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IMDbPro

Homem Até o Fim

Título original: The Kentuckian
  • 1955
  • Approved
  • 1 h 44 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,2/10
3,4 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Burt Lancaster and Dianne Foster in Homem Até o Fim (1955)
A Kentucky widower bound for 1820's Texas with his young son is thwarted in his efforts by a corrupt constable, a long-standing family feud, and a beautiful indentured servant.
Reproduzir trailer2:18
1 vídeo
38 fotos
Western clássicoDramaOcidente

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA Kentucky widower bound for 1820's Texas with his young son is thwarted in his efforts by a corrupt constable, a long-standing family feud, and a beautiful indentured servant.A Kentucky widower bound for 1820's Texas with his young son is thwarted in his efforts by a corrupt constable, a long-standing family feud, and a beautiful indentured servant.A Kentucky widower bound for 1820's Texas with his young son is thwarted in his efforts by a corrupt constable, a long-standing family feud, and a beautiful indentured servant.

  • Direção
    • Burt Lancaster
  • Roteiristas
    • A.B. Guthrie Jr.
    • Felix Holt
  • Artistas
    • Burt Lancaster
    • Diana Lynn
    • Dianne Foster
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    6,2/10
    3,4 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Burt Lancaster
    • Roteiristas
      • A.B. Guthrie Jr.
      • Felix Holt
    • Artistas
      • Burt Lancaster
      • Diana Lynn
      • Dianne Foster
    • 45Avaliações de usuários
    • 30Avaliações da crítica
    • 41Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 2 indicações no total

    Vídeos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:18
    Trailer

    Fotos38

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    Elenco principal27

    Editar
    Burt Lancaster
    Burt Lancaster
    • Big Eli Wakefield
    Diana Lynn
    Diana Lynn
    • Susie Spann
    Dianne Foster
    Dianne Foster
    • Hannah Bolen
    John McIntire
    John McIntire
    • Zack Wakefield
    Una Merkel
    Una Merkel
    • Sophie Wakefield
    John Carradine
    John Carradine
    • Ziby Fletcher
    John Litel
    John Litel
    • Pleasant Tuesday Babson
    Rhys Williams
    Rhys Williams
    • Constable
    Edward Norris
    Edward Norris
    • Roulette Dealer
    Walter Matthau
    Walter Matthau
    • Stan Bodine
    Donald MacDonald
    Donald MacDonald
    • Little Eli Wakefield
    Clem Bevans
    Clem Bevans
    • River Queen Pilot
    • (não creditado)
    Blackie
    • Dog
    • (não creditado)
    Lee Erickson
    • Luke Lester
    • (não creditado)
    Faro
    • Faro
    • (não creditado)
    Lisa Ferraday
    Lisa Ferraday
    • Gambler
    • (não creditado)
    James Griffith
    James Griffith
    • Riverboat Gambler
    • (não creditado)
    Gil Herman
    • Frontiersman
    • (não creditado)
    • Direção
      • Burt Lancaster
    • Roteiristas
      • A.B. Guthrie Jr.
      • Felix Holt
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários45

    6,23.3K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    7bkoganbing

    When A Wakefield Meets A Fromes

    In the first of two films Burt Lancaster directs as well as stars, he plays the title role of Eli Wakefield who is The Kentuckian. The part of the frontiersman in the James Monroe presidency fits Lancaster's robust personality perfectly. He's very much a combination of both the William Holden and Robert Mitchum characters in Rachel and the Stranger, taking the best aspects of both for his portrayal. Like Mitchum he's got 'woodsy' ways and like Holden he aims to see his son grows out of those ways.

    Just where and how little David McDonald does grow up does concern Lancaster and he does during the course of The Kentuckian reexamine just what it is he wants for himself and his son. He's also got a real problem in the shape of a pair of inbred mountain people called Fromes whose family has feuded with the Wakefields for a couple of generations.

    Burt's moving west with his boy to get away from the mountain feud so his kid has a chance to grow up and their destination is Texas which the Mexicans had opened up for Yankee settlers eventually to their regret. But he helps a lady in distress in the person of bond servant Dianne Foster and spends his 'Texas' money buying out her contract from Will Wright.

    So a planned visit with brother John McIntire and sister-in-law Una Merkel is going to be longer than he thought especially with McIntire wanting to remake Lancaster into a merchant like himself. McIntire also has a wife picked out for him in the person of school teacher Diana Lynn.

    The film was shot in Owensboro, Kentucky and presumably in 1955 there was still enough 'woodsy' territory that it still looked like 1820 frontier America. Director Lancaster got good performances out of his cast which included Walter Matthau making his motion picture debut. Matthau plays a tavern owner and town bully, a mean man with a bull-whip who goes after an unarmed Lancaster with one. That scene is really the climax of the film.

    However the two to watch for here are the Fromes brothers, Paul Wexler and Douglas Spencer. They are a pair of evil looking dudes, no doubt ancestors of those guys from Deliverance.

    In a recent biography of Burt Lancaster, because of some disparaging comments Lancaster made about directors, the Director's Guild first refused to let him direct his own film. Eventually the production company, Hecht-Hill-Lancaster got a waiver from the Guild. I think they wanted to Burt to sweat a little. For him though directing turned out not to be something he wanted to do, he got through the film with some difficulty and it was no accident that while he was on the production end, Lancaster only directed one other film in his career, Midnight Man.

    The Kentuckian is a good film, perfectly suited to Burt Lancaster's athleticism and charisma, a must for his fans.
    6CinemaSerf

    The Kentuckian

    Burt Lancaster starred in, and directed, this story of a well meaning traveller ("Big Eli") and his young son "Little Eli" (Donald MacDonald) heading to Texas hoping to make a decent living for him and his son. Along the way he encounters (and buys) an indentured slave "Susie" (Diana Lynn) who only complicates their already interesting journey as he fights his own demons with women, booze and a particularly nasty Walter Matthau ("Bodine"). It's a beautifully shot piece of cinema, this, and the mischievous charm of the star is writ large. It's too long, though - frequently sagging as the romantic elements go quickly from humorously hostile to schmaltzy just a bit too quickly. Matthau and his whip are the stuff of cinema legend though, and the young MacDomald plays his part well. Fans of Burt will love this, but I found I was bored by the half way mark as what pace it does have it doesn't really sustain.
    9alydar21

    For Burt Fans, Isn't everyone?

    Lancaster's only directing role. A decent western with a twist or two, especially at the ending showdown, which features 10 dramatic seconds of feat that only Lancaster could make suspenseful.

    How does a man defeat an armed enemy while standing opposite a 40 yard wide stream, and with no gun? The daring Lancaster meets this challenge with a surprising, brash dash. Check it out.
    7Wuchakk

    Burt Lancaster's Eastern Frontier flick

    Released in 1955, "The Kentuckian" is one of only a couple films directed by Burt Lancaster.

    THE STORY takes place during the presidency of James Monroe circa 1820. Lancaster plays Eli Wakefield, a Kentuckian who desires more room to breath in Texas. Still in Kentucky, they blow their "Texas money" on freeing a beautiful indentured servant, Hannah (Dianne Foster). They don't get past the next frontier town where Eli takes up with his brother in the tobacco business and Hannah gets a job as a bar matron. Eli's dreams of Texas are sidetracked when he meets up with a schoolmarm (Diana Lynn) who encourages him to settle down and make a family with her. The problem is that Eli's son prefers Hannah and doesn't want to give up their Texas dream. Meanwhile feuders are hot on Eli's trail, not to mention malevolent local businessman with a whip (Walter Matthau).

    Some highlights include:

    • Lush Eastern locations. The film was shot in Levi Jackson State Park, Kentucky (near London), as well as Owensboro, Kentucky, which is on the Ohio River, and Rockport, which is just across the river in Indiana. The river depicted in the film is supposed to be the Tennessee River (I think), but it was shot on the Ohio. In any event, although "The Kentuckian" is classified as a Western, it's actually an Eastern.


    • The film offers a good glimpse of what the Eastern USA was like back when it was still a frontier -- the cabin-styled houses, sleeping in the woods, etc. No internet, cable, video games, DVDs or microwaves. People actually sat down with other people and communed.


    • The story is realistic, albeit with some lame dialogue. Regardless,you don't have to worry about any goofiness or unbelievable bits that plague some 50's Westerns, except for the too-wooden-they're-funny feudalists.


    • Back then a huge riverboat coming to town was an exciting attraction. Americans today, by contrast, get all excited over the shenanigans of some celebrity.


    • Dianne Foster (Hannah) is a beautiful redhead. One wonders how a woman like this would stay single very long on the frontier.


    • The whip fight with Matthau is great. Lancaster is almost whipped to shreds (!).


    • Loyalty is a sub-theme here. Eli's son is loyal to Hannah and never warms up to the schoolmarm, although there's it's clear that there's nothing wrong with the latter. And Hannah is loyal to the man who delivered her from bondage (Eli), despite his infatuation with the marm.


    • I liked the bit on Eli being a laughing stock because of a worthless freshwater pearl, but he gets the last laugh with a letter from the President (or is it?) and additional help.


    • Lastly, Lancaster is a likable protagonist with his charismatic joy-of-living persona; he's humble and respectful, the antithesis of Eastwood's amoral and lifeless 'man with no name' a decade later.


    The film runs an hour and 44 minutes.

    BOTTOM LINE: "The Kentuckian" is breath of fresh air and I enjoyed it from beginning to end for all the above reasons; it's sort of like "The Last of the Mohicans" (1992) of its era, albeit no where as good. It's innocuous and easy-going, but sometimes surprisingly brutal (the dog fight and whip fight). If you can acclimate to the style of filmmaking of the mid-50s it's worth checking out.

    GRADE: B
    6adrianovasconcelos

    Lancaster directs, acts; amiable but self-centered movie

    Burt Lancaster remains one of my all-time favorite American actors, but I do not think his decision to direct THE KENTUCKIAN was his wisest.

    Clearly, Burt was concerned with his image from the start, his hair always neatly coiffured despite tackling dense forest in the Kentuckyan wilds, and he wastes no time highlighting his own athleticism, good looks, healthy teeth, and blue eyes.

    As Elias Wakefield, he also plays the part of a caring father to a poor Little Eli who suffers abuse at school, but is such a pure, natural child that you overlook how different Little Eli's facial features are from his progenitor's. Elias Sr. also allows himself to beaten up to a pulp before he subdues nasty Bodine (played by Matthau), and at the end he runs out the evil Fromes in great style.

    John McIntire plays a solid supporting role as Elias Sr.'s older brother, who seems to care for him as much as he wants him to stay in place and do all the hard work, thereby making poor Elias Sr. the target of brotherly exploitation.

    The cherry on this self-enhancing effort is Burt's capacity to have two women swooning over him. First, he is interested in Diane Foster (who is even willing to work to pay his move to Texas) but stops short of giving her the unequivocal nod, which obviously frustrates her; then, without much ado, he kisses and plans to marry Diana Lynn, and to stay in Kentucky; but, at movie's end, he listens to Little Eli and his desire to move to Texas and his preference for Diane Foster (I suppose Elias Sr. was well ahead of his time, listening to his son and acting like a late 20th Century father).

    There are some brief and eye-catching sideshows like the river boat, and a band of black musicians who play a delightful tune, and - again - seem to belong more in the 1950s than in the 19th Century.

    At the river boat, Elias Sr. achieves another feather for his cap, as a card greenhorn who actually cleans out the house. Attaboy, Burt!

    In the end, THE KENTUCKIAN is a kind-hearted movie but I felt that I was never to lose sight of the fact that Burt was pulling all the strings... which, from my standpoint, lowers the film's quality, and gives the wrong impression about the thoughtful, humane, and intelligent human being that Burt Lancaster actually was. 6/10

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    Interesses relacionados

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    Western clássico
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    Drama
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    Ocidente

    Enredo

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    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      The first movie directed by Burt Lancaster. Due to the unfavorable critical response he did not direct again for almost 20 years, until O Homem da Meia-Noite (1974).
    • Erros de gravação
      At the beginning, Eli is sitting near a campfire. We can clearly see its flames, showing it is burning. When Eli stands up, the flames have disappeared, and we haven't see him extinguishing the fire.
    • Citações

      Big Eli Wakefield: The way to start off new is to shuck off what's old.

    • Conexões
      Featured in Walter Matthau: Diamante em Bruto (1997)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Possum Up a Gum Tree
      (uncredited)

      Traditional folk song

      Performed by Diana Lynn, John McIntire, Una Merkel, and Burt Lancaster

      [The song Susie, Zack, Sophie and Big Eli eventually sing when Little Eli requests Susie play it on the spinet]

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    Perguntas frequentes15

    • How long is The Kentuckian?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 11 de agosto de 1955 (Japão)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idiomas
      • Inglês
      • Francês
    • Também conhecido como
      • O Aventureiro
    • Locações de filme
      • Cumberland Falls State Park, Corbin, Kentucky, EUA
    • Empresa de produção
      • Hecht-Lancaster Productions
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 2.600.000
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 44 min(104 min)
    • Proporção
      • 2.55 : 1

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