Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaAn American gunslinger kills a Mexican man in California immediately after the Mexican-American war. The killer is arrested and put on trial for murder with the Hispanic population waiting t... Leggi tuttoAn American gunslinger kills a Mexican man in California immediately after the Mexican-American war. The killer is arrested and put on trial for murder with the Hispanic population waiting to learn of American justice.An American gunslinger kills a Mexican man in California immediately after the Mexican-American war. The killer is arrested and put on trial for murder with the Hispanic population waiting to learn of American justice.
- Candidato a 1 Oscar
- 1 candidatura in totale
- Sheriff Jim Ellison
- (as Pat Wayne)
- Drifter
- (as Edward Juaregui)
- Juror
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Mario a Vaquero
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Juror
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
The appointed judge (Dan O'Herlihy) is a stickler for the law and for proper procedure...which is problematic because he only has a local sheriff (Patrick Wayne) and a US Marshall to assist him....and there are many Mexican-American vaqueros ('cowboys') and American cowboys who are bent on their own form of justice. You have no idea what's going to happen until the end...and it's a very tense setting.
As a former US History teacher, I appreciate the setting and plot. I didn't appreciate the historical inaccuracies. They are not horrible inaccuracies, but folks just didn't run around shooting each other with revolvers back in 1848. First, shootouts like you see in the film were incredibly rare. Second, at this time, revolvers of any type were exceptionally rare...only having been invented shortly before this. The same can be said for the lever action rifle used at the end...it wasn't available until about 1860. Most of the guns they use in the film were all of much later models than 1848. Now this doesn't destroy the film...it just makes it annoying for us ex-teachers. And, it could be worse, as in "The Alamo" (1960) there were TONS of repeating pistols and rifles...none of which had yet been invented!
The direction is good and the acting quite good despite there being no 'names' in the story for 1959. Dennis Hopper is great as the scummy villain...but he was definitely an unknown at the time. This is even more the case with Patrick Wayne, John Wayne's son, who plays the lead....he's good and handsome but like Hopper he added little to the film's marketability and most people wondered who the heck these folks were! Still, they were very good....and O'Herlihy as well.
By the way, while he may not have looked it, Wayne was an interesting choice in this film about race relations and prejudice, as in real life Patrick's mother was a Mexican-American and father the famous American icon.
The issue comes to a head when a murderous young punk played by Dennis Hopper uses his fast draw to gun down a Mexican vaquero who works for Roberto DeLa Madrid. Sheriff Patrick Wayne whose job usually is to jail drunks disarms Hopper and arrests him. Now the job is to try him and for that Wayne sends for a federal judge played by Dan O'Herlihy who is a model of judicial decorum.
O'Herlihy is not terribly impressed with Wayne as a sheriff, but gradually they develop a certain respect for each other. And Wayne also grows some in the estimation of Yvonne Lime, daughter of Robert DeLa Madrid.
The Young Land is a simple straightforward tale told thusly for the audience. It's got some thoughtful and sincere performances by its cast. Hopper stands out in his role. And it even got an Oscar nomination for the song Strange Are The Ways Of Love which lost to the far better known High Hopes.
The story has worn well and The Young Land is as fresh as it was when it was sadly held up in release.
There isn't much subtext to this movie, and director Ted Tetzlaff runs things that way, with a competent cast that includes Yvonne Craig, Ken Curtis, and Pedro Gonzalez Gonzalez, all indulging in stereotypes of various sorts. Hopper is excellent, of course, as is Curtis as another bad man who fled to California and is appointed deputy to guard his old friend. Winton Hoch shoots wide vistas in Technicolor, and Dmitri Tiomkin picked up and Oscar nomination with Ned Washington for best song.
Lo sapevi?
- Quiz"Don Roberto de la Madrid" was played by the real-life Roberto de la Madrid Romandia (February 3, 1922 - March 19, 2010)... this was his only acting role. He was a Mexican elected official who served as governor of Baja California from 1977 to 1983 and was the first American-born governor of a Mexican state. He was a very close friend of John Wayne, who's son Patrick Wayne was the star of this film.
- Citazioni
Hatfield Carnes: Had to shoot me a Mexican.
Deputy Santiago: He's dead!
Sheriff Jim Ellison: Give me your gun.
Hatfield Carnes: You ain't seem to get the right of it. I had to shoot him.
Sheriff Jim Ellison: Nothin' personal, Hat. Let's have the gun.
Hatfield Carnes: What? For shootin' a Mexican?
Sheriff Jim Ellison: For shootin' a man.
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- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 29 minuti