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IMDbPro

Passaggio a Nord-Ovest

Titolo originale: 'Northwest Passage' (Book I -- Rogers' Rangers)
  • 1940
  • Approved
  • 2h 6min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,0/10
4189
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Spencer Tracy and Robert Young in Passaggio a Nord-Ovest (1940)
Guarda Northwest Passage: Official Trailer
Riproduci trailer2:00
1 video
36 foto
SopravvivenzaTragediaWestern classicoAvventuraDrammaGuerraOccidentaleRomanticismoStoria

Langdon Towne e Hunk Marriner si uniscono ai Ranger del maggiore Rogers mentre spazzano via un villaggio indiano. Partono per Fort Wentworth ma quando arrivano non trovano soldati e nessuno ... Leggi tuttoLangdon Towne e Hunk Marriner si uniscono ai Ranger del maggiore Rogers mentre spazzano via un villaggio indiano. Partono per Fort Wentworth ma quando arrivano non trovano soldati e nessuno dei rifornimenti che si aspettavano.Langdon Towne e Hunk Marriner si uniscono ai Ranger del maggiore Rogers mentre spazzano via un villaggio indiano. Partono per Fort Wentworth ma quando arrivano non trovano soldati e nessuno dei rifornimenti che si aspettavano.

  • Regia
    • King Vidor
    • Jack Conway
    • W.S. Van Dyke
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Laurence Stallings
    • Talbot Jennings
    • Kenneth Roberts
  • Star
    • Spencer Tracy
    • Robert Young
    • Walter Brennan
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,0/10
    4189
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • King Vidor
      • Jack Conway
      • W.S. Van Dyke
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Laurence Stallings
      • Talbot Jennings
      • Kenneth Roberts
    • Star
      • Spencer Tracy
      • Robert Young
      • Walter Brennan
    • 62Recensioni degli utenti
    • 27Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Candidato a 1 Oscar
      • 3 vittorie e 1 candidatura in totale

    Video1

    Northwest Passage: Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:00
    Northwest Passage: Official Trailer

    Foto36

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    + 30
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    Interpreti principali52

    Modifica
    Spencer Tracy
    Spencer Tracy
    • Maj. Robert Rogers
    Robert Young
    Robert Young
    • Langdon Towne
    Walter Brennan
    Walter Brennan
    • 'Hunk' Marriner
    Ruth Hussey
    Ruth Hussey
    • Elizabeth Browne
    Nat Pendleton
    Nat Pendleton
    • 'Cap' Huff
    Louis Hector
    • Rev. Browne
    Robert Barrat
    Robert Barrat
    • Humphrey Towne
    Lumsden Hare
    Lumsden Hare
    • Lord Amherst
    Donald MacBride
    Donald MacBride
    • Sgt. McNott
    • (as Donald McBride)
    Isabel Jewell
    Isabel Jewell
    • Jennie Coit
    Douglas Walton
    Douglas Walton
    • Lt. Avery
    Addison Richards
    Addison Richards
    • Lt. Crofton
    Hugh Sothern
    Hugh Sothern
    • Jesse Beacham
    Regis Toomey
    Regis Toomey
    • Webster
    Montagu Love
    Montagu Love
    • Wiseman Clagett
    Lester Matthews
    Lester Matthews
    • Sam Livermore
    Truman Bradley
    Truman Bradley
    • Capt. Ogden
    C.E. Anderson
    C.E. Anderson
    • Ranger
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    • Regia
      • King Vidor
      • Jack Conway
      • W.S. Van Dyke
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Laurence Stallings
      • Talbot Jennings
      • Kenneth Roberts
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti62

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    Recensioni in evidenza

    cmdraga

    A supurb engrossing tale

    It is great when you find an old movie that you have never seen before, and I have seen many. This epic is one of broad scope and adventure, well balanced with good and evil aspects. A film of this quality could NEVER be made today and not maintain an unprejudiced view. Bravo!
    dpingr1

    Well, it's well photographed, but .....

    Northwest Passage is one of the few films about the Seven Years' War that isn't based on a James Fenimore Cooper novel, and in that sense, it's a welcome lesson in how that important period has come to be mythologized in popular culture. I've never read the Roberts books, so I can't comment on how faithful the film is to its source material. I can only make a few comments on how movies have their own sensibilities and cultural rules. Like most films, this one tells us more about the era in which it was made than the time period in which the film's events take place. It's certainly an exciting story, but it has a number of cringeworthy elements (and they would have elicited just as many cringes back in the 1930s, I assure you.)Here's a few comments:

    Jeffrey Amherst and Sir William Johnson: As anyone who has read any of the fine studies of this era can attest (I recommend the works of James Axtell, Gregory Evans Dowd, Daniel Usner, Daniel Richter, Richard White, and many others as fine introductions to Indian-White relations in the 17th and 18th centuries), this film takes a rather interesting view of these historical figures. Amherst is here depicted as the realistic good guy, who is in tune with Rogers's vicious sentiments. Johnson, on the other hand, is seen as part of the problem because of his private relationships with several Indian groups, especially the Mohawks. Johnson's Mohawk allies are here shown as lazy, duplicitous, suspicious interlopers. In fact, Johnson and his many Indian allies throughout Iroquoia and the Ohio country were indispensable to the British victory in the Seven Years' War, while Amherst, a capable officer but a virulent anti-native racist, instituted policies that helped start the 1763-64 Indian uprising ("Pontiac's War") and actually approved using germ warfare on Indians near Fort Pitt (he approved a plan to give them smallpox-infected blankets.)

    Uniforms: If you squint, Roger's Rangers look like they should be in the Confederate Army. This may be a Technicolor issue. In fact, Roger's men often dressed as Indians and other backcountry residents did. It is the demands of movie convention that put them all in blue buckskin uniforms -- just as Japanese and German soldiers always wore particular shapes of helmets, so you can tell them apart from the other guys. Even the Mohawk and Abenaki Indians wear similar "uniforms," i.e. matching loincloths. The Indians in this movie look like they belong in the Southwest or the plains -- not in the Eastern Woodlands, especially late in the year.

    Rogers himself: Well, his anti-Indian rants probably do illustrate something of the man himself. It should be noted that Rogers's sensationalized exploits made him a problematic celebrity during his life. He was always distrusted by his British superiors, who nevertheless bowed to public acclaim and gave him important positions after the war, including a brief command of Fort Detroit, and his disastrous tenure commanding Fort Michilimackinac after the Indian uprising. Like many outpost commanders, Rogers let his personal greed take over in the relative freedom of the pays d'en haut, and ended up being arrested and returned to Niagara in irons. Amherst gave him guarded trust, but Amherst's successor, Thomas Gage, and Indian Supervisor William Johnson, considered him a villain. As for the native Americans, everyone knew about Rogers's Indian killing, and he had few Indian friends and many enemies. Everywhere Rogers went became a tense place of interaction between Indians and Europeans.

    Indian issues: Well, it's true that Indians, Abenakis and others, used brutal tactics in war. But this movie, like other movies such as Drums Along the Mohawk, definitely take the settlers' side in their confrontations with native Americans. In one scene, Rogers tells his men how the Abenakis should be killed for brutally hatcheting innocent settlers, who were just trying to make lives for themselves and weren't bothering anyone. It should be noted that settlers were often a great bother to Indians, just by their presence alone. Indians who lived in transitional regions resented the encroachments of white settlers more than anything else, including the presence of forts and soldiers. Settlers used land for farming, which was an exclusive operation. Unlike the skin trade, which used native residents as partners, farmers viewed Indians as being in the way. All Eastern Indians knew that farming was the one operation that turned Indian country into European territory exclusively, and did everything they could to oppose it. And as far as relative levels of brutality go, backcountry settlers and soldiers were capable of all the worst kinds of viciousness. Reference the Gnadenhutten Massacre during the Revolutionary War if you want to read about some really vicious behavior by America militiamen.

    This movie is a great mirror on its time. Americans looked to their settler past, mythical or otherwise, whenever they wished to differentiate their national identity from the "bad old" Europeans, or the brutal state of nature. The rugged, idealistic frontier settler, hacking a life out of the wilderness but imbued with democratic virtue, was a popular model for Depression-riddled Americans who felt that their agency and power was slipping away. People today might like these movies for the same reasons!

    As for me, I think the film is well-acted and filmed, and somewhat exciting, but too laughable to take very seriously. That is, it's laughable when it is not deplorable. This is the most virulent anti-Indian movie I know, worse even than most westerns. Some of the comments here label this as a "family" film. The hero of this film repeatedly labels all Indians as brutes, thieves, and cowards. I wouldn't let any child see this movie.
    9imauter

    One of King Vidor's best!

    Northwest Passage is based on a novel of the same name by Kenneth Roberts, in fact it is an adaptation of its first part The Roger's Rangers, the second part was also originally planned to be filmed by King Vidor, but MGM dropped the project fearing the costs involved. As a consequence only the first part of the novel was brought to the screen where passage through the northwest never actually happens but only is talked about.

    The story is centred on Major Robert Rogers (Spencer Tracy) and his rangers who take a dangerous and adventurous journey through the territory controlled by the Indians and the French troops in 18th century America in order to destroy a hostile Indian village from where English settlements are constantly being attacked.

    Right in the beginning the rangers are joined by right out of Harvard idealistic young cartographer Langdon Towne (Robert Young) who is dreaming of becoming a great painter `like Velasquez or Rubens' and is enthusiastic about the journey because of possibility it offers to paint portraits of Indians and landscapes in contrast with the other rangers who are mainly driven by yearning of revenge for relatives murdered during Indian raids.

    Northwest Passage is possibly the best and the most visually impressive King Vidor's adventure film. Breathtakingly beautiful landscapes shown here certainly stand out as the most wonderful even among King Vidor's work who was well known for beautiful Technicolor exteriors in his movies. A beautiful film, definitely worth watching. 8/10
    7Vermunster

    Rogers' Rangers' History Is Far More Exciting (and Unbelievable) Than the Film (2of2).

    Harking back to Kenneth Roberts' Roberts' "Northwest Passage," Rogers' life after the legendary mission to destroy the nest of Abenaki vipers equally unbelievable.

    Did you know that Rogers undertook with just two companies of Rangers an equally legendary 1763 expedition into what was called the Northwest (the Ohio territory) to accept the surrender of the French posts to the British, who had in that year won the French and Indian War?

    This trip afoot took Rogers nearly halfway across the continent. In fact, Rogers proposed to the British Crown an expedition to the Pacific, an exploration which one of his captains later partly accomplished while Rogers was stuck commanding Fort Michilmackinac in what would later become Michigan.

    Thus Rogers almost achieved in 1763 what Lewis and Clark wouldn't actually fully achieve till some 40 years later -- an expedition of exploration to the Pacific Ocean.

    Rogers was indeed turned down by George Washington at the start of the American Revolution as a volunteer Ranger in the colonial forces. Instead, Washington had Rogers arrested and tossed into prison.

    Understandably rankled by this, Rogers broke out of jail and went over to the British.

    Rogers is the guy of whom George Washington said: "He is the only man I ever feared."

    We have our unfathomably brave predecessors in the Rangers to thank for the British colonists' ultimate victory in the 150-year-long war against the French and Indians -- America's longest war, and one that NO elementary or high school ANYWHERE in America teaches ANYTHING about.

    Robert Rogers was larger than life. He is often called the Father of U.S. Special Forces, for his work pioneering the colonial rangers in early America. His Rules for Ranging are still required reading by the U.S. Rangers and Green Berets.

    But Rogers wasn't the first colonial ranger. It is uncertain who could claim that title, because the tradition of "ranging" goes back to early England and Scotland. The colonists took that tradition with them when they settled America. Rangers were deployed in Jamestown.

    Ranger Benjamin Church, who was instrumental in winning King Philip's war (1675-1678) in New England, is also called the Father of the Rangers. It was his team that hunted down and killed King Philip (aka Metacomet) in Rhode Island.

    King Philip's War is another one of those gigantic historical struggles not taught in our schools.

    This was the war in which the Indians pushed the American colonists all the way back to the shoreline towns all across New England (except in Connecticut, where there were just a few battles), and almost into the ocean.

    Did you know that New England's colonists almost starved during that war, and would have had it not been for ships full of emergency provisions sent from England? The Indians banded together -- most of them, but not all -- to exterminate the white man.

    But the colonists won that war.

    They won all of the other Indian wars in New England too.

    Rogers is the guy who turned the tide in the last such war.

    If you read anything about Rogers and the men he fought with, you will not believe the hardships they endured to bequeath us our free and easy lives of today. Those who sling arrows at Rogers and his Rangers from their easy chair in a warm home on land won by their forebears from the Indians have no conception - absolutely none - of just how feral the so-called native Americans were.

    FACT: Like most Stone Age peoples, most Indian tribes engaged in constant warfare. Tribal death rates, as a percentage, were far higher than any of the white man's wars. The Comanches would become the apex tribe in North America when it comes to aggression, outstripping even the Abenakis and Pequots. In fact, the Comanches were so powerful that they hunted the terrifying Apaches for fun, and chased all of the Apache tribes off the plains. Read "Empire of the Summer Moon: Quanah Parker and the Rise and Fall of the Comanches, the Most Powerful Indian Tribe in American History" by S.C. Gwynne if you want to understand Stone Age pathologies.

    The "noble savage" is a myth. Most tribes, given half a chance, would exterminate enemy tribes in a New York minute. They extracted positive orgasmic delight in the most heinous and protracted tortures. These cultures refined torture for century upon century. This had nothing whatsoever to do with the New Age apologetics about "absorbing a victim's spirit." Balderdash. They just liked torture.

    Rogers' bushwhacking victory over the Abenaki Indians -- the Northeast's Islamofacist terrorists of one-quarter of a millennium ago -- helped finally end the last of the five consecutive French and Indian wars in New England. Ironically, these wars had been going on pretty much continuously almost from the year of discovery -- 1609 -- i.e., the year that Samuel de Champlain (the "Father of New France") discovered the lake named for him, the same year that Henry Hudson sailed up the river named for him.

    Yes, the year of discovery was 400 years ago in 2009 and the year of British victory in the 150-year war against New France was 1759, 250 years ago in 2009.

    Tempus fugit.
    7ma-cortes

    Bloody and spectacular raid by Rogers' Rangers against Indians in hostile territory

    Exciting picture with open-air spectacular scenes starts depicting in a foreword : ¨This is a story of our early America..of the century of conflict with French and Indians .. when necessity made simple men, unknown to history, into giants in daring and endurance . It begins on Potmouth New Hampshire in 1759...¨ This Technicolor MGM classical describing the troop of Rogers' Rangers battling the hostile Indians and wilderness. The historical novel Northwest Passage (1937), by American author Kenneth Roberts, portrayed the events of Rogers' Rangers' raid on the Abenaki town of St. Francis. The first half of the novel was adapted in this film by Talbot Jennings and Laurence Stallings , being lavishly produced and uncomprimisingly directed by King Vidor . It actually intents to be the first of a two-part epic but the second half was never realized and the Northwest passage itself is never seen. The picture is packed with spectacular battles, heroism , heartbreaking scenes and blood-letting deeds . The main cast ans secondary support give good performances with special mention to Spencer Tracy , Walter Brennan and Robert Young. It contains marvelously photographed in glimmer Technicolor by Henry Jaffa and adequate musical score by Herbert Stothart. This is a winner for Spencer Tracy fans.

    The story is based on real events , these are the following : During 1759, the Rangers were involved in one of their most famous operations: they were ordered to destroy the Abenaki settlement of Saint-Francis in Quebec. It has been the base for raids and attacks of British settlements. Rogers led a force of 200 rangers from Crown Point deep into French territory. Following the October 3, 1759 attack and successful destruction of Saint-Francis, Rogers' force ran out of food during their retreat through the wilderness of northern Vermont. Once the Rangers reached a safe location along the Connecticut River at the abandoned Fort Wentworth, Rogers left them encamped. He returned a few days later with food, and relief forces from Fort at Number 4 now Charlestown, New Hampshire, the nearest English town.In the raid on Saint-Francis, Rogers claimed 200 enemies were killed, leaving 20 women and children to be taken prisoner, of whom he took five children prisoner and let the rest go . The French recorded that only 30 were killed, including 20 women and children. According to Francis Parkman Ranger casualties in the attack were 1 killed and 6 wounded; however in the retreat, 5 were captured from one band of Rangers and nearly all in another party of about 20 Rangers were killed or captured. One source alleges that of about 204 Rangers, allies and observers, only about 100 returned.

    Altri elementi simili

    L'esploratore scomparso
    7,0
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    Il re dei pellirosse
    6,6
    Il re dei pellirosse
    Il romanzo di una vita
    7,0
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    La febbre del petrolio
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    La febbre del petrolio
    La belva umana
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    Gli avventurieri di Plymouth
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    I cacciatori dell'oro
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    Kit carson la grande cavalcata
    6,3
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    Northwest Passage
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    Missione segreta
    7,2
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    I forzati della gloria
    7,2
    I forzati della gloria
    Carovana d'eroi
    6,8
    Carovana d'eroi

    Trama

    Modifica

    Lo sapevi?

    Modifica
    • Quiz
      The most demanding scene for the actors involved the filming of the human chain employed by the Rangers to cross a treacherous river. The actors themselves had to do the shots without the benefit of stunt doubles. The sequence was begun at Payette Lake in Idaho but had to be completed in the studio tank because the lake was far too dangerous. For Spencer Tracy, who once complained that the physical labors required of actors "wouldn't tax an embryo," it was his most difficult shoot to that point, surpassing even the taxing ocean scenes of his Oscar-winning Capitani coraggiosi (1937).
    • Blooper
      Rogers' Rangers did not portage their whaleboats over a ridge during the St. Francis raid. This actually happened two years prior when the Rangers portaged their boats from Lake George to Wood Creek in order to avoid French outposts around Fort Ticonderoga (Carillon).
    • Citazioni

      [repeated line]

      Maj. Robert Rogers: I'll see you at sundown, Harvard.

    • Connessioni
      Featured in Land of Liberty (1939)
    • Colonne sonore
      America, My Country Tis of Thee
      (1832) (uncredited)

      Music by Lowell Mason, based on the Music by Henry Carey from "God Save the King" (1744)

      In the score during the opening credits

      Reprised in the score near the end

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    Domande frequenti21

    • How long is Northwest Passage?Powered by Alexa
    • Where can I read more about what really happened?
    • Why was the St. Francis Raid launched?
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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 23 febbraio 1940 (Stati Uniti)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Northwest Passage
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Payette Lake, McCall, Idaho, Stati Uniti
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Botteghino

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

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 2h 6min(126 min)
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.37 : 1

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