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IMDbPro

I pionieri del West

Titolo originale: Cimarron
  • 1931
  • Approved
  • 2h 3min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
5,8/10
7440
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Irene Dunne and Richard Dix in I pionieri del West (1931)
Western classicoDrammaOccidentale

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA newspaper editor settles in an Oklahoma boom town with his reluctant wife at the end of the nineteenth century.A newspaper editor settles in an Oklahoma boom town with his reluctant wife at the end of the nineteenth century.A newspaper editor settles in an Oklahoma boom town with his reluctant wife at the end of the nineteenth century.

  • Regia
    • Wesley Ruggles
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Edna Ferber
    • Howard Estabrook
    • Louis Sarecky
  • Star
    • Richard Dix
    • Irene Dunne
    • Estelle Taylor
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    5,8/10
    7440
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Wesley Ruggles
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Edna Ferber
      • Howard Estabrook
      • Louis Sarecky
    • Star
      • Richard Dix
      • Irene Dunne
      • Estelle Taylor
    • 95Recensioni degli utenti
    • 38Recensioni della critica
    • 70Metascore
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Vincitore di 3 Oscar
      • 7 vittorie e 5 candidature totali

    Foto36

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    Interpreti principali68

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    Richard Dix
    Richard Dix
    • Yancey Cravat
    Irene Dunne
    Irene Dunne
    • Sabra Cravat
    Estelle Taylor
    Estelle Taylor
    • Dixie Lee
    Nance O'Neil
    Nance O'Neil
    • Felice Venable
    William Collier Jr.
    William Collier Jr.
    • The Kid
    Roscoe Ates
    Roscoe Ates
    • Jesse Rickey
    • (as Rosco Ates)
    George E. Stone
    George E. Stone
    • Sol Levy
    Stanley Fields
    Stanley Fields
    • Lon Yountis
    Robert McWade
    Robert McWade
    • Louis Hefner
    Edna May Oliver
    Edna May Oliver
    • Mrs. Tracy Wyatt
    Judith Barrett
    Judith Barrett
    • Donna Cravat
    • (as Nancy Dover)
    Eugene Jackson
    • Isaiah
    Roberta Gregory
    • Indian Girl
    Alice Adair
    Alice Adair
      Max Barwyn
      Max Barwyn
      • Sabra's Luncheon Greeter
      • (non citato nei titoli originali)
      Frank Beal
      Frank Beal
      • Louis Venable
      • (non citato nei titoli originali)
      Tyrone Brereton
      • Dabney Venable
      • (non citato nei titoli originali)
      Dolores Brown
      Dolores Brown
      • Adult Ruby Big Elk
      • (non citato nei titoli originali)
      • Regia
        • Wesley Ruggles
      • Sceneggiatura
        • Edna Ferber
        • Howard Estabrook
        • Louis Sarecky
      • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
      • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

      Recensioni degli utenti95

      5,87.4K
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      Recensioni in evidenza

      Lechuguilla

      American Frontier Epic

      Vilified in modern times as one of the weakest and/or worst Oscar Best Picture winner, and spanked as "very racist and very bad" by one author, "Cimarron" does not deserve such condemnation. It won Best Picture because the script is high concept, the type of overarching, epic story that Hollywood has always rewarded.

      Its script tells the fictional tale of adventurer and pioneer Yancey Cravat (Richard Dix) who, along with his wife Sabra (Irene Dunne), takes part in the 1889 land rush into Oklahoma Territory, along with thousands of others. In the film, these pioneers stake a land claim and build a new town, called Osage, out on the prairie.

      The plot spans some forty years in the Cravat's lives, filled with dreams, accomplishments, sorrow, and interaction with a variety of characters, from prim and proper Mrs. Wyatt (humorous Edna May Oliver) to town thug Lon Yountis (Stanley Fields). Along the way we encounter: gun toting outlaws; dust; a strange gospel meeting; bullies; buildings and walkways made of wood; more dust; the trial of an "immoral" young woman; politicians; and still more dust.

      The plot is structured to give most of the film's runtime to the Cravat's lives during the 19th century. As we move into the 20th century, the plot speeds up; characters age a little too quickly. That is a problem I have with the script. The film's tone starts out enthusiastic and rowdy, and ends stoical and long-suffering.

      B&W photography is acceptable. There are lots of wide-angle shots, as we would expect for a story set in the wide-open spaces. Prod design and costumes are elaborate and probably accurate for the era. Casting is acceptable. For a 1920s type film, acting is predictably melodramatic. But with his eyes all bugged-out, Richard Dix seriously overacts, even for that era.

      In retrospect, there may have been other films as deserving, or more so, for Best Picture of 1931. But at the time, this big-budget Western was almost certainly a predictable winner. I found the story only mildly interesting. But then I'm a creature of a more modern era. And I think viewers would do well to consider "Cimarron" a valid film, one that now gives us some historical perspective, both on Hollywood cinema and on American history.
      5ccthemovieman-1

      A Historic But Very Dated Dunne-Dix Western

      This is a very dated western but so much so it makes it interesting to watch in spots. However, it's too long - 131 minutes - and I watched it on a VHS tape in which the sound quality wasn't the best, which helped make it too tough to watch in one sitting. Yet, for its uniqueness and strange-looking characters and strange scenes, it made it worthwhile to stick it through to the end. However, the first half of the film is a lot better than the second half.

      This was Irene Dunne's first starring role and, frankly, I didn't recognize her. She was anything but pretty and certainly looked different. Her role was that a steady person who keeps her marriage together but has a major flaws, including a real prejudice against the local Indians. In the end, sees the error of her ways. Richard Dix plays her husband. He overacts and looks cartoonish most of the time. This movie was in the beginning of "talkies" and Dix still looked like he belonged in silent movies. He marries Dunne and quickly leaves to go wandering. He comes home briefly and leaves again....and it's okay. Strange.

      The story revolves around the two leads (Yancy and Sabra Cravat") and the their town which grows from nothing into a big city by the late 1920s. Seeing that city grow was interesting.

      Included in this movie was the strangest "gospel meeting" I've ever seen. It begins well-intentioned, but becomes so spiritually weak and so secular that it makes a farce out of the whole proceedings. You have to see this to believe it. I just shook my head in amazement about how Hollywood has never had a clue when it came to topics like this.

      I got rid of the VHS long ago but, if given the opportunity, now that it is out on DVD, would give it another look. It's almost a curiosity piece.
      5FightingWesterner

      Best Picture? Not Really

      Despite it's awards for best picture and best adapted screenplay, this first film version of the popular soap-opera/western novel is badly dated and with plenty of overacting, though it's really a handsome-looking production. The best thing about this, is the atmospheric cinematography and the fantastic costumes and sets, particularly in the exterior scenes of the growing town of Osage.

      Richard Dix certainly has great screen presence, but here he's kind of hammy, acting in a manner more suitable to silent film or the stage.

      I can't help but compare this to the 1960 remake, of which this version is actually quite preferable. The remake starts out vastly superior, but squanders it's entertainment value when it turns into the cinematic equivalent of nails on a blackboard, while this version starts out as a mixed-bag and stays pretty much consistent the whole way through.

      Still, much like the remake, this suffers greatly after Dix takes a hike the first time around and the picture becomes rambling, winding down to an unsatisfying conclusion.
      6MOscarbradley

      Quantity - not quality

      This gargantuan war-horse of a western epic won the Oscar as the Best Film of 1930/31 proving from the earliest days of the Academy it was quantity not quality that mattered and that big equalled best. Of course there wasn't much in the way competition, ("East Lynne", "The Front Page", "Skippy" and "Trader Horn"). Much better films like "Morocco", "The Criminal Code" and "Little Caesar" failed to make the short-list. But it is still surprisingly robust and enjoyable in the way that these kind of movies sometimes are, (it's certainly a lot less po-faced than the dire 1960 remake), and it has some really good things in it; a great church meeting sequence and a very well staged hold-up culminating in a great moment when a young black boy is killed and is ignored in the general mêlée and is a brave scene for the period, and a sequence probably deemed too contentious for the remake.

      The acting, too, is a cut above the average for the time. A young, fresh-faced Irene Dunne is lovely and shows considerable promise here and Richard Dix has a kind of screen presence. It's ham and he plays to the gallery but he's very likable. Estelle Taylor is touching as the whore with the obligatory heart of gold and Edna May Oliver is very funny but in too small a role.

      It runs out of steam before the end. It's top heavy in the plot department, (based, as it is, on an Edna Ferber door-stopper), and characters come and go without making much of an impression. Often listed in polls of the worst films to win the Best Picture Oscar it has vigour and a complete lack of pretension. I'll take it any day over "A Beautiful Mind".
      8mukava991

      thoughtful and lavishly produced western

      "Sprawling" is the adjective most often associated with novels and movies-from-novels by Edna Ferber. Her stories span geographical locations, family generations and economic strata, usually with a strong female at the center. In the case of CIMARRON it's the story of how Oklahoma became a state seen through the life of Sabra Cravat (Irene Dunne), demure wife of gun-totin' macho dude Yancey Cravat (Richard Dix). It's a fascinating and not pleasant relationship: He always hankering for another risky adventure and she wanting to settle down and be respectable. He is also politically minded, a fighter for the underdog, defender of the prostitute ("victim of the social order") and the Indians (robbed of their land and cheated thereafter), dispenser of frontier justice against the bad guys (but only when provoked to the limit) and literate to boot (frequently quoting Shakespeare, Milton and the Bible). The film is splendidly produced with well staged action sequences (particularly the opening Oklahoma land rush which puts even DeMille's exodus to the Red Sea to shame) and realistic recreation of a filthy, crowded, violent and anarchic boom town which gradually gentrifies as the decades pass. Interiors are similarly authentic. Wesley Ruggles directs multiple crowd scenes with great mastery. And the whole film is structured in fully realized episodes beginning with a title card and a year (1889 to start, 1930 to finish) and ending with a close up on the character at hand as the screen slowly fades to black. The Dix character is heroic in the old style and though many modern viewers find his acting preposterous, I disagree. I think he is the perfect actor for the character he is playing. Yes, such a person would definitely be out of place in today's urban world, but so what? We aren't watching a contemporary story anyway. The supporting cast, particularly George E. Stone as a Jewish peddler who is defended against ruffians by Dix, Edna May Oliver as the pushy, judgmental neighbor and Stanley Fields as a grizzled sociopath are my favorites.

      Ferber's feelings about intolerance always informed her stories and make us think. Seeing a film like this 78 years after it was made also reminds us that although the US has come a long way, the consciousness that all was not well was firmly operating even back then and available for wide public consumption. CIMARRON works as pure entertainment as well as history; in fact the film and novel themselves are now history and have been folded into the larger history of this country.

      The only problem technically is the soundtrack which has become fuzzy. Maybe a pristine print is lurking around somewhere. And the supporting character of a black house servant played by Eugene Jackson will raise PC hackles from the early scene in which he is perched on a platform above the family dinner table fanning the white employers with bird feathers through one degrading interaction after another with whites. But this film was made in the age when most black actors (and black people) played servile or childlike roles, so it is not a surprise to see the practice here.

      Oscars Best Picture Winners, Ranked

      Oscars Best Picture Winners, Ranked

      See the complete list of Oscars Best Picture winners, ranked by IMDb ratings.
      See the complete list
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      Lo sapevi?

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      • Quiz
        The celebrated land rush sequence took a week to film, using 5,000 extras, 28 cameramen, six still photographers, and 27 camera assistants. The scene is so iconic that, three decades later, when MGM remade the film, the camera angles for the land rush sequence remained almost identical to the original.
      • Blooper
        During the period of the film set in 1907, Yancey is the Progressive Party's candidate for governor of Oklahoma. The Progressive Party did not form until 1912, and then disbanded after Theodore Roosevelt's unsuccessful third party candidacy that year.
      • Citazioni

        Mrs. Tracy Wyatt: One of my ancestors was a signer of the Declaration of Independence.

        Sol Levy: That's all right. A relative of mine, a fellow named Moses, wrote the Ten Commandments.

      • Connessioni
        Edited into Land of the Open Range (1942)

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      Dettagli

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      • Data di uscita
        • 9 febbraio 1931 (Stati Uniti)
      • Paese di origine
        • Stati Uniti
      • Lingue
        • Inglese
        • Francese
      • Celebre anche come
        • Cimarron
      • Luoghi delle riprese
        • Venice, Los Angeles, California, Stati Uniti
      • Azienda produttrice
        • RKO Radio Pictures
      • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

      Botteghino

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      • Budget
        • 1.433.000 USD (previsto)
      Vedi le informazioni dettagliate del botteghino su IMDbPro

      Specifiche tecniche

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      • Tempo di esecuzione
        • 2h 3min(123 min)
      • Colore
        • Black and White

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