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I conquistatori dell'Oregon

Titolo originale: The Oregon Trail
  • 1959
  • Approved
  • 1h 26min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
5,2/10
535
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Fred MacMurray and Nina Shipman in I conquistatori dell'Oregon (1959)
In 1846, a newspaperman joins an Oregon Trail wagon train to verify rumors about the U.S. government sending troops disguised as settlers there in order to claim Oregon.
Riproduci trailer3: 37
1 video
6 foto
DrammaOccidentaleWestern classico

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaIn 1846, a newspaperman joins an Oregon Trail wagon train to verify rumors about the U.S. government sending troops disguised as settlers there in order to claim Oregon.In 1846, a newspaperman joins an Oregon Trail wagon train to verify rumors about the U.S. government sending troops disguised as settlers there in order to claim Oregon.In 1846, a newspaperman joins an Oregon Trail wagon train to verify rumors about the U.S. government sending troops disguised as settlers there in order to claim Oregon.

  • Regia
    • Gene Fowler Jr.
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Louis Vittes
    • Gene Fowler Jr.
  • Star
    • Fred MacMurray
    • William Bishop
    • Nina Shipman
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    5,2/10
    535
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Gene Fowler Jr.
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Louis Vittes
      • Gene Fowler Jr.
    • Star
      • Fred MacMurray
      • William Bishop
      • Nina Shipman
    • 18Recensioni degli utenti
    • 8Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Video1

    Theatrical Trailer
    Trailer 3:37
    Theatrical Trailer

    Foto5

    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster
    Visualizza poster

    Interpreti principali28

    Modifica
    Fred MacMurray
    Fred MacMurray
    • Neal Harris
    William Bishop
    William Bishop
    • Capt. George Wayne
    Nina Shipman
    Nina Shipman
    • Prudence Cooper
    Gloria Talbott
    Gloria Talbott
    • Shona Hastings
    Henry Hull
    Henry Hull
    • George Seton
    John Carradine
    John Carradine
    • Zachariah Garrison
    John Dierkes
    John Dierkes
    • Gabe Hastings
    Roxene Wells
    • Flossie Shoemaker
    Elizabeth Patterson
    Elizabeth Patterson
    • Maria Cooper
    Gene N. Fowler
    • Richard Cooper
    James Bell
    James Bell
    • Jeremiah Cooper
    John Slosser
    • Johnny
    Ralph Sanford
    Ralph Sanford
    • John Decker
    Sherry Spalding
    • Lucy
    Tex Terry
    • Brizzard
    Ollie O'Toole
    Ollie O'Toole
    • James Gordon Bennett
    Arvo Ojala
    Arvo Ojala
    • Ellis
    Ed Wright
    • Jesse
    • Regia
      • Gene Fowler Jr.
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Louis Vittes
      • Gene Fowler Jr.
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti18

    5,2535
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    3planktonrules

    Obviously this film was not written by a history professor!

    An anachronism is something that appears in the wrong time period. For example, if you see jet planes fighting at the Battle of Gettysburg...that would be a serious anachronism. However, sometimes these anachronisms aren't that obvious and make their way into movies. In the case of "The Oregon Trail", it is chock full of anachronisms...so many that you cannot believe that the writers did any research at all to make sure they were getting the facts right. And, for an ex-history teacher like me, it's really annoying!

    Let's mention some of the many anachronisms in this film. The movie talks about the new 'Colt revolver' and show the soldiers using them in 1846. But Samuel Colt didn't make his prototype revolver in 1847 and didn't even open up his own company until 1855...so there would have been no Colt revolvers in 1846. The same goes for the repeating rifles you see in the movie...they didn't come out until about 1860 and were very rare even then....but the natives and soldiers all seem to have them! And, it's not just about weapons...at one point Fred MacMurray's character talks about sending a telegraph from out west to his employers on the East Coast. But the telegraph was never used until 1844 and telegraph wires didn't make it West until a decade later.

    But anachronisms aren't the only problem in the film. President Polk had long hair and styled it in a mullet....but here he's nearly as bald as Kojak! And, often characters do things that simply make no sense...such as MacMurray's character defending a thief even when it's obvious the guy is stealing as well as his crazy fight with the guy with a whip early in the movie. The nasty guy is whipping the snot out of people and Fred is literally standing NEXT to the guy. But instead of socking him then, he backs up...thus allowing the whipper to whip him!! Who is THAT stupid??!! Fred....when you are standing NEXT to a guy with a whip, he cannot use it on you....get it?! Apparently not. Such is the care the writers and director took in making this film. And these little details are why I was not enthralled with this movie.

    If you care, here is the plot: Fred plays Neal Harris, a reporter from back East. There's a rumor that President Polk is sending soldiers disguised as settlers into the disputed Oregon Territory. He heads there in a wagon train to determine if the rumor is true. Along the way, there's a lot of nonsense and really, really bombastic music!

    Overall, this is a sloppy film and one I'd just as soon skip. There are far better westerns and far better Fred MacMurray films out there!
    5Marlburian

    Mediocre, with many flaws

    The best thing about "The Oregon Trail" was that it prompted me to research the tensions between Britain and the States over Oregon in the early 1840s. Apart from that, the film was mediocre. Some of its deficiencies have already been mentioned in other reviews, not least the terrible backdrops early on and the anachronistic rifles (to which might be added the anachronistic army uniforms, notably hats).

    Its initial premise was suspect: sending a reporter on a five-month journey to check out rumours that soldiers in civilian clothing were accompanying wagon-trains. Neal Harris had no reliable means of getting his dispatches back to his editor, and if they had been printed they would have been dated; as it happened, his objectives were overtaken by events.

    I can't see McMurray as a great ladies' man, even when he displays a sweaty chest. His flirting with President Polk's secretary (did he have a female secretary, I wonder), didn't convince, nor did his instant rapport with Shona.

    After days of water shortage and dust, Prudence Cooper's hair looked remarkably well-groomed and there was a terrible lack of continuity when a settler took an arrow in his chest, only for it to appear in his back a couple of seconds later.

    Plus points for John Carradine as the eccentric settler with his apple trees and for John Dierkes as mountain man Gabe Hastings.
    5dinky-4

    Well-worn ruts on this "Trail"

    By 1959, TV westerns had begun to replace the Hollywood B-western so there's the distinct feeling that "The Oregon Trail" -- despite its color and widescreen -- really isn't needed. Certainly there's no passion or style apparent in the film's making. It's more a case of everyone just going through the motions and collecting a paycheck.

    Things begin unpromisingly with a scene involving President Polk in Washington D.C. This scene tries to give the story a historical context but it's on the dull and talky side. This is followed by another lax scene in which dapper, man-about-town reporter, Fred MacMurray, is assigned to go west on a wagon train and write a story for his newspaper. Finally, as MacMurray arrives in Westport, Missouri -- the eastern start of the Oregon Trail -- things begin rolling. They do so in a conventional way, however, and the entire trek west is filled with the usual situations: troubling encounters with Indians, dry water holes, tensions among the folk on the wagon train, an unexpected rain storm, a funeral service by the side of the trail, a settler protecting his apple-tree seedlings, etc. The use of stock shots and indoor sets hamper the effects of many of these scenes and there's no real villain to conflict with Fred MacMurray. There's also no tension about his mission since he makes no effort to hide it and the possible romantic- triangle involving him and William Bishop and Nina Shipman never takes form. Instead, MacMurray is implausibly paired with Gloria Talbott who appears fairly late in the proceedings.

    Action builds toward a last-reel Indian attack which now seems quite "politically incorrect." (The "half-breed" Indian girl implausibly says: "It is because of this, I renounce my people.") Perhaps the only notable thing about "The Oregon Trail" is the scene in which Indians capture Fred MacMurray, strip off his shirt, and stake him out to die. (For a man in his early 50s, MacMurray looks pretty good bare-chested!) While TV westerns often staged these stake-outs, they're not all that common in the movies, and who'd believe one of them would "star" an actor about to get a career boost by playing in Disney comedies?!
    searchanddestroy-1

    outrageous

    I was enjoyed to see this pretty little western again. Colourful, action packed, with interesting and deep searched characters. Real good picture indeed.

    But there is one thing that petrified me literally.I was torn to pieces when the Indian girl, who was in love with Mac Murray and saved him from the Indian warrior, says that she disowns her own people - because of his ferocity, after the ending slaughter. SHAME ON HER !!!

    I have never heard such a crap, sorry nonsense, in a western before; and I have already seen thousands of them since I was a kid !!!

    I am an Indian lover, and proud of that. I am also sad and angry when I think about all that white people did to the Indian nation. They wiped them out. For their land only. They nearly killed them all with bullets, hunger, plagues, alcohol, misery in reservation - even now...

    So, in short, when I hear that kind of nonsense from a character in a movie, particularly an Indian one, i prefer think about something else or switch my TV set off.

    But, let's be fair, except for that, "Oregon trail" is nevertheless a good western.
    3HotToastyRag

    Too sad to be entertaining

    Any of you out there think Fred MacMurray wouldn't be convincing in a covered wagon pioneering the Oregon Trail? You're not the only one, which is why he doesn't play a cowboy in the movie. He plays a city reporter, on an assignment to write about the Oregon Trail, so he tags along with a wagon trail, led by the gruff and grizzly, racoon-cap wearing, gravely-voiced Henry Hull. The versatile character actor is real tough in this one, not at all like the softie he played in Boys Town. He stands up to Indians, mounts a horse with no difficulty, and knows how to tackle anything from a water shortage to rattlesnakes.

    Fred is the lead, though, working undercover to find secret bad guys, wooing women, and learning how to cope with dust in his trousers and sleeping on the dirt. If you're a fan, you'll like seeing him in this City Slickers-esque movie. Keep in mind it's not a comedy, though. There are some tense situations, trigger-happy grumps, and violin strings playing whenever Granny Elizabeth Patterson says she knows she'll make it through the entire ride. John Carradine portrays Johnny Appleseed, and there's a particularly sad scene when his trees get attacked. Personally, I found this movie too sad to be enjoyable. You might want to try the Lewis and Clark biopic The Far Horizons instead.

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    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      This was William Bishop's last role and last movie.
    • Blooper
      In scenes at the White House, President James K. Polk stands in front of a US map, but the map shows the US following the Compromise of 1850. The film is set in 1846, before the Texas border was changed, before the Mexican Cession resulted in the admission of California and the organization of the Territories of Utah and New Mexico, all of which are clearly seen on that map.
    • Citazioni

      Neal Harris: Questions seem to bother you a lot, Mr. Wayne.

      Capt. George Wayne: Only the man who asks them.

      Neal Harris: Well, that's too bad because my livelihood happens to depend on questions.

      Capt. George Wayne: Then I suggest you go back East and ask them. Out here, questions can get you killed.

    • Connessioni
      Referenced in Les Sièges de l'Alcazar (1989)
    • Colonne sonore
      Ballad of the Oregon Trail
      Lyrics by Charles Devlan

      Music by Paul Dunlap

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    Domande frequenti15

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • settembre 1959 (Stati Uniti)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • The Oregon Trail
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Hollywood, California, Stati Uniti
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Associated Producers (API)
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      1 ora 26 minuti
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Proporzioni
      • 2.35 : 1

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