westerns, and I presume you do if you've read this far, you could do a lot worse that this movie. I enjoyed it quite a bit.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe character "Luke Cottrell" is described as the leader of a band of guerrilla raiders working for the Union army that ravaged the Missouri countryside during the Civil War, robbing and murdering Southern sympathizers. The character is obviously based on the real-life William Quantrill, who was in fact the leader of a band of Confederate guerrillas that terrorized the Missouri and Kansas countryside during the Civil War. His raiders were responsible for the sacking and burning of Lawrence, KS, on Aug. 21, 1863, during which more than 150 men and boys in the town were rounded up and executed. It became known as The Lawrence Massacre. Eventually Quantrill's methods were so brutal--wholesale executions of prisoners, burning and looting towns and villages, etc.--that the Confederacy disowned him and withdrew all support. He was shot in an ambush by Union troops on May 10, 1865, and died in a Union military prison on June 6.
- GaffesA revolver commonly seen in the film is the famous Colt Single Action Army Revolver. This design did not appear until 1873, much too late for use in the American Civil War.
- Citations
[after Rouge spurns Charlie's advances in favor of his honest brother Kip]
Charlie Burns: But he doesn't even have a shirt to his name!
Rouge de Lisle: It's not the clothes that make the man, it's how he wears 'em.
- ConnexionsReferenced in Sables mouvants (1950)
- Bandes originalesToo Much Love
Music by Ray Heindorf
Lyrics by Ralph Blane
Performed by Alexis Smith (dubbed by Bonnie Lou Williams) (uncredited)
Meilleurs choix
- How long is South of St. Louis?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- South of St. Louis
- Lieux de tournage
- Warner Ranch, Calabasas, Californie, États-Unis(open road/range scenes)
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 1 600 000 $US
- Durée
- 1h 28min(88 min)
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1