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IMDbPro

Duel au soleil

Original title: Duel in the Sun
  • 1946
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 26m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
10K
YOUR RATING
Gregory Peck, Joseph Cotten, and Jennifer Jones in Duel au soleil (1946)
Watch Official Trailer
Play trailer2:17
1 Video
99+ Photos
Classical WesternWestern EpicDramaRomanceWestern

Beautiful, biracial Pearl Chavez becomes the ward of her dead father's first love and finds herself torn between two brothers, one good and the other bad.Beautiful, biracial Pearl Chavez becomes the ward of her dead father's first love and finds herself torn between two brothers, one good and the other bad.Beautiful, biracial Pearl Chavez becomes the ward of her dead father's first love and finds herself torn between two brothers, one good and the other bad.

  • Directors
    • King Vidor
    • Otto Brower
    • William Dieterle
  • Writers
    • David O. Selznick
    • Niven Busch
    • Oliver H.P. Garrett
  • Stars
    • Jennifer Jones
    • Joseph Cotten
    • Gregory Peck
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    10K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • King Vidor
      • Otto Brower
      • William Dieterle
    • Writers
      • David O. Selznick
      • Niven Busch
      • Oliver H.P. Garrett
    • Stars
      • Jennifer Jones
      • Joseph Cotten
      • Gregory Peck
    • 119User reviews
    • 46Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 2 Oscars
      • 3 wins & 4 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:17
    Official Trailer

    Photos157

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    Top cast58

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    Jennifer Jones
    Jennifer Jones
    • Pearl Chavez
    Joseph Cotten
    Joseph Cotten
    • Jesse McCanles
    Gregory Peck
    Gregory Peck
    • Lewton 'Lewt' McCanles
    Lionel Barrymore
    Lionel Barrymore
    • Sen. Jackson McCanles
    Herbert Marshall
    Herbert Marshall
    • Scott Chavez
    Lillian Gish
    Lillian Gish
    • Laura Belle McCanles
    Walter Huston
    Walter Huston
    • The Sinkiller
    Charles Bickford
    Charles Bickford
    • Sam Pierce
    Harry Carey
    Harry Carey
    • Lem Smoot
    Joan Tetzel
    Joan Tetzel
    • Helen Langford
    Tilly Losch
    Tilly Losch
    • Mrs. Chavez
    Butterfly McQueen
    Butterfly McQueen
    • Vashti
    Scott McKay
    Scott McKay
    • Sid
    Otto Kruger
    Otto Kruger
    • Mr. Langford
    Sidney Blackmer
    Sidney Blackmer
    • The Lover
    Charles Dingle
    Charles Dingle
    • Sheriff Hardy
    Griff Barnett
    Griff Barnett
    • The Bordertown Jailer
    • (uncredited)
    John Barton
    • Party Guest
    • (uncredited)
    • Directors
      • King Vidor
      • Otto Brower
      • William Dieterle
    • Writers
      • David O. Selznick
      • Niven Busch
      • Oliver H.P. Garrett
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews119

    6.710K
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    Featured reviews

    6bkoganbing

    She's a good girl that Pearl

    David O. Selznick spent the rest of his life trying to top Gone With the Wind. What other mountains did he have to climb after making the most acclaimed motion picture ever?

    In addition he had another obsession, his second wife Jennifer Jones. He was going to make her the greatest leading lady in the history of film.

    Well he didn't succeed at either, but it wasn't for lack of trying. Jones herself was in a peculiar position similar to her husband's. She got an Oscar for her first feature film after she changed her name from Phyllis Isley to Jennifer Jones. Selznick knew that she couldn't play saints all her life as she did in The Song of Bernadette. So for this western answer to Gone With the Wind as Pearl Chavez she plays about as opposite a character from Bernadette Soubirous as you can get.

    Duel in the Sun got mixed reviews by the critics, but the public ate it up. It's the story of the McCanless family, parents Lionel Barrymore and Lillian Gish and sons Joseph Cotten and Gregory Peck. Cotten is the good son, Peck the bad one. In fact as Lewt McCanless Peck played his worst character until Josef Mengele in Boys from Brazil.

    A kissing cousin of their's Jennifer Jones comes to live with them. She's the offspring of an old beau of Lillian's, Herbert Marshall and the Indian wife he ran off with back in the day. Lillian and Herbert were kissing cousins also.

    As Pearl Chavez, Jen gets the McCanless boys testosterone going into overdrive. Take one look at her and you can hardly blame them.

    One of the not so hidden subtexts of Duel in the Sun is racism. Jennifer's good for a quick roll in the hay, but marriage is out of the question, at least for Gregory Peck. Barrymore's and Peck's racism is overt, the others not quite so, but it's still there.

    The negotiations with Louis B. Mayer for Lionel Barrymore must have been interesting. Selznick's former wife was Irene Mayer, Louis's daughter.

    One thing with Selznick, he spared no expense. He got the best in talent for this film. Dimitri Tiomkin did the score, King Vidor the direction, Ray Rennahan the color photography which is absolutely stunning.

    He even got Bing Crosby to record Gotta Get Me Somebody to Love with Les Paul's guitar. Peck sang it in the film, Crosby's record sold a few platters.

    He even got Orson Welles to do the off-screen narration if you don't recognize that voice.

    It misses being a classic mainly because Selznick couldn't keep his hands off it. Sometimes the acting is about as subtle as a sledgehammer from all the performers. I'm willing to bet it's Selznick more than Vidor.

    Yet it's good entertainment and Duel in the Sun does have its moments.
    spordesign

    Just remember, don't call her "Honey".

    PURE OPERA. From the scenic backdrops seething in passionate colors to Jennifer Jones' over-ripe performance and Dimitri Tiomkin's tempestuous score...'Duel In The Sun' isn't just another soapy oater, it is the ultimate soapy oater. Brimming with more bad taste than any screenwriter could possibly misconceive, this Selznick classic is the penultimate guilty viewing pleasure...if you like you're Westerns on the sleazy side that is!

    The performances are all unapologetically over-the-top, with Ms. Jones, in an Oscar winning performance no less, as Pearl Chavez, the 'half-breed' vixen torn between lust for Gregory Peck's Lewt McCanles, the bad-boy brother gone badder, and the 'save-me-from-myself' brand of love for Joseph Cotten's Jesse McCanles, the good brother with not-a-whole-heck-of-alot of sex appeal going for him. In between all this indecision, Ms. Jones sets fire to the scenery with as many sultry leers and poses as, I suppose, the censors of the time would permit her. "I'm TRASH, TRASH, TRASH," Pearl exclaims. And that about sums it all up. In spades! I should also make mention of the other Oscar winning performance, that by the venerable Lillian Gish as Laura Belle McCanles who, in perhaps the most painfully rapturous sequence, resurrects her silent film training in a tour-de-force of physical acting that, in less capable hands, would only be embarrassing. Not that you won't be tempted to laugh mind you, even Grand Opera, at the best of times, isn't this exquisitely sublime. And then there is Butterfly McQueen...as the befuddled maid (what else)...in the only role written for obvious comedic effect, whose long-winded sincerity couldn't be the more perfect foil for a hurried house full of whitees with nothing but sex on the brain...

    On the technical side, it is an unquestionably ravishing film to look at. In glorious Technicolor, the 'Old West' never looked more mythic or more prone to tragedy...the 'campy' side that is. And, yet once more, Dimitri Tiomkin finesses our ears with a resounding melody of wide open spaces and of still bigger ambitions and desires, culminating in a symphonic tempest for two ill-fated (or over-sexed) lovers who could only be united in death.

    WOW, this picture is right off the Harlequin Romance map! And I enjoyed every minute of it.
    8Nazi_Fighter_David

    A highly original piece of work that remains impressive, baroque folly, not least for the final scene

    King Vidor was a long-serving and much-respected Hollywood grandmaster who took a serious interest in movie-making… "Billy the Kid" and "Duel in the Sun" hold an important place in the history of the genre… These two films in particular, along with "Northwest Passage," show Vidor's romantic vision of backwoods America and his love of natural landscape; they share, too, an earthy quality which is missing from his more routine action Westerns, "The Texas Rangers" and "Man Without a Star."

    Photographed in rich color, the visual magnificence of the film was manifested in the shots of the cowboys galloping across the rolling hills; in the spectacular confrontation between the McCanles forces who aimed to defend Spanish Bit with lead and the U.S. Cavalry; in the deep red sunset sequence with Lionel Barymore as "the lonely Senator"; and in that long shot of the surreptitious meeting between Lewt and his father on the hilltop at sunset…

    "Duel in the Sun" is extravagantly and grandiosely passionate and romantic and its characters are much larger than life… A poignant scene was the tremendous moment between two legendary actors (Lionel Barrymore & Lillian Gish) when Laura Belle said to her husband "I'm a nuisance to you even to the end. It's the first time you've been in this room since that night./I loved you, Laura Belle. Yes, sir, I loved you."

    Now, when a single movie offers murder, rape, attempted fratricide, train wreck, fiery sensual dance, drunkenness, religion, range wars, prostitution, sacred and profane love and sex as the principal motivation and not as an incidental subplot, and all that against an epic background of empire-building, well, it is for the first time in a Western in such a big scale…

    The film featured the story of Pearl Chavez whose past is dark as her coca-stained skin and who loves everybody but loves bad Lewt most often…

    Gregory Peck character as Lewt is barbaric, undisciplined, untamed, overwhelming… He is a bad man, all bad, but he is also the lowest, dirtiest, meanest and cool, and he knows how to laugh and have a good time…

    Jennifer Jones as Pearl, is the 'prettiest girl ever to set foot on Spanish Bit.' She is a marvelous overwrought minx, wild and sexy…

    Joseph Cotton is the calm, educated, refined, pleasant son Jesse who ultimately sides with the railroad against his father…He even threatens to cut the fence wire promising: "I'd rather be on the side of the victims than of the murderers."

    Lionel Barrymore is the invalid Senator Jackson McCanles who orders his son, calling him a "Judas," to leave his ranch for as long as he lives…

    Lillian Gish is the delicate Laura Belle who blames her husband of spoiling Lewt and she let him do so ever since he was a child making him think that rules weren't made for him…

    Herbert Marshall plays Scott Chavez the condemned Southern aristocrat gentleman who sends his daughter to Laura Belle, his second cousin…

    Charles Bickford plays Sam Pierce, the boss who gets a little ranch of his own but never run across anybody he wanted to marry… Besides, he never got up nerve enough to ask anybody…

    Impassions, pulsating, barbaric, and thunderous, the music matches perfectly the fervid emotionalism of the story…

    The film received only two Academy Awards nominations
    dougdoepke

    Overheated Fandango

    No need to recap the plot.

    One thing about this overblown fandango— once seeing it, you won't forget it. How could anyone when everything is done to such tasteless excess. Poor Pearl (Jones). Apparently, Jones was told her part was that of a hot-blooded wench, which she unfortunately took to mean parboiled. It's hard not to laugh at the first hour when she acts like a nympho on steroids, tossing hair and leering wildly like pampas grass in a windstorm. Not far behind is that vintage ham Lionel Barrymore doing his usual blustery bit, like we won't get his hard-bitten patriarch unless he takes it into hyper speed. And who could have guessed that the usually constricted and constrained Gregory Peck could actually over-act. I think it was his first and last time—good thing, too.

    It's possible to go on about the unrelenting excess— the sunsets that appear to hemorrhage, a musical score that's as necessary as sugar on molasses, and a loony ending that defies parody. But you get the idea. Too bad so much money and effort went into such a generally overheated result. Only Cotten, Gish and the black stallion come through unscathed. I'm thinking RKO could have made a dozen worthwhile programmers on the same budget. As things turned out, Selznick did his beloved Jones no favors with this one. It's hard to believe the man responsible for Gone with the Wind (1939) is also responsible for this swollen mess.
    Kirpianuscus

    perfect

    not great. only perfect. for the story, mix of different lines. for cast. and for the meet between Jennifer Jones and Gregory Peck in a last scene who impress again and again. it is a masterpiece . for the opportunity to discover a lost age of Hollywood in the best version. for the desire, and the reasonable result, to make a different western. and for its...humanitarian perspective about love and family. sure, I am far to be objective about it as admirer of Lillian Gish and Gregory Peck . but it is real good film. maybe, obvious, perfect.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      According to King Vidor, director Josef von Sternberg was hired only as a lighting expert by David O. Selznick in order to give his wife--and the film's star--Jennifer Jones a more glamorous look.
    • Goofs
      The opening shows saguaro cacti in the valley. The film is supposed to take place in Texas, but southern Arizona is the only place in the US with saguaro cacti, unless they've been transplanted.
    • Quotes

      The Sinkiller: Under that heathen blanket, there's a full-blossomed woman built by the devil to drive men crazy.

    • Alternate versions
      The original "roadshow" version ran 144 minutes. The additional 16 minutes, over the commonly-shown 128 minute version, consisted of a musical "prelude," an "overture" (which contained a spoken prologue, by Orson Welles), and exit music, but no additional scenes in the film. The two additional opening sequences were each inadvertently given the other's label.
    • Connections
      Edited into Histoire(s) du cinéma: Une histoire seule (1989)
    • Soundtracks
      Beautiful Dreamer
      (uncredited)

      Music by Stephen Foster

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 30, 1948 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Duelo al sol
    • Filming locations
      • Tucson Mountain Park, Tucson, Arizona, USA(final duel)
    • Production companies
      • Selznick International Pictures
      • Vanguard Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $8,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $20,408,163
    • Gross worldwide
      • $20,428,771
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      2 hours 26 minutes
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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