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En route pour la gloire

Original title: Bound for Glory
  • 1976
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 27m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
5.9K
YOUR RATING
En route pour la gloire (1976)
The early life of Woody Guthrie as a vagabond folk singer.
Play trailer2:39
1 Video
99+ Photos
BiographyDramaMusic

The early life of Woody Guthrie as a vagabond folk singer.The early life of Woody Guthrie as a vagabond folk singer.The early life of Woody Guthrie as a vagabond folk singer.

  • Director
    • Hal Ashby
  • Writers
    • Robert Getchell
    • Woody Guthrie
  • Stars
    • David Carradine
    • Ronny Cox
    • Melinda Dillon
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    5.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Hal Ashby
    • Writers
      • Robert Getchell
      • Woody Guthrie
    • Stars
      • David Carradine
      • Ronny Cox
      • Melinda Dillon
    • 62User reviews
    • 45Critic reviews
    • 70Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 2 Oscars
      • 6 wins & 11 nominations total

    Videos1

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    Trailer 2:39
    Trailer

    Photos133

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    Top cast68

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    David Carradine
    David Carradine
    • Woody Guthrie
    Ronny Cox
    Ronny Cox
    • Ozark Bule
    Melinda Dillon
    Melinda Dillon
    • Mary - Woody's Wife
    Gail Strickland
    Gail Strickland
    • Pauline
    John Lehne
    John Lehne
    • Locke - Radio Station Manager
    Ji-Tu Cumbuka
    Ji-Tu Cumbuka
    • Slim Snedeger - Hobo on Train
    Randy Quaid
    Randy Quaid
    • Luther Johnson - Migrant Worker
    Elizabeth Macey
    • Liz - Johnson's Wife
    Susan Vaill
    Susan Vaill
    • Gwen - Guthrie Child
    Sarah Vaill
    • Gwen - Guthrie Child
    Alexandra Mock
    • Sue - Guthrie Child
    Kimberly Mock
    • Sue - Guthrie Child
    Miriam Byrd-Nethery
    Miriam Byrd-Nethery
    • Sick Woman - Water-Swallowing Scene
    • (as Miriam Byrd Nethery)
    Jane Lambert
    • Other Woman - Water-Swallowing Scene
    Jan Burrell
    Jan Burrell
    • Other Woman - Water-Swallowing Scene
    Lee McLaughlin
    • Heavy Chandler - 'Insane' Man
    Ted Gehring
    Ted Gehring
    • Conners - Pampa Store Owner
    Robert Sorrells
    • Charlie Guthrie - Woody's Father
    • Director
      • Hal Ashby
    • Writers
      • Robert Getchell
      • Woody Guthrie
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews62

    7.25.8K
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    Featured reviews

    7planktonrules

    Well done but not for everyone.

    "Bound for Glory" is a dramatization of the early career of Woody Guthrie--particularly his wanderings around the country and the establishment of his career as a folk singer. However, the film does NOT cover his later years and his affliction with Huntington's.

    Have you ever seen a movie that is well made and you are supposed to enjoy it but you didn't? That's my experience with "Bound for Glory". While I could see it was a fine film and David Carradine did a fine job, I found my attention wandering throughout. Part of it is because the film is VERY deliberately paced (i.e., slow). Part of it is because I just don't happen to care much about the subject matter. This is sad, I know, as I am a retired history teacher and I should love seeing the dust bowl and the history of Woody Guthrie but I still didn't. Part of it is because Guthrie was a pretty selfish guy (leaving his family and just going on the road for months or years at a time with little regard for them). Regardless, I just didn't enjoy the experience. Well done but I had a devil of a time with "Bound for Glory"... But, I am NOT saying it's a bad film or that you shouldn't see it--it's just that I was not bowled over by it like nearly all the other reviewers.
    9raydavies

    This film was made for you and me

    One can go into this film from several different angles, and be rewarded at every turn. You like history? Bound For Glory's depiction of Depression Era life is both accurate and eye-opening. You like music? The perspective gained on one of our nation's greatest songwriters is delightful in a way every man can appreciate. You like against-the-odds stories of rugged individualism? Hope you're hungry. The pace may be criticized as slow, but works in emphasizing the dreariness and despair needed to understand the motivations and emotions that lead to Woody Guthrie's greatness. The deliberate storytelling also reminds one of the manner in which Kurosawa might weave a fable. Which reminds me, David Carradine's performance is inspired. Great film any way you look at it.
    7sol-

    My brief review of the film

    An unusual film, it starts by depicting the harsh life that many had to live during the Depression era, but then about halfway through it takes a sharp turn to become a biography of a musician. This change is rather jarring, as it comes unexpected. It manages to paint the glumness and the poverty of the Depression era so well that the sudden change in story direction just about violates what has gone before. In fairness, it does give us an idea of what the protagonist went through and what motivated his career, but is there not too much time spent on it? There is relatively little in the way of story until the music side enters in. It is quite meandering, and full of characters that have no importance later on, there is cause to wonder whether it could have been compressed down. For the adventure genre that the film best fits into, it is also relatively unexciting. The film is rather awkwardly put together, and it could do with a few events removed, but there are still a lot of good points to it. The cinematography won the film an Academy Award, as did the adapted music soundtrack, and both these elements are good. Haskell Wexler has chosen some interesting angles to shoot the film from, and the songs are fitted into the material quite well. Overall it is a good film, but a difficult one too. It takes patience to get through, but there are some good things in the end.
    tfrizzell

    It Is Glorious. It Made It.

    Of all the five best picture nominees of 1976, "Bound for Glory" is the most difficult for most to remember. I mean it was the quiet film in a year which consisted of "Rocky", "Network", "All the President's Men" and "Taxi Driver". Woody Guthrie (David Carradine of "Kung Fu" fame) is suffering through the Dust Bowl of Pampa, Texas in 1936. There are no jobs, no crops and really no hope. Guthrie decides that the best way for him to do his part is to become a folk singer for the poorest peoples of Northern Texas and depression-era Oklahoma. What follows is a genuinely wonderful story which is all based upon the life of America's greatest folk singer. "Bound for Glory" is well-written, well-directed by the wonderful Hal Ashby and well-acted by David Carradine in the role of a lifetime. Melinda Dillon, Randy Quaid and Ronny Cox are among the other players, but this is Carradine's show from the word go. A wonderful, but truthfully somewhat forgotten masterpiece from the 1970s. 4.5 out of 5 stars.
    10zetes

    Passionate, poetic, exceptional filmmaking

    At its base, Bound for Glory is just a simple biopic about Woody Guthrie. In execution, it turns out to be a lot more. We actually learn very little about Woody Guthrie's life. I don't know the exact statistic, but I would guess that it covers no more than a few years, with an end title that tells us briefly of his death. And basically all of the experiences shown onscreen can be seen in other films, most notably John Ford's brilliant American masterpiece The Grapes of Wrath. To be absolutely fair, the scenes of migrant workers' woes are at least equal to those in its predecessor. A good one-line summary of Bound for Glory might read "a modernist equivalent of The Grapes of Wrath told from the point of view of folk singer Woody Guthrie." But Bound for Glory has a few things that make it stand out from other films, that make it as memorable as The Grapes of Wrath.

    First and maybe foremost, you have the brilliant and gorgeous cinematography of the great Haskell Wexler. I'm no expert on cinematographers, but Wexler is one of only three I can name offhand (the other two being, if you are interested, Vittorio de Sica and Sven Nykvist). I love Wexler's work in films like Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? and Matewan (a thematically similar film directed by the great John Sayles). But what Bound for Glory most resembles is Wexler's very controversial cinematography on Days of Heaven. Not controversial because of anything specifically photographed, of course, but, if you know the story, a different cinematographer took credit as lead DP, leaving Wexler with a credit that was something along the lines of "with additional photography by". Wexler claims to have photographed more than 50% of the scenes in the finished film. He has sat through the film several times, I have heard, with a stopwatch. Bound for Glory, at any rate, is one of the most beautiful films you're ever likely to see. It's golden colors are beautiful, and the camera is moved gently, but with precision. This film actually has the first shot that used a steadicam, although I had forgotten to keep an eye out for it when the film was playing (I was far too engrossed). My favorite scene is one where Guthrie and a black hobo have left the boxcar of a train and move to the top of it. There they sit and converse as the most beautiful landscapes in our country pass by behind them. These are some of the best shots I've ever seen. And just because of those shots, even if the film didn't contain a plethora of other relevant materials, I would call this film one of the best ever made about the United States.

    Secondly and thirdly, this film is about Woody Guthrie, one of the greatest American artists of the past century. David Carradine, who, in other performances, has never convinced me that he was as good as his father, John (who was in Grapes of Wrath, incidentally), or his brother, Keith, breaks apart my former opinion of him and delivers a masterful performance. I don't know whether I could identify why he is so good in this film. It's as if he has an aura about him. He really does, however, seem to enbody Guthrie's convictions. Throughout the film, Guthrie's music is played, whether sung or as an extra-diagetic score. This is great American music. So much of it has become part of the soundtrack to the American life. I mean, I remember learning songs like "This Land is Your Land" and "This Train" in elementary school music class. In his day, Guthrie had difficulty in getting those kind of songs out to the public. His bosses were constantly ordering him to tone down the political edge of his music. Luckily for America, he steadfastly refused to do so. Woody Guthrie was a true American hero. Bound for Glory depicts that as much as he could have hoped for.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The pivotal Steadicam sequence that first captivated industry insiders involved David Carradine's amble through a migrant camp. The Steadicam operator, Garrett Brown, descends into the scene on a Chapman crane and follows Woody Guthrie (Carradine) as he gets off a pickup truck and walks past some 900 extras. The sequence, which looks quite simple on film, posed a challenge to operator and crew in that, just as Brown stepped off the crane platform laden with his weighty armature, grips had to simultaneously counterbalance the crane arm to prevent it from becoming a human catapult.
    • Goofs
      Guthrie's singing partner on KFVD radio in Los Angeles was not named Memphis Sue. Her real name was Maxine Crissman, and she was known as "Lefty Lou," because she shared Guthrie's politics and was just as outspoken. In fact, Guthrie was never pressed to stop singing union-organizing songs; the station owner, Frank Burke, was a populist New Dealer who agreed with Guthrie. The reason Woody was fired was because after the Soviet Union signed a non-aggression pact with Nazi Germany in 1939, he started singing songs that, mirroring the Communist Party line, denounced the war as a capitalist fraud.
    • Quotes

      Woody Guthrie: This land is your land/This land is my land/From California to the New York Island/From the Redwood forests to the Gulf Stream waters/This land was made for you and me

    • Connections
      Featured in Colorado: The Winds of Death (1979)
    • Soundtracks
      Hard Travelin'
      Written by Woody Guthrie

      Performed by David Carradine

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 25, 1977 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Bound for Glory
    • Filming locations
      • Pittsburg, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Bound for Glory
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 27 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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