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Whistle Stopper - Owen Wister's The Virginian (Universal Western Collection)

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List Price: $9.98
Our Price: $38.50
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Manufacturer: Universal Studios Starring: Joel McCrea, Brian Donlevy, Sonny Tufts, Barbara Britton, Fay Bainter Directed By: Stuart Gilmore
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Binding: VHS Tape EAN: 9780783217185 Format: Closed-captioned ISBN: 0783217188 Label: Universal Studios Manufacturer: Universal Studios Number Of Items: 1 Publisher: Universal Studios Release Date: 1996-05-14 Running Time: 90 Studio: Universal Studios Theatrical Release Date: 1946-05-05
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Fair Joel McCrea Remake Of A Gary Cooper Classic Comment: It had to be a thankless task to remake one of the classic Westerns of all time, one that has a special place in the heart of filmlovers because it was one of the first great talking Westerns.
Yet and still, Hollywood has never let a little thing like unenviable comparison stop from remaking a classic, which they did when they remade the classic western The Virginian, starring Gary Cooper, Walter Huston, and Richard Arlen, this time starring Joel McCrea, Brian Donlevy, and Sonny Tufts in the corresponding roles.
McCrea, who was a lot better than he gave himself credit, is solid as the unnamed Virginian who tries to steer (no pun intended, but if it works for you, I'm glad!) his fellow cowboy Steve away from the murderous cattle rustler Trampas, and then sets out for vengeance when tragedy ensues. Donlevy is his usual nasty, snarling villain, and Tufts makes a fine simpleton doomed to make fatal choices, but this version does pale to the Cooper version, which wasn't even the first filmed version of the story.
Things are pretty routine, and there is nothing about the acting, directing, or the script that would make this film stand out among other Westerns.
This version of The Virginian is not an unpleasant film, just a pretty unremarkable one.
Customer Rating:      Summary: 1946 "Virginian" Comment: this is a remake in technicolor of the 1930 black and white classic, with Joel McCrea playing the Gary Cooper hero role and Brian Donlevy playing the evil Trampas as earlier portrayed by Walter Huston. Sonny Tufts is a little goofier but still good as the doomed sidekick played by Richard Arlen in the earlier version. Both versions are quite good;neither great. This version would probably be more acceptable to viewers who just don't care for older black and white films.
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Editorial Reviews:
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In latter-day interviews Joel McCrea always maintained that producers would cast him "only if they couldn't get somebody really good, like [Gary] Cooper." This very pleasant actor was self-effacing to a fault (and largely mistaken), but when it came to the 1946 remake of The Virginian, he had a point. Cooper had done The Virginian already at the dawn of the talkies, and McCrea's incarnation pales beside his, even with the benefit of postcard-pretty Technicolor. But then, this whole movie pales--alongside not only the classic version but most any run-of-the-mill Western. The elements of the sturdy Owen Wister tale--the growing tension between the Virginian and the black-clad cattleman/rustler Trampas, the running critique of vigilante justice by the new schoolmarm from the East, the slide of the hero's feckless pal Steve into outlawry--are still discernible. But everything's been softened (and the ornate frontier dialogue of the 1929 version is gone), and it's difficult to begin to understand how Stuart Gilmore, newly promoted from the film-editing bench, managed to turn in such a flaccid job of direction. He botches even the surefire sequence of the rustlers' hanging, when the Virginian has to... well, we won't play the spoiler. McCrea's shortfall vis-à-vis Cooper is less severe than the gulf between Brian Donlevy's stolid villainy as Trampas and Walter Huston's venomous exuberance 17 years earlier, or Sonny Tufts's Steve vs. Richard Arlen's, or--especially--Barbara Britton's Vermont violet vs. Mary Brian's spunky schoolmarm. As Trampas might bark at this point: Oh, I'm sick o' this! Buy the 1929 movie. --Richard T. Jameson
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