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IMDbPro

The Alamo: Thirteen Days to Glory

  • TV Movie
  • 1987
  • Not Rated
  • 2h 20m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
792
YOUR RATING
The Alamo: Thirteen Days to Glory (1987)
ActionAdventureBiographyDramaHistoryWarWestern

Against orders and with no help of relief Texas patriots led by William Travis, Jim Bowie and Davy Crockett defend the Alamo against overwhelming Mexican forces.Against orders and with no help of relief Texas patriots led by William Travis, Jim Bowie and Davy Crockett defend the Alamo against overwhelming Mexican forces.Against orders and with no help of relief Texas patriots led by William Travis, Jim Bowie and Davy Crockett defend the Alamo against overwhelming Mexican forces.

  • Director
    • Burt Kennedy
  • Writers
    • Lon Tinkle
    • Clyde Ware
    • Norman Morrill
  • Stars
    • James Arness
    • Brian Keith
    • Alec Baldwin
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    792
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Burt Kennedy
    • Writers
      • Lon Tinkle
      • Clyde Ware
      • Norman Morrill
    • Stars
      • James Arness
      • Brian Keith
      • Alec Baldwin
    • 26User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Primetime Emmy
      • 1 nomination total

    Photos10

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    Top cast40

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    James Arness
    James Arness
    • Jim Bowie
    Brian Keith
    Brian Keith
    • Col. Davy Crockett
    Alec Baldwin
    Alec Baldwin
    • Col. William Travis
    David Ogden Stiers
    David Ogden Stiers
    • Col. Black
    Jim Metzler
    Jim Metzler
    • Maj. James Bonham
    Tom Schanley
    Tom Schanley
    • Pvt. Danny Cloud
    Fernando Allende
    Fernando Allende
    • Col. Alamonte
    Kathleen York
    Kathleen York
    • Mrs. Susannah Dickinson
    Isela Vega
    Isela Vega
    • Senora Cos
    Raul Julia
    Raul Julia
    • Gen. Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna
    Gene Evans
    Gene Evans
    • McGregor
    Michael Wren
    • Juan Seguin
    Jon Lindstrom
    Jon Lindstrom
    • Capt. Almeron Dickinson
    Hinton Battle
    Hinton Battle
    • Joe
    David Sheiner
    David Sheiner
    • Luis
    Noble Willingham
    Noble Willingham
    • Dr. Pollard
    Eloy Casados
    Eloy Casados
    • Gregorio
    Tony Becker
    Tony Becker
    • George Taylor
    • Director
      • Burt Kennedy
    • Writers
      • Lon Tinkle
      • Clyde Ware
      • Norman Morrill
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews26

    6.1792
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    Featured reviews

    9OddlyStrange

    Fun Fact

    heres a fun fact, I was the baby in the movie, the one in the crib. :) I am 19 years old now. my parents took me to try out for the part, we lived in Texas at the time.I think I only made like 80 bucks for it, but i wasn't in it very long. My parents said i would cry when i was supposed to be happy and would be happy when i was supposed to cry. I was all mixed up. Strange and funny fact i suppose.. and no I am not a child actress. I am livin' in San Antonio, workin' at a walgreens. I graduated here in Texas but I lived in Maryland most my life. This Movie is a great movie, though, good concept. I have seen it several times in my short 19 years.
    9bkoganbing

    The Beginnings Of Texas

    When John Wayne filmed his Alamo story he had built a complete Alamo set in the town of Brackettsville, Texas which is still there and quite the tourist attraction. As long as that stands, we will have a set for future Alamo interpretations for the screen. One such with Dennis Quaid and Billy Bob Thornton was done in this century.

    But I would say The Alamo: Thirteen Days To Glory is the best Alamo story filmed I've seen. John Wayne's film is a good one if over-hyped, but it's a John Wayne film with the story redone to fill parameters of screen character of John Wayne. Brian Keith plays Davy Crockett here and gives a fine interpretation of the rollicking frontier character he was.

    It's a lot closer to Professor Lon Tinkle's book on The Alamo than the Wayne film was and having read the book years ago I can attest to that. Tinkle's book is listed as the source in both films, but Tinkle who was alive back then when the Wayne film was done and he was not pleased with the result.

    Alec Baldwin was around the right age for young William Barrett Travis, the idealistic freedom fighter who incidentally was a slave owner. Back in the day no one saw the ironic contradiction in that. One thing that was not explored and hasn't been was Travis's hyperactive sex drive. He was the Casanova of the Southwest, he even kept a salacious diary of his libidinal conquests.

    But the man who always gets the whitewash is Jim Bowie, played here by James Arness. He was a hero at the Alamo to be sure, but his career before the Alamo was that of a scoundrel. He was a smuggler, a slave trader, an all around con man selling land he had questionable title to. But his heroic death certainly redeemed him. No hint of that is in Arness's portrayal nor any others I've seen of Bowie on the screen. And of course he did design the Bowie knife, done to his specifications. That man needed such a weapon.

    However the main asset that The Alamo: Thirteen Days To Glory has is a full blown portrayal of Antonio De Lopez De Santa Anna, the president of Mexico who comes up personally to put down the rebellion stirred up by the North Americans who've come to settle in Texas at Mexican invitation. Unfortunately those Americans came with some pre-conceived notions about liberty that just hadn't made it that far south, at least liberty for white people. Raul Julia plays Santa Anna who remains an even more controversial figure in Mexican history. He was also quite the scoundrel, but he was the best Mexico produced until a genuine reformer named Benito Juarez came along.

    This film was the farewell performance of Lorne Greene who appears briefly as General Sam Houston. Greene's not quite my conception of Houston, he really was way too old for the part, Houston was in his early forties in 1836, he was not yet the patriarch of Texas. But within the limits imposed on him, Greene does a fine job.

    For a romantic telling of The Alamo tale by all means see John Wayne's version, but for historical content I recommend this film highly.
    4MiketheWhistle

    Even with big name actors, not very good

    I was very surprised as to how disappointed I was with this film because of all the big name actors it had. I'm not really sure why it didn't seem to work for me because at least a half-dozen actors in this I've enjoyed in other things. Perhaps it boils down to inter chemistry, that being, that the actors' mix simply didn't provide the boom. Listening to Baldwin in this, part of it may be the attempted accents they tried to use which especially in Baldwin's case did not work at all and only served to make him seem like a clown. And this may be it as so often I would rather the actor just deliver their lines and not try and force an accent they can't deliver on.
    cariart

    Good Intentions Don't Always Make Great Films!

    THE ALAMO: THIRTEEN DAYS TO GLORY, James Arness' variation of his mentor John Wayne's 1960 classic, attempts to present the famous 1836 Texas siege in human terms, utilizing the more 'intimate' medium of television to make the story of the defenders more understandable. Eschewing the 'living legend' portrayals of the earlier film, a sincere effort is made to make the famous personalities of the battle more realistic, with both good and bad qualities, thus making their heroism more personal, and ultimately profound.

    While this is certainly an admirable intention (it would also be the motivation behind the 2004 ALAMO), the TV-film fails, and isn't held in high regard by either Alamo historians or fans of the small collection of films concerning that pivotal moment in Texas history.

    A major problem is that THIRTEEN DAYS TO GLORY is seriously miscast. Other than the inspired choices of Alec Baldwin as William Barret Travis, and Raul Julia, who nearly steals the film as Gen. Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna (offering what is probably the most accurate portrayal of the 'Napoleon of the West', ever), virtually every actor is wrong for their role. Arness, at 64, lacks the dynamic, corrupt vitality of the historical Bowie, 40, prior to his physical collapse at the start of the siege (caused, historians now believe, by advanced tuberculosis, or another fatal lung disease). The filmmakers choose, rather, the LAST COMMAND approach to Bowie, injuring him during the battle, instead, and giving him enough energy to cling to a lamp and wall, and to die 'on his feet', his famous knife in his hand. Arness' portrayal is closer in spirit to his outdoorsman 'Zeb Macahan' in the TV "How the West Was Won", than the charismatic swindler/slaver. Even worse is Brian Keith, 66, as 49-year old David ('Davy') Crockett. The frail-looking, silver-haired Keith, while correctly emphasizing Crockett's heritage as a politician, appears acutely uncomfortable in the physically demanding role, and totally lacks the magnetism that made Crockett legendary. As for 68-year old Lorne Greene as 43-year old Sam Houston, the less that is said, the better. In trying to be more 'honest', the film chose acting 'legends', forgetting that performers of legendary status tend to make their characters 'larger-than-life'.

    Shot at the '60 ALAMO movie set in Brackettville, Texas, in the 110-degree heat of late summer, the cold dampness of March, 1836 was never achieved. Compounding the problem was a budget that was too small to hire the 'army' of extras required to give lopsided battle some scope. Instead, the production liberally 'lifted' shots from 1955's THE LAST COMMAND, filmed at yet another location (with budget restrictions of it's own), and the differences of the sets, and the film stock, are occasionally jarring.

    THE ALAMO: THIRTEEN DAYS TO GLORY, for all of it's ambitions, is, ultimately, no more than a 'B' movie with higher aspirations!
    7kayaker36

    Modest But Sincere

    This made for television version of the legendary stand against hopeless odds is more objective, more realistic than earlier filmed versions of the events, though the one movie made after this went perhaps too far in humanizing the figures of Sam Houston, Bowie, Travis and Crockett.

    The focus here is on Jim Bowie, played with sharp, cynical detachment by James Arness who passed away in 2011 at age 88. Then 65, he made a comeback to acting after years away from the screen to do this part.

    Puerto Rican-born Raul Julia humanizes Gen. Santa Ana as no one since J. Carol Naish back in '54 had done. However, the Mexican dictator is portrayed as a lecherous, vainglorious popinjay--gaudier uniforms have never been seen before or since. He receives excellent advice from the European officers he has hired but, convinced of his own infallibility, he does not heed it. He also ignores the warning from one of his own staff officers that it is not "prudente" to divide one's army in the face of the enemy. The result is the disaster of San Jacinto.

    Alec Baldwin is the one actor whose age is appropriate to the character he plays: Col. William Travis. His portrayal is earnest. He is almost in awe of the older men who share command with him.

    The one jarring note was Brian Keith as Crockett. In a coonskin cap and carrying Ol' Betsy, he stumbles about as if he had wandered in from another movie. With no conviction in the portrayal, the character is reduced to a few stage conventions.

    The script reveals some historical facts overlooked or suppressed in earlier film versions. We learn that Jim Bowie was, in the person of Santa Ana, fighting his own brother-in-law. The Mexican soldiers performed poorly in part because they were armed with rifles left over from the Napoleonic Wars a generation earlier. "Santa Ana likes a bargain." Bowie wryly explains. The whole project of defending the former Spanish mission as a fort was courageous but militarily ill- advised--a fact explored in greater depth in the 2004 film "The Alamo".

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Three of the actors were considerably older than the real-life people they played: James Arness, 64, played Jim Bowie, who was 40 at the time; Brian Keith, 66, played Davy Crockett, who was 49 at the Alamo; and Lorne Greene, 72, played Sam Houston, who was 43.
    • Goofs
      According to most accounts Travis was shot and killed at the onset of the final charge, but Alec Baldwin's Travis does not die until near the end.
    • Quotes

      Jim Bowie: This is for Texas, boys. This is for Texas and Freedom!

    • Connections
      Featured in Exterminez toutes ces brutes: Who the F*** is Columbus? (2021)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 26, 1987 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Alamo - 13 Tage bis zum Sieg
    • Filming locations
      • Alamo Village - Highway 674, Brackettville, Texas, USA
    • Production companies
      • Briggle, Hennessey, Carrothers & Associates
      • The Finnegan Company
      • Fries Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 20m(140 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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