This is the first feature-length documentary on legendary director Raoul Walsh. In this 'memoir,' Walsh 'recounts' his career from the silent film era to the tumultuous 1960s. The documentar... Read allThis is the first feature-length documentary on legendary director Raoul Walsh. In this 'memoir,' Walsh 'recounts' his career from the silent film era to the tumultuous 1960s. The documentary makes stunning use of rare, personal and production photos and footage, revealing Walsh'... Read allThis is the first feature-length documentary on legendary director Raoul Walsh. In this 'memoir,' Walsh 'recounts' his career from the silent film era to the tumultuous 1960s. The documentary makes stunning use of rare, personal and production photos and footage, revealing Walsh's extraordinary, adventurous life on and off the set. From his apprenticeship with D.W. Gr... Read all
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Featured reviews
10) Silver River 9) A Lion Is In The Streets 8) Colorado Territory 7) Strawberry Blonde 6) Hornblower 5) Gentleman Jim 4) Roaring Twenties 3) High Sierra 2) Objective Burma 1) White Heat.
PS...Is it just me or did the kidnapping of Barrymore's corpse occur in "W C Fields And Me" and was attributed to the comedian, not Walsh?
Johnny Crear narrate from Walsh's writing in what becomes a "And then I directed" piece, with pauses for people who are still alive to comment on him. How did he survive changing tastes for so long? How could he have two extremely fertile periods, from 1925 through 1929 at Fox, and then from 1939 through 1945 at Warners? Ileana Douglas may have it right: his basic story was the wandering loner who finds the tough woman who can make him reveal his honor.... and perhaps he should have directed Casablanca.
In any case, it doesn't really matter why a great artist creates great art. What matters is the art, from Regeneration through White Heat. Good enough.
Did you know
- TriviaRaoul Walsh states he needed a "new face" for La piste des géants (1930) and spotted "a beautiful, tall fellow carrying a huge arm chair" at the studio and says, "Hey, kid, ever been in any pictures?" "Not yet" is the reply Walsh claims he received from the fellow. "Well, let your hair grow long, and I'll get back to you." Walsh says that 2 weeks later he did a silent test of Marion Morrison and, thus, discovered John Wayne. However, while Walsh may have "discovered" the Duke, Wayne actually had had small parts in well-over a dozen films when he supposedly told Walsh he had not yet been in any pictures.
- GoofsThe reminiscences from Walsh's biography contain at least two major errors. He claims to have discovered John Wayne and that "The Big Trail" was his first film. In fact, Wayne had played bits and extras in over 20 films prior, and if anyone "discovered" him, it was John Ford. Secondly. he said Darryl Zanuck left Warner Bros. for Fox when the latter essentially was bankrupt. Zanuck started Twentieth Century Pictures in 1933, releasing through United Artists. It was two full years before the two companies merged and Zanuck took over.
- Quotes
On Screen Quote: Working for Jack Warner and working for Pancho Villa? They're about the same. Both of them bandits. - Raoul Walsh
- Crazy creditsMuch of what follows is true...
- ConnectionsFeatures Le baiser (1896)
Details
- Runtime1 hour 35 minutes
- Color