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IMDbPro

La famille des collines

Original title: The Waltons
  • TV Series
  • 1972–1981
  • Tous publics
  • 1h
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
9.8K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
1,099
4
Richard Thomas, Will Geer, Judy Norton, Ellen Corby, Kami Cotler, David W. Harper, Michael Learned, Mary Beth McDonough, Eric Scott, Ralph Waite, and Jon Walmsley in La famille des collines (1972)
The Waltons Movie Collection: Married
Play trailer1:45
7 Videos
99+ Photos
Feel-Good RomanceDramaFamilyRomance

The life and trials of a 1930s and 1940s Virginia mountain family through financial depression and World War II.The life and trials of a 1930s and 1940s Virginia mountain family through financial depression and World War II.The life and trials of a 1930s and 1940s Virginia mountain family through financial depression and World War II.

  • Creator
    • Earl Hamner Jr.
  • Stars
    • Jon Walmsley
    • Mary Beth McDonough
    • Eric Scott
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    9.8K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    1,099
    4
    • Creator
      • Earl Hamner Jr.
    • Stars
      • Jon Walmsley
      • Mary Beth McDonough
      • Eric Scott
    • 70User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 13 Primetime Emmys
      • 20 wins & 53 nominations total

    Episodes212

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    Videos7

    The Waltons Movie Collection: Married
    Trailer 1:45
    The Waltons Movie Collection: Married
    The Waltons Movie Collection
    Trailer 1:21
    The Waltons Movie Collection
    The Waltons Movie Collection
    Trailer 1:21
    The Waltons Movie Collection
    The Waltons Movie Collection: Such A Temper
    Trailer 1:50
    The Waltons Movie Collection: Such A Temper
    The Waltons Movie Collection: Taken Over Our Wedding
    Trailer 2:26
    The Waltons Movie Collection: Taken Over Our Wedding
    The Waltons
    Trailer 2:02
    The Waltons
    The Waltons: Season 8
    Trailer 2:31
    The Waltons: Season 8

    Photos371

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    Top cast99+

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    Jon Walmsley
    Jon Walmsley
    • Jason Walton
    • 1972–1981
    Mary Beth McDonough
    Mary Beth McDonough
    • Erin Walton
    • 1972–1981
    Eric Scott
    Eric Scott
    • Ben Walton
    • 1972–1981
    Kami Cotler
    Kami Cotler
    • Elizabeth Walton
    • 1972–1981
    Judy Norton
    Judy Norton
    • Mary Ellen Walton
    • 1972–1981
    David W. Harper
    David W. Harper
    • Jim-Bob Walton
    • 1972–1981
    Earl Hamner Jr.
    Earl Hamner Jr.
    • The Narrator…
    • 1972–1981
    Ralph Waite
    Ralph Waite
    • John Walton, Sr.…
    • 1972–1981
    Joe Conley
    Joe Conley
    • Ike Godsey
    • 1972–1981
    Michael Learned
    Michael Learned
    • Olivia Walton
    • 1972–1979
    Ellen Corby
    Ellen Corby
    • Esther Walton
    • 1972–1980
    Will Geer
    Will Geer
    • The Grandfather
    • 1972–1979
    Richard Thomas
    Richard Thomas
    • John-Boy Walton
    • 1972–1978
    Ronnie Claire Edwards
    Ronnie Claire Edwards
    • Corabeth Godsey
    • 1975–1981
    Mary Jackson
    Mary Jackson
    • Emily Baldwin
    • 1972–1981
    Helen Kleeb
    Helen Kleeb
    • Mamie Baldwin
    • 1972–1981
    Michael Reed
    • John Curtis Willard…
    • 1978–1981
    Marshall Reed
    • John Curtis Willard…
    • 1978–1981
    • Creator
      • Earl Hamner Jr.
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews70

    7.69.8K
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    Featured reviews

    meows11

    Need More TV Shows Like This One

    Both my parents are dead and gone, but where raised in the Southwest mountains of Virginia during the depression, as Baptists, they along with myself and other members of our family watched this show every week. Several of us still watch it every morning, it comes on here at 7 am, it's a great start to my day. Every episode may not be exactly as some remember, that lived during that era, but it's a lot more true to life than most of what is on TV today. It would be nice if there were shows that even came close to this one, made now. Children and grown-ups alike could benefit from acting a little more like the Waltons, than a lot of people they try to imitate from TV in this day and time.
    Katz5

    A breath of fresh air in 2004

    Television has been going to the dogs over the past few years. I recently picked up the DVD set of the first season of The Waltons and have been engrossed with every episode. Each episode is like a miniature movie, with good acting and stories. And what people used to make fun of (the syrupy quality of the show) now is a welcome relief. I'd watch this over 99.9% of the junk on TV these days. One could have a field day writing about this show and comparing/contrasting it to The Sopranos. The Sopranos, a show that I enjoy equally for other reasons (I'm not counting HBO's shows as regular TV shows), is the polar opposite. That family is rich, profane, powerful, violent, confrontational, unhappy--while the Waltons are struggling (not exactly poor, despite the fact that it takes place during the Depression), wholesome, spiritual, loving, and HAPPY. The only thing I can quibble about The Waltons is the outdoor scenery. The tall mountains and pine trees are clearly in California, not Piedmont Virginia. The real Waltons mountain and home is not too far from where I live. There are signs off U.S. Route 29 directing tourists to the home, which I believe is now a museum. It may be worth a visit. All in all an excellent program. Definitely a collector's item.
    6mts43

    Should have ended the series after Season 6.

    Richard Thomas, "John Boy", left the series after Season 5. Ellen Corby, "Grandma Walton", suffered a stroke in November 1976, then was not in any further episodes until 1978, and only on a very limited basis because her stroke greatly impaired her ability to speak. The quality of the episodes without the John Boy character nosedived in Season 6, with many contrived storylines and the limited acting ability of the rest of the cast portraying the other six Walton children. Then Will Geer, "Grandpa Zeb Walton", died after Season 6 had been completed. The producers should have called it quits after Episodes 1-2 in Season 7, which were a tribute to Grandpa Walton and Geer, and the storylines continued to get worse. Michael Learned (Olivia Walton), also curtailed her performances on the series, and the writers had to come up with some dubious reasons why she'd be gone for much of the time, then reappear on occasions. The "Jump the Shark" moment came in Season 8 when they introduced not one but two "Cousin Olivers" (the Brady Bunch had just one) and even a fake John Boy! Given Richard Thomas's strong portrayal of John Boy for the first five seasons, the producers should have been smart enough (I know that's expecting a lot) to realize that a Fake John Boy was a terrible idea. The two kids were gone by Season 9, and I don't remember any explanation being given. In Season 9, the writers even came up with a fake Curtis, "resurrecting" Mary Ellen's husband, supposedly lost at Pearl Harbor in Season 7. The associated storyline was equally ludicrous. After that, the producers, who were obviously more concerned with the Bottom Line than program quality, fired Ralph Waite after just a few episodes in Season 9 in order to dump his salary. With the real John Boy, Grandpa, Grandma, Olivia, and now John Sr gone from the cast, , Season 9 was a complete embarrassment.
    Sargebri

    Ironies of Ironies

    This was one of the most popular series on CBS in the mid-1970's and it is one of the most ironic. This show came one year after CBS's infamous purge of all of its rural comedies. In 1971 hugely popular shows like The Beverly Hillbillies, Mayberry RFD, Green Acres, He Haw and The Ed Sullivan show were all canceled because of the perception that they didn't appeal to urban dwellers or young people. Ironically all these shows were still in the top-10 at the time they were canceled. The next year The Waltons debuted and quickly became one of the most popular shows in the network's history, it even was responsible, in part, for the cancellation of the hugely popular Flip Wilson Show on NBC. I wonder how Fred Silverman, the man responsible for the purge, felt after this show became a hit.
    10roghache

    Wonderful, nostalgic series of family warmth and closeness

    This is a delightful series with wholesome values that my own family often watched together during my son's earlier growing up years. It chronicles the ongoing story of a Depression Era family living in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia...often seen though the eyes of the oldest son John Boy, a budding author, who relates his family's experiences in a journal. The series follows the Walton family through both the Depression and World War II. It also portrays the career paths, courtships, & marriages of many of the children, the births of new grandchildren, and the illnesses, aging, & deaths of some of the characters.

    The mother, Olivia, is a devout Baptist who must deal with an extended stay in hospital as she suffers from tuberculosis. The father, John, though perhaps a little lapsed in his own faith, runs a saw mill and is a hard working man of integrity. The couple have seven children. John Boy eventually goes off to Richmond for college, Boatwright University, and later embarks upon a journalistic career in New York. Mary Ellen, a feisty tomboy, grows up to become a nurse and marries a doctor, Curtis Willard, sent to Pearl Harbour just prior to the Japanese attack. Jason is the family's budding musician, sometimes providing lively entertainment at the local Dew Drop Inn. Ben marries at a young age the pretty Cindy, and the two are set up with charming little accommodations adjacent to the main Walton house. Erin, the pretty one with her various beaux, is employed at the local telephone switchboard and later by G.W. Haines. Jim Bob is a mechanical tinkerer, and Elizabeth the rather spoiled and generally irritating baby of the family.

    Also living under the same roof are John's parents, the devilish but wise old Grandpa Zebulun and the strict & proper but feisty Grandma Esther. Years ago, it became a family chuckle that if Grandma Walton wouldn't have approved of the language, then it just wasn't acceptable! The banter between these grandparents is absolutely precious. I liked the multi generational aspects of the program with eventually four generations of Waltons. An ongoing storyline involved the stroke suffered by Grandma (and actress Ellen Corby), which restricted her movement and left her with a severe speech impediment. Also, actor Will Greer passed away, so the family was forced to grieve the loss of Grandpa.

    The likable country store keeper, Ike Godsey, and his prim & snooty wife, Corabeth, appear regularly on the show. Other local characters are featured, including Yancy Tucker and a succession of various parsons (one was portrayed by actor John Ritter). Of course my favourites are the charming, elderly Baldwin sisters with their legendary Recipe inherited from their dearly departed father! Olivia and Grandma were strongly opposed to alcohol, but Grandpa would sometimes stop by at the Baldwins for a wee nip of the Recipe, actually moonshine whiskey. Some episodes also featured interactions with 'outsiders', including circus acrobats and gypsies.

    Most of the individual episodes are quite engaging, and the family's interactions even during conflict show an underlying warmth. Their famous extended calls of Good Night are of course legendary! Many plot lines revolve around their various financial struggles to live a decent life during the Great Depression. The marital relationship between John & Olivia is well captured, as well as the siblings' interactions and their relationship with their parents & grandparents.

    Sadly, I am not surprised that this heartwarming series is receiving a few disparaging reviews these days. Perhaps life wasn't all rosy and moral back in the 1930's with issues of poverty, racism and so forth. However, its values were generally preferable to the decaying ones of today, where materialism reigns supreme, parents & offspring alike feel entitled to their self absorbed attitude, rudeness is the norm in human interactions, the nuclear family and moral absolutes are becoming obsolete, and faith is mocked everywhere. This series represents the very antithesis of all such modern views, but thankfully, the vast majority of reviewers here still seem to appreciate it. Yes, better the Waltons than the Simpsons. My son is now a college sophomore, but admits to looking back fondly upon the series.

    Indeed, these Walton characters are almost like family members in many homes, including my own. My compliments to actors Ralph Waite (John), Michael Learned (Olivia), Richard Thomas (John Boy), and all the others who brought them so vividly to life. Yes, the series can be sappy at times and may not always be realistic, but it is really not overly sentimental as some claim. Rather it is a depiction of the way we should ALL treat each other and the love, closeness, concern, warmth, and often unselfish giving that should be found in ALL our homes. Pity there aren't more TV programs nowadays that give us something worthy to aspire to.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Jon Walmsley never knew his grandparents, while Ellen Corby never had grandchildren. The two "adopted" each other, attending events, and visiting places together.
    • Goofs
      The gender of the dog Reckless seemed to change back and forth throughout the first several episodes.
    • Quotes

      Olivia: Now I've got two sons working nights in a saloon.

    • Alternate versions
      In the French version the show is called "La Famille des Collines," which loosely translates to "The Family of the Hills."
    • Connections
      Featured in The 25th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (1973)

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    FAQ22

    • How many seasons does The Waltons have?Powered by Alexa
    • What were these distances in the story: Walton home to Ike Godsey's Store, the Baldwin home, Boatwright University? And how far did the Walton children have to walk to school?
    • What happened to the Burton kids? Rose Burton is still around at the the start of Season 9, but the kids disappeared after Season 8 with no explanation.
    • Where were the outside scenes filmed? It says here that it was studios in Burbank, however, some of the mountain scenes really appear to be the Blue Ridge Mountains.

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 7, 1991 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Waltons
    • Filming locations
      • Port Hueneme, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Lorimar Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h(60 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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