Davy Crockett et les pirates de la rivière
- 1956
- Tous publics
- 1h 21m
Davy and his friends leave for New Orleans to sell some fur pelts.Davy and his friends leave for New Orleans to sell some fur pelts.Davy and his friends leave for New Orleans to sell some fur pelts.
- Davy Crockett
- (archive footage)
- George Russel
- (archive footage)
- Jocko
- (archive footage)
- Cap'n Cobb
- (archive footage)
- Moose
- (archive footage)
- Sam Mason
- (archive footage)
- Big Harpe
- (archive footage)
- Little Harpe
- (archive footage)
- Hank
- (archive footage)
- Fiddler
- (archive footage)
- Colonel Plug
- (archive footage)
- Townsman
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
- Official at Keel Boat Race
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
- Townsman
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
- Saloon Owner
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
- Black Eagle
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
It is very easy to see why there was a Crockett phenomenon at the time. Fess Parker is perfect as Davy, and his sidekick, Georgie Russel, is played by Buddy Ebson, a few years before "Beverly Hillbillies". They play off of each other like a perfectly matched pair of shoes.
This film is wonderful and makes me wish that Disney had made more of them back in the 1950's. Unfortunately, however, the interest in Crockett was winding down by the time this one played in the theaters, and Disney used Fess Parker in other movies, like "Old Yeller" and "Westward Ho! The Wagons"
Still, this is a great film that is a lot of fun. The boats were later taken to Disneyland and utilized as the Mike Fink Keelboats ride.
-- One sidenote here: the keelboats were removed from Disneyland in 1996 following an accident that dumped a load of passengers into the water! --
As with most of the old Disney titles, I greatly recommend this film.
If you found 'Davy Crocket: King of the Wild Frontier' a fun film, you probably liked it. 'Davy Crocket and the River Pirates' continues the fun and increases it as it flows more smoothly story wise then it's predecessor. It flows smoothly perhaps because there is a river in it, because rivers usually flow well if not roughly at times. Davy goes up against the King of the River Mink Fink in a race down the Ohio. I currently live near the Ohio river in Steubenville Ohio. It doesn't look as clean as it did back then, as everything looked cleaner back then if you take 50's films seriously.
After beating the tar out of each other, they take on the river pirates giving the Indians a bad name and beat the tar out of them. The action is more intense then the last time around, because it ignores the moral Mr. Smith dialogues in congress in favor of fists flying through the air. And the fight scenes believe you me, looks just as real as if Davy Crockett was fighting outside your local bar.
Davy Crocket is so suave and cool, basically because he just is and quite frankly he is humble about it which makes him more suave and cool. He doesn't brag or come up with wise cracks like some modern action heroes, he just goes and kicks butt wherever it is needed. Kinda of like Chuck Norris. But Davy has his own theme song, which they take time for in this production to sing as their going down the river. Mink Finch has his boys sing a song about him, but it never caught on in record sales.
The River Pirates deserves a place on your video library shelf, right next to the other Davy flick. Chances are they'll be on the same DVD, so you may have no choice in the matter.
What is the quickest way to mans heart? Davy Crockett's fist.
Sometimes a film is powerful because it WAS powerful.
This is an amazingly dumb movie but perhaps no dumber in extremes than today's. The reason it might be on your radar is because of how influential it was.
It was the first movie with multimedia tie-ins. You could buy Davey Crockett hats and weapons. And lunchboxes stuff like that. That wasn't all that extraordinary then. But this was also the first movie that was also a theme park ride. So it is the beginning of a food chain that leads us to the Depp pirate projects. That Davey Crockett ride lasted 40 years! (Incidentally, students of film will see blocking similarities between Depp's boat ride in the bayou and Parker's.)
Its also one of the movies most obviously designed for boys. Here you have guys pretending to be Indians and dying by falling down. You have water play. You have racing. You have tricksters.
And most of all, you have a juvenile version of that John Ford/ John Wayne meme: real men achieve honor through recreational fighting.
Seeing it again fifty years later is very strange. Young people watch movies more closely than adults I think. I remembered the smallest details, like the lettering on barrels, which incidentally was inspired by the Our Gang/Little Rascals cosmology that things become props by labelling them.
There are no "girls;" this is strictly boy's play. The only time girlie stuff appears is when the pirates try to attract Mike Fink's crew to an ambush. They do this by dressing up as floozies, which of course he cannot resist.
And its also an influential film in melding a certain collection of values to a certain collection of cultural carriers.
The values are honesty, plainspokenness, insight outside of book-larnin', loyalty (at least among men). The cultural carriers today are what's been labelled as "country" music (and its advertising affiliate, NASCAR).
Ted's Evaluation -- 2 of 3: Has some interesting elements.
Did you know
- TriviaThe movie was made from two episodes of Disney's TV show spliced together and released as a profitable feature film. Walt Disney filmed his show in color even though few color TVs were being sold as yet. As a result, the Davy Crockett episodes could be turned into instant movies by stitching the episodes together.
- GoofsThe move is set in 1810. Davy asks Georgie to charge up Old Betsy in the saloon. Davy got his rifle, Old Betsy, in the 1820's.
- Quotes
[Crockett and Russel approach Fink as the Gullywhumper is secured to the boat landing]
Davy Crockett: Excuse me, mister? Which one of them fellers is captain of this boat?
Mike Fink: What did you say?
Moose: [laughing] He wants to know who the captain is!
[Fink smacks Moose]
Mike Fink: How long you bush-wackers been beating the backwoods? Why, everybody knows who the captain of the Gullywhumper is! It's me! Mike Fink, King of the River!
George Russel: Well, Captain, meet up with Davy Crockett, King of the Wild Frontier.
Mike Fink: Davy Crockett, huh? Well, it sure is a small world. You're about a foot shorter than you oughta be.
George Russel: Don't worry, he's still a growin'.
Mike Fink: Yeah, like them yarns they keep spreadin' about him.
Davy Crockett: Mighty hard to live up to, sometime.
Mike Fink: Well, I don't have any trouble livin' up to mine. I am the original ringtail roarer from the thunder 'n lightnin' country! I'm a real snorter and a head buster! I can out-run, out-jump, out-sing, out-swim, out-dance, out-shoot, out-eat, out-drink...
Davy Crockett: Out-talk?
Mike Fink: Yeah, out-talk, out-cuss and out-fight anybody in the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers put together!
- Alternate versionsUK version submitted to the BBFC in December 2003 is "re-edited" and runs 78 min.
- ConnectionsEdited from Le monde merveilleux de Disney: Davy Crockett's Keelboat Race (1955)
- SoundtracksBallad Of Davy Crockett
Words by Tom Blackburn
Words by Tom Blackburn
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Details
- Runtime1 hour 21 minutes