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The Big Land

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Wikipedia article




'The Big Land' is a 1957 American Western film in Warnercolor directed by Gordon Douglas and starring Alan Ladd, Virginia Mayo and Edmond O'Brien

Plot



Back home in Texas following the Civil War, former Confederate officer Chad Morgan (Alan Ladd) leads a cattle drive to Missouri, assuring fellow ranchers that their stock will bring $20 a head at auction. Instead, ruthless cattle baron Brog (Anthony Caruso) has scared off all competition and offers a dollar and a half a head for the half-starved Longhorns, who had little good grazing along the trail. Chad had enough of violence during the war, and chooses not to confront Brog, a skilled gunfighter, who wounds one of his companions.

Blamed for what happened, Morgan chooses not to return to Texas. He spends a night in a livery stable and meets town drunk Joe Jagger (Edmond O'Brien), who is nearly lynched for trying to steal whiskey. Chad helps keep Joe sober after they leave town. On their journey, Chad finds out the rail line has been extended well into Kansas, much closer to Texas, and there is good grass land there to fatten the cattle up after the long trek, making them more valuable. He also learns Joe is a talented architect, who has worked on important projects, but never finished any of them, because of his drinking.

They meet farmers who are growing a lot of wheat and have nowhere to sell it. Chad has an ideabetween cattle from Texas and wheat from Kansas, the railroad might be persuaded to build a spur line. so Chad and Joe ride to Kansas City to meet Tom Draper (Don Castle), a railroad man who is engaged to Joe's sister Helen (Virginia Mayo), a singer in the saloon. Tom likes the idea of a railroad spur to aid the farmers and cattlemenseparately, neither would be enough to make it worthwhile.

Helen is pleased at the change in her brother and thanks Chad, which brings out some jealousy in her fianc. Brog and his sidekick disrupt the town's construction attempts while Chad is off getting his fellow cattlemen to drive their steers to Kansas. Brog, wanting to monopolize the new market, murders one of the cattle buyers to scare the others off, so he can still bid low. At first, Joe backs down from Brog, and goes back to drinking. But when he does confront Brog and his sidekick, Brog gets him to draw his gun, then shoots him down easily.

Blaming Chad for not being there, Helen turns on him upon his return. Brog stampedes cattle through the town to try and destroy Chad and Joe's rebellion against his monopoly. Chad meets Brog and his man in the saloonBrog doesn't realize Chad is faster than he is, and in spite of the two-to-one odds, Chad prevails in the gunfight. Helen embraces him and Tom realizes he has lost her for good. But the vision he, Chad, and Joe had together has come to fruition.

Cast



* Alan Ladd as Chad Morgan

* Virginia Mayo as Helen Jagger

* Edmond O'Brien as Joe Jagger

* Anthony Caruso as Brog

* Julie Bishop as Kate Johnson

* John Qualen as Sven Johnson

* Don Castle as Tom Draper

* David Ladd as David Johnson

* Jack Wrather Jr. as Olaf Johnson

* George J. Lewis as Dawson

Production



The film was based on the novel 'Buffalo Grass', which was published in 1955. Alan Ladd's Jaguar Productions bought film rights prior to publication for a reported $100,000.Louella Parsons "Gary Set for Railroad-Building Role" 'The Washington Post and Times-Herald' 28 Dec 1956: A11. The movie was meant to be the first in a revised four-year production deal between Jaguar and Warner Bros. Frank Gruber himself was hired to write the script and Eleanor Parker and Robert Ryan were discussed as possible co-stars to Ladd. Eventually, Edmond O'Brien who had just made 'A Cry in the Night' for Jaguar and Virginia Mayo who was under contract to Warner Bros and who had acted opposite Ladd before were cast.

The movie was shot near Sonora, California, a location not far from Yosemite National Park over four weeks in June 1956.http://www.tcm.com/this-month/article.html?isPreview=&id=1019023|1008289&name=The-Big-Land The unit then moved to the Warner Bros backlot. Four different sets for the township were created to show the town being built, after it had been burnt, to film the burning sequence, and to show the town being completed."Burning Tale Of Four Cities" 'The Washington Post and Times-Herald' 5 Aug 1956: H9.

Reception



The 'Los Angeles Times' said the film "is about as plodding as a western can get and still be called one."

Before the film was made, a possible follow-up 'The Dry Lands' was mentioned in the press.

See also



* List of American films of 1957

References




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