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Tonnerre sur Timberland

Original title: Guns of the Timberland
  • 1960
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 31m
IMDb RATING
5.5/10
611
YOUR RATING
Alan Ladd, Frankie Avalon, Jeanne Crain, and Gilbert Roland in Tonnerre sur Timberland (1960)
Classical WesternWestern

Feud between ranchers and lumberjacks over the issue of environment protection versus profits.Feud between ranchers and lumberjacks over the issue of environment protection versus profits.Feud between ranchers and lumberjacks over the issue of environment protection versus profits.

  • Director
    • Robert D. Webb
  • Writers
    • Joseph Petracca
    • Aaron Spelling
    • Louis L'Amour
  • Stars
    • Alan Ladd
    • Jeanne Crain
    • Gilbert Roland
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.5/10
    611
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Robert D. Webb
    • Writers
      • Joseph Petracca
      • Aaron Spelling
      • Louis L'Amour
    • Stars
      • Alan Ladd
      • Jeanne Crain
      • Gilbert Roland
    • 18User reviews
    • 7Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos6

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    Top cast52

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    Alan Ladd
    Alan Ladd
    • Jim Hadley
    Jeanne Crain
    Jeanne Crain
    • Laura Riley
    Gilbert Roland
    Gilbert Roland
    • Monty Walker
    Frankie Avalon
    Frankie Avalon
    • Bert Harvey
    Lyle Bettger
    Lyle Bettger
    • Clay Bell
    Noah Beery Jr.
    Noah Beery Jr.
    • Blackie
    • (as Noah Beery)
    Verna Felton
    Verna Felton
    • Aunt Sarah
    Alana Ladd
    Alana Ladd
    • Jane Peterson
    Regis Toomey
    Regis Toomey
    • Sheriff Taylor
    Johnny Seven
    Johnny Seven
    • Vince
    George Selk
    George Selk
    • Amos Stearns
    Paul E. Burns
    Paul E. Burns
    • Bill Burroughs
    Henry Kulky
    Henry Kulky
    • Logger
    John Albright
    • Townsman
    • (uncredited)
    Emile Avery
    • Rancher
    • (uncredited)
    Fern Barry
    • Mother
    • (uncredited)
    Paul Baxley
    • Logger
    • (uncredited)
    Danny Borzage
    • Cookie
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Robert D. Webb
    • Writers
      • Joseph Petracca
      • Aaron Spelling
      • Louis L'Amour
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    5.5611
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    Featured reviews

    6ma-cortes

    Nice and moving film about the confrontation between lumberjacks led by Alan Ladd and ranchers led by Jeanne Crain

    Decent Alan Ladd vehicle about confrontation between ranchers and timbermen. A tough logger : Alan Ladd and his group : Gilbert Roland , Noah Beery Jr., among others, go to the outskirts of Deep Wells. There they contend a beautiful rancher: Jeanne Crain and her foreman : Lyle Bettger . The towners are opposed to trees cutting , thinking of falling trees would cause mudslide sweeping the buildings.

    An exciting film in Western style about violent feud, thrills , action , fights and romance. Based on the novel by prolific Louis L'Amour , whose books have got several cinematic adaptations . Stars Alan Ladd gives a passable acting in his usual style , though he seems to be oldest than his true age : 46 at the time of shooting , that's why he was a real drunk, in fact he died early at 50 for mingling drinking and pills . He was already in his fall after his succesful films, especially in Film Noir, such as The Black Cat, The Glass Key, This Gun for Hire The Blue Dahlia, or other genres in movies as The Great Gastby , Botany Bay, Hell below Zero, The Black Night, The Badlanders and his bigh hit : Shane. While the always gorgeous Jeanne Crain is pretty well as her contender as well as her sweetheart . And a large support cast of notorious secondaries, such as : the teen idol Frankie Avalon playing some catching songs , Alana Ladd -Alan Ladd's daughter- as the sweet girlfriend , the ordinary baddie Lyle Bettger , the Latino Gilbert Roland, Noah Beery Jr as a sympathetc logger , Regis Toomey as a good-tempered Sheriff and Verna Felton as grumpy grandmother. It displays a colorful and brilliant cinematography in glimmer Technicolor. As well as a stirring and evocative musical score by David Buttolph adding the enjoyable songs performed by singer Frankie Avalon .

    The picture produced by Jaguar Productions- Alan Ladd ownership- and Warner Bros , being professionally directed by Robert D Webb. The latter was a professional artisan, an expert craftsman, at the beginning he worked as a director assistant, producer and subsequently fimmaker. He directed all kinds of genres as Western : White Feather, The Proud ones, The Jackals and Adventures : Pirates of Tortuga, Seven Citirs of Gold, The Way of Gold and Noir : The Cape Town Affair, The Spider, The Caribbean Mystery. Although he also made documentary and TV episodes from known series as Daniel Boone, Rawhide, Temple Houston series. Rating 5.5/10. Acceptable and passable. Well worth watching for Alan Ladd and Jeanne Crain fans.
    3bkoganbing

    If A Tree Don't Fall On Me

    Kirk Douglas said the worst film he ever did was The Big Trees, in fact he did it for no salary in order to buy his way out of a Warner Brothers contract. Like Guns Of The Timberland, it's a logging story and was a bad step in the career of both stars.

    The problem with Alan Ladd, producer and star of Guns Of The Timberland was that there weren't too many steps left for him. Douglas did his timber disaster at the beginning of his career, Ladd towards the end.

    Ladd and Gilbert Roland are partners in a timber concern and they've got a contract to cut logs in the territory of Jeanne Crain's ranch. The problem for Jeanne and the rest of the valley is that it will leave no watershed for flooding and as her foreman Lyle Bettger so aptly puts it, her cattle will be eating mud next year.

    Of course the sight of Jeanne in a nice tight fitting cowgirl outfit was enough to make Ladd only concerned about one log in his life. But Roland wants to fight and therein lies the conflict.

    Like Douglas in The Big Trees, Ladd's conversion to the cause of environmentalism is a bit too unconvincing. And Gilbert Roland going berserk is not the Gilbert Roland I'm used to on the screen. I really hated him in this and Gilbert Roland is one of my favorite players.

    Ladd produced as well as starred in Guns Of The Timberland and in order to get a little box office from the young, he had current teen heart throb Frankie Avalon make his screen debut opposite his own daughter Alana. I don't think Frankie got any big hit records out of Guns Of The Timberland, he did sing two forgettable songs here.

    But this was not the worst film Alan Ladd made. That would be next year in Duel Of The Champions, but he was definitely tobogganing down career wise in Guns Of The Timberland.
    2angelsunchained

    Guns of Bad Acting Land

    I wanted to like this movie, but it was really a total mess. Alan Ladd had sadly lost his looks. He looked very tired, puffy, bloated, stiff and wooden. Seemed like he was just going through the motions. Frankie Avalon had his collar up and his hair in an Elvis cut without the sideburns. He looked like he belonged in a 1950s teenager rebelling flick and not a western. His acting was pleasant, but mediocre at best..Alana Ladd, Alan's daughter, at seventeen was cute enough to be Avalon's love interest, but the poor girl was not much of an actress and by twenty two her acting career was over. Only thing of any interest was the final show down between Ladd and Gilbert Roland using rifles.
    dbdumonteil

    A jaded lad

    Physically ,Alan Ladd was becoming the ghost of himself:His puffed up face had lost most of its charm;it was even worse in "duel of champions" (aka "Horatio E Curazio"),his Italian sword and sandal,the following year.In his final years ,only "the carpetbaggers"-in other respects an average movie- gave him a prophetic role worthy of himself ,an aging actor down on his luck.

    This is a western which displays ecological concern : lumberjacks versus farmers (the best scene shows Jeanne Crain taking Ladd to the ghost town :"you would ruin our village too ").The cinematography is fine ,with a good use of the wide screen which enhances the splendid landscapes ,particularly in the scenes of the fire.But the characters are cardboard .For those whose taste runs that way,Frankie Avalon sings two songs ,the first one in a ball and the second after a quarrel with his girlfriend.
    3planktonrules

    I am not sure what the point was of this rather dull film...

    Aside from a plot that would become more and more relevant as the decade progressed as well as a chance to see Alan Ladd's daughter, Alana, I can't see much about this dull little film that would encourage me to recommend it or see it again. Like most of Alan Ladd's later films, it's very listless and dull. Plus, I really am not sure what the message was nor do I think the folks making the film knew either.

    The film begins with some loggers coming to clear the land. However, the locals are very unhappy as they are concerned about the ecological effects this might have on the town below. This is understandable. However, instead of trying to work with the loggers or go through the courts to stop them, some of the locals (led by Lyle Bettger and Jeanne Craine) decide that pretty much anything is fair to stop the tree cutting. During most of the town's dirty tricks, the boss of the logging outfit (Ladd) is amazingly complacent. In fact, this is his mood through almost all the film--like he's only semi-conscious. As a result, one of his men, Monty (Gilbert Roland) has had enough and has decided to fight fire with fire, so to speak. Then, and only then, does the boss rouse out of his near slumber.

    I know it might sound rather nasty, but at this point in his career, Alan Ladd was a hard-core alcoholic. Because of this, he began to look puffy and his acting became much more muted and slow. I really think this is a serious problem in "Guns of the Timberland". However, it's NOT the biggest problem. This problem is the writing. The film doesn't seem to know WHAT the message is and many of the characters are, as a result, very inconsistent. Too often, folks behave in ways that defy common sense as well as who they have been throughout the film--particularly Ladd and Craine. Overall, the film is sluggish and dull and this is rather sad, as in his prime, Ladd was an exciting actor. Here, he's as dull as dish water.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Filming started in April 1959 on location in and around Blairsden, California, Graeagle, California, and other locations throughout Plumas County. The scenes involving the steam engine and railroad cars were shot on the Western Pacific Railroad right-of-way. The scene where the steam engine goes over the tall "bridge" was shot using the Clio Trestle. Filming finished in June 1959.
    • Goofs
      During Bert's (Frankie Avalon) first song of the dance, an electric guitar can be heard, but none of the band is playing one---never mind there is no electricity in town (note all the oil or kerosene lamps being used).
    • Quotes

      Monty Walker: [the logging crew's train has just arrived in the town of Deep Well, which appears to be deserted] Hey, where's everybody?

      Jim Hadley: I don't know.

      Jim Hadley: [Jim then notices the old stationmaster] Hey, friend...

      Monty Walker: Hello friend. What's going on here?

      Bill Burroughs: [Unconcerned] Nothing.

      Monty Walker: Well, where is everybody?

      Bill Burroughs: What'd you expect, a brass band?

      Monty Walker: Sure! Why not?

      Bill Burroughs: You know, folks around here don't take to loggers.

      Monty Walker: Now, look here, mister. Every place we go people are happy to see us. We spend money like water. Why, we'll put this town on the map.

      Bill Burroughs: Or take it off!

      [scowls and walks off]

    • Connections
      Featured in Best in Action: 1960 (2018)
    • Soundtracks
      Gee Whizz Whilikens Golly Gee
      Lyrics by Mack David

      Music by Jerry Livingston

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    FAQ15

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 8, 1960 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Fuego en el bosque
    • Filming locations
      • Blairsden-Graegle, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Jaguar Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 31 minutes
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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    Alan Ladd, Frankie Avalon, Jeanne Crain, and Gilbert Roland in Tonnerre sur Timberland (1960)
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