IMDb RATING
7.1/10
125
YOUR RATING
A look at the lives of migratory farm workers, focusing on one family.A look at the lives of migratory farm workers, focusing on one family.A look at the lives of migratory farm workers, focusing on one family.
- Nominated for 6 Primetime Emmys
- 6 nominations total
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Recommended by a friend, I reluctantly watched this film, dreading the thought of watching familiar actors reenact the Joad family. Instead, I was mesmerized by a life made real by the extraordinary talents of Cloris Leachman and Ron Howard. This IS the Joad family, as they existed in more recent times in the South. The film continues to haunt my thoughts years later.
Acclaimed TV-movie from CBS features Ron Howard as the eldest child in a gypsy-living, crop-picking family who dreams of his independence, guiltily planning for the day when he can make a life for himself in the city--far away from the long, sweaty days out in the fields. Lanford Wilson adapted the short story by Tennessee Williams, showing us the hardships behind this caravan of migrating workers who pick up and go from one crop to the next in the southeast. Still, with such attention to the milieu, one feels the character content comes up short. Wilson and director Tom Gries spend so much time telegraphing us that one of the workers is sick, we have nothing much to look forward to except his demise (and the burden this will place upon matriarch Cloris Leachman). Meanwhile, Howard's relationship with factory-line worker Cindy Williams (reunited from 1973's "American Graffiti") is sketchy--and it comes as a surprise to learn later that she's 'underage'. Emmy-nominated Leachman performs her role without affectation or vanity, and her wry way with a line of dialogue (neither saint nor sinner) ultimately makes the film worth-seeing, although it isn't an emotional or touching picture, as it was undoubtedly meant to be. Wilson and Gries haven't shaped the characters with care, introducing us to them within a flurry of activity. The effect is off-putting, and the finale--a hopeful question mark--doesn't begin to resolve the central family's issues.
10GoUSN
As a senior at an all-boys Jesuit high school, we the entire student body were required to watch this. It was part of the school's relentless insistence that we in all ways should be Men for Others.
I've remebered this film ever since as my awakening awareness of the poor.
I've remebered this film ever since as my awakening awareness of the poor.
Cloris Leachman is the matriarch of this family, that travels wherever the work is. When it's spring, it's time to be here to pick that, Or, if it's fall, we go south. Sissy Spacek, Ron Howard, Cindy Williams, Ed Lauter, and David Clennon costar in this TV movie that is painfully real and is based on a Tennessee Williams story. Bad luck seems to find them and they are always behind the eight ball with no sign of change in sight. Cloris Leachman is a standout and is totally in character. It's amazing just how much she is immersed in her role, looks-wise and in terms of desperation of her situation. And, it's interesting to see Ron and Cindy paired together, before being in American Graffiti and Happy Days together. This may be disturbing for some, but it is one TV-movie that should never be forgotten.
I saw this TV movie when it originally aired in 1974. I was thirteen. I had just seen my first Tennessee Williams play ("The Glass Menagerie") at a local repertory theatre and was smitten with his work. My memory is that I watched this and thought it was great. In the thirty-three intervening years I haven't met a single person who has seen this. I've looked for it for years. Yesterday, I noticed a videotape of it in my local library and I borrowed it. It is a very moving, realistic drama of a family of migrant farmers. I am surprised to find I am only the second customer to review this at this webpage. THE MIGRANTS is based on a story by Tennessee Williams and adapted by Lanford Wilson. The authorship alone should be a reason more people would even hear of this, but this is as obscure as can be. Maybe because it was a TV movie, distribution is problematic. But I doubt it. I see that it was nominated for multiple Emmys and didn't get any. Maybe the fact that THE GRAPES OF WRATH covers the same territory so definitively keeps people from separating THE MIGRANTS from Steinbeck's epic (or from Ford's.) I'll give a list of reasons I still find this intriguing: 1) Cloris Leachman gives a performance equal to the one she gave in THE LAST PICTURE SHOW. 2) Ron Howard gives the performance of his life. He was indeed right for a Tennessee Williams character. 3) Sissy Spacek, pre-CARRIE, packs a lot of emotion (and sympathy) into a relatively small role. 4) Tennessee Williams 5) Lanford Wilson It's not earth-shattering, but it is a very solid drama which appeals to the viewer's sense of outrage over the treatment of the people who farm the land. For fans of oddity, there is another aspect worth a mention. This is ANOTHER pairing of Ron Howard and Cindy Williams. If you don't count crossover episodes of HAPPY DAYS and LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY (but you do count the LOVE, American STYLE episode which served, essentially, as a pilot for HAPPY DAYS, or an audition for the George Lucas film I'm about to mention) Ron Howard and Cindy Williams appeared together in two pretty big vehicles: The LOVE, American STYLE episode I've mentioned and, of course, the giant hit, American Graffiti. But nobody's heard of THE MIGRANTS.
Did you know
- ConnectionsFeatured in The 26th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (1974)
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