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IMDbPro

La grande caravane

Original title: Wagon Train
  • TV Series
  • 1957–1965
  • TV-PG
  • 1h 15m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
4.1K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
1,542
300
John McIntire in La grande caravane (1957)
Wagon Train: Season 4
Play trailer1:31
1 Video
99+ Photos
Classical WesternWestern EpicWestern

Stories of the journeys of a wagon train as it leaves post-Civil War Missouri on its way to California through the plains, deserts, and Rocky Mountains.Stories of the journeys of a wagon train as it leaves post-Civil War Missouri on its way to California through the plains, deserts, and Rocky Mountains.Stories of the journeys of a wagon train as it leaves post-Civil War Missouri on its way to California through the plains, deserts, and Rocky Mountains.

  • Stars
    • Frank McGrath
    • Terry Wilson
    • Robert Horton
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    4.1K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    1,542
    300
    • Stars
      • Frank McGrath
      • Terry Wilson
      • Robert Horton
    • 25User reviews
    • 2Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 7 Primetime Emmys
      • 12 nominations total

    Episodes284

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    Videos1

    Wagon Train: Season 4
    Trailer 1:31
    Wagon Train: Season 4

    Photos5058

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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Frank McGrath
    Frank McGrath
    • Charlie Wooster
    • 1957–1965
    Terry Wilson
    Terry Wilson
    • Bill Hawks
    • 1957–1965
    Robert Horton
    Robert Horton
    • Flint McCullough
    • 1957–1962
    John McIntire
    John McIntire
    • Christopher Hale…
    • 1959–1965
    Ward Bond
    Ward Bond
    • Major Seth Adams
    • 1957–1961
    Denny Miller
    Denny Miller
    • Duke Shannon
    • 1961–1964
    Robert Fuller
    Robert Fuller
    • Cooper Smith…
    • 1959–1965
    Michael Burns
    Michael Burns
    • Barnaby West…
    • 1960–1965
    Leonard P. Geer
    Leonard P. Geer
    • Wagon Train Member…
    • 1957–1964
    Milan Smith
    • Wagon Train Member…
    • 1957–1964
    Morgan Woodward
    Morgan Woodward
    • Barney…
    • 1958–1965
    I. Stanford Jolley
    I. Stanford Jolley
    • Briggs…
    • 1958–1965
    Richard H. Cutting
    Richard H. Cutting
    • Ben Mayhew…
    • 1958–1965
    Orville Sherman
    Orville Sherman
    • Arthur Pelham…
    • 1958–1965
    Kay Stewart
    Kay Stewart
    • Abby Hicks…
    • 1958–1964
    Dennis McCarthy
    Dennis McCarthy
    • Beauford…
    • 1958–1965
    Norman Leavitt
    Norman Leavitt
    • Cory…
    • 1957–1965
    David McMahon
    David McMahon
    • Adrian Murphy…
    • 1958–1965
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews25

    7.54K
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    Featured reviews

    donahue-1

    Wagon Train - Robert Horton

    I'm not quite sure how your website allows for the addition of biographical information - so I'm entering this comment in this forum in the hope that you might be able to add this to Mr. Horton's biographical sketch. I thought that your readers would find it interesting - as I did - that Mr. Horton wrote the biography for his character Flint McCullough in Wagon Train.

    At the Western Film Festival in Tombstone Arizona (2004) - Mr. Horton stated that since the writers often changed from episode to episode - he wrote the biography for Flint McCullough - to ensure consistency for his character across all episodes. For example - one writer would write his character as an expert horseman - and the next would write his character as being less than expert with horses.
    9bkoganbing

    Crossing the Plains

    As a lad way back in the day I was one big fan of this TV series. Even at that age I appreciated all the famous guest stars this series seemed to attract.

    Take a look at the film credits of Ward Bond. You can hardly find a player, male or female, who at one point did not work with Ward Bond. All the more remarkable when you consider his rightwing politics and championing of the blacklist. The man was hated in some circles, but apparently no one denied his talent.

    It was a simple concept, Ward Bond as Major Seth Adams and his team led a group of hardy pioneers across the plains and mountains to California post Civil War. EAch episode focused on those traveling in a particular wagon or someone they met on the way who was usually a name guest star.

    Wagon Train was enormously popular. When Ward Bond died in November of 1960 it was national news. It was quite a month, his death and that of Clark Gable almost put the election of a new president named Kennedy out of the headlines.

    Bond's death also allowed Wagon Train to pioneer what Law and Order later perfected, the revolving change of regulars. Only Frank McGrath and Terry Wilson stayed with the show for the entire run.

    Frank McGrath and Terry Wilson were a pair of stunt men who worked a whole lot for John Ford and though they had done some roles with dialog in front of the camera, Wagon Train made their faces familiar to the public. McGrath was funny little guy as cook Charlie Wooster who must have kept them all amused because the regulars were forever complaining about his lousy cooking.

    Wilson played Bill Hawks and comments have been made about the horrible continuity Wagon Train had. It sure did and the most glaring example was that when the show first started, Hawks had a wife named Emily in that first season. She was not only dropped. but later on Hawks referred to himself as a bachelor. Couldn't do that today.

    John McIntire replaced Bond and was more than adequate as the father figure wagonmaster. There was a good episode that introduced McIntire as a temporary and sadistic wagonmaster played by Lee Marvin takes over and at the same time, the train picks up McIntire who's just seen his family massacred by Indians. McIntire is a former wagonmaster and he and Marvin have a confrontation.

    Robert Horton was scout Flint McCullough and several episodes featured him in the lead and they took him to the places he was scouting with guest stars there for him to interact with. Supposedly political differences were pretty rife between him and Bond. He quit as he was planning to do anyway as I remember even after Bond died. Bad career move though, he never got anything as good as Flint McCullough again.

    After that a host of new regulars came on the show, Robert Fuller, Denny Miller, and Michael Burns. The train came to an end in 1965. I was sorry to see it end.

    Hallmark channel runs Wagon Train sometimes, here's hoping they start them again.
    dinky-4

    The "Gold" from the TV Western's Golden Age

    Perhaps the quintessential show from the Golden Age of TV westerns, this series ran from 1957 to 1965 and it had a simple but compelling format. Each week it told the story of one of the travelers on an 1870's "wagon train" making its way across the American West. This format thus combined the sweeping backdrop of an ever-changing frontier with the small, personal story of a single individual.

    So popular did the show become that it attracted an impressive array of "guest stars" -- Bette Davis, Ernest Borgnine, Rhonda Fleming, Barbara Stanwyck, Leslie Nielsen, Lee Marvin, etc.

    The earlier shows in the series were probably the best since they featured Ward Bond as the leader of the wagon train and Robert Horton as his scout. Ward's death in 1960 and Horton's departure in 1962 weakened the series though it maintained a respectable level of production for several more years.

    While the TV westerns that arose in the Eisenhower years are now nostalgically regarded as fine "family" entertainment, it's curious that they often showed their leading actors stripped half-naked and subjected to various forms of torture. "Wagon Train" was no exception. On the 1-15-1958 episode titled "The Gabe Carswell Story," for example, a bare-chested Robert Horton is staked out spreadeagle-style under the scorching sun and left to die by a villainous "half-breed." And in the 12-13-1961 episode titled "The Traitor," Horton is stripped to the waist, tied to a wagon wheel, and whipped across his bare back. In both cases the sado-masochistic nature of these sequences is emphasized rather than muted and the exposed muscularity of the actor is openly exploited.

    While Ward Bond could never be replaced, many viewers looked kindly on his successor, John McIntire. Robert Fuller, however, never quite seemed adequate as Robert Horton's replacement.
    8michelleishappy

    A series of adventure and human hearts

    Even though this series aired before I was born, it's been a joy to discover. I wish they'd have kept and credited the awesome vocals of the theme song throughout the series. Popular voiceover artist and singer Thurl Ravenscroft (of Tony the Tiger fame) was a part of the vocal ensemble behind the theme song. My Mother loves the character drawings in the opening and closing scenes. So much behind-the-scenes talent help make this series a true western gem.
    6strong-122-478885

    "Wagons, Ho!"

    On the strength of this vintage TV' show's 1st season (where I watched all of its 39 episodes) - I enthusiastically give Wagon Train my personal recommendation.

    Even though (at a 50-minute running time) a number of the episodes did tend to wear a little thin at times - (For the most part) - The overall majority of these 39 episodes were quite tightly scripted and believable.

    I also found the "Old West" settings seemed authentic and the actors could usually be counted on to give convincing performances.

    All-in-all - For anyone who enjoys watching top-notch TV Westerns from the 1950s - Wagon Train (filmed in b&w) was right on the mark. I especially liked actors Robert Horton and Terry Wilson.

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    Related interests

    Gary Cooper in Le train sifflera trois fois (1952)
    Classical Western
    Henry Fonda and Charles Bronson in Il était une fois dans l'Ouest (1968)
    Western Epic
    John Wayne and Harry Carey Jr. in La Prisonnière du désert (1956)
    Western

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Ward Bond (Major Seth Adams) and Robert Horton (Flint McCullough) did not get along on the set. According to Horton, Bond spread rumors about his sexuality. The two men settled their differences two days before Bond died.
    • Goofs
      Often, when people are aboard the wagons conversing, the back projection of the scenery passing appears to have been shot at thirty miles per hour or more, which would be a velocity rarely approached by a covered wagon.
    • Connections
      Featured in TV's Western Heroes (1993)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 26, 1964 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Wagon Train
    • Filming locations
      • Lake Sherwood, California, USA
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 15m(75 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Mono

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