Un burocrate della TVA arriva al fiume per fare ciò che nessuno dei suoi predecessori è stato in grado di fare: sfrattare un'ottuagenaria testarda dalla sua isola prima che l'innalzamento de... Leggi tuttoUn burocrate della TVA arriva al fiume per fare ciò che nessuno dei suoi predecessori è stato in grado di fare: sfrattare un'ottuagenaria testarda dalla sua isola prima che l'innalzamento delle acque finisca per sommergerla.Un burocrate della TVA arriva al fiume per fare ciò che nessuno dei suoi predecessori è stato in grado di fare: sfrattare un'ottuagenaria testarda dalla sua isola prima che l'innalzamento delle acque finisca per sommergerla.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 2 vittorie e 2 candidature totali
- Hamilton Garth
- (as J.C. Flippen)
- Night Clerk
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Attorney Armstrong
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- Joe John Garth
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- Small Role
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- Small Role
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- Jack Roper
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- Sheriff Hogue
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Todd
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Small Role
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Recensioni in evidenza
This film contains one of the all-time greatest performances by an American actress that it is possible to see. Jo Van Fleet is so convincing as the intransigent matriarch, who refuses to leave her island, that the injustice of her not receiving an Academy Award nomination for her performance still rankles. Perhaps the members of the Academy could not decide to grant her a nomination as the lead actress or as an actress in a supporting role and muffed the chance to show their admiration. Other comments here aptly point out all of the other outstanding elements in this film and the pain of seeing it so diminished in this TV broadcast (I did see it during its theatrical release, but had forgotten how eloquently most of it was done.) was, nevertheless, worthwhile. I join others who have expressed a desire for a DVD release (where the CinemaScope ratio would be approximated, we can hope.) Wish we could persuade Fox Classics to see if the response to a video audience would exceed the neglect this film was subjected to during its first exposure to the paying public.
One of Elia Kazan's first film assignments was a documentary about the Tennessee Valley Authority in the 1930's. Incorporating some of the footage from that film, he returned to the subject in 1960 with "Wild River", a film which explores the gray areas of life as richly as any I can think of.
Following the catastrophic floods of 1932, the TVA is determined to build a dam to regulate the flow of the river. The dam can not be operated, however, until the 80 year old Ella Garth (Jo Van Fleet) can be persuaded to leave her home on Garth Island. The situation seems clear and simple to TVA representative Chuck Glover (Montgomery Clift), but it is not long before he must accept that what he sees as progress others see as the destruction of their natural way of life.
The urban intellectual Glover is sensitive enough to be moved by Mrs. Garth's plight but practical enough not to back down, even as he begins an affair with her granddaughter (Lee Remick). This relationship eschews all cinematic cliches, with Remick clearly the aggressor as the two seem pulled together by forces beyond their control. Kazan has criticized Clift's performance, terming him "not masculine" enough (he was gay in real life), but his chemistry with Remick is quite palpable even if it is unorthodox. She is nothing less than luminous, and he responds with the finest and healthiest performance of his later years. Van Fleet is magnificent. Incredibly, she and Clift were the same age at the time of filming.
Kazan's direction is masterful throughout, and he is abetted by his many collaborators. Ellsworth Fredericks's cinematography subtly suggests the inevitable changes of nature, and the mournful sound of Kenyon Hopkins's score on the soundtrack seems to echo the thoughts of the river itself. Paul Osborn's screenplay and the naturalistic work of the supporting cast (virtually a given with Kazan) sustain the documentary-like tone throughout the film, which seems to grow richer with subsequent viewings.
Let's hope the film will become available on video soon, allowing us to take advantage of those subsequent viewings.
As usual, her performance carries the movie.
Some should remember her as the mother of the James Dean character in East of Eden, where her scenes with Dean are the most powerful in the film.
Elia Kazan, who directed Wild River, also directed East of Eden.
Kazan said in an interview he considered van Fleet a "great" actress, and expressed irritation that she had been "forgotten."
In Wild River the character she plays so believably is decades older than she actually was.
One previous reviewer here is so fixated on politics that he really uses his pretense of reviewing this movie to give his own personal political views, which are of no interest to me, and which do not belong in a forum of this type.
A wonderful film. An 8 out of 10. Best performance = Lee Remick. There are other gliding Southern performances that grace the Magnolia trees, gator bait, and overalls that we have all come to love in an artistic, American way. Find this one!
Lo sapevi?
- QuizLee Remick picked out two local Charleston kids to play her children. She chose the little girl because she looked like Lee at age 7. She chose the little boy because he loved hugging and kissing Lee.
- BlooperWhen Chuck and Carol stop for gas, a torn movie poster is displayed prominently on the wall of the station. Although the title and the name of the players have been ripped off, it's quite obviously Conta solo l'avvenire (1946) with the images of its three stars, Claudette Colbert, George Brent, and Orson Welles, easily identifiable; this film was not actually produced until 12 years later, in 1945, and released in 1946.
- Citazioni
Carol Garth Baldwin: [to Chuck] I'm leaving here, with you or without you, but I want you to know something... I'd be a good wife for you. A DAMN good wife. I'm smarter than you in some ways and I know what's good about you and I know what's bad and I'm not afraid to tell you... I have two children who love you. They love you and I love you... and you're not easy to love, but you do need someone... and I love you. I love you, I love you.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Mirror for Our Dreams: The Director: A Matter of Viewpoint (1968)
I più visti
- How long is Wild River?Powered by Alexa
Dettagli
Botteghino
- Budget
- 1.595.000 USD (previsto)
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 50 minuti
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 2.35 : 1