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21 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The First "Virginian" Movie., July 23, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: The Virginian [VHS] (VHS Tape)
This is one of the first "talkie" movies so one has to bear with the black & white & variable sound quality. Otherwise, it's a great story by Owen Wister (which was remade twice more) and quite well done for so early a feature and true to the book. Gary Cooper rose to stardom as a result of this one. If you like to see a young Gary Cooper, this one's for you. If you like Westerns, this one's for you. If you like a good old-fashioned story, this one's for you.
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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Actually, the line is: "If you want to call me that, smile!", August 11, 2001
This review is from: The Virginian [VHS] (VHS Tape)
This 1929 film directed by Victory Fleming, was the third film version of Owen Wister's classic western novel and the first all-talking picture for star Gary Cooper. "The Virginian" is the foreman of the Box H ranch, near Medicine Bow, Wyoming, where he gives his old friend Steve (Richard Arlen) a job. Then they are both smitten with Molly Wood (Mary Brian), the new schoolteacher, playing practical jokes on each other to win her attention. But the Virginian also crosses paths with Tramapas (Walter Huston) and then catches Steve has been putting Tramapas' brand on Box H cattle. Forced to hang his friend and two other outlaws, the Virginian swears he will get Trampas. For an early talking film, director Fleming does a marvelous job of using sound. He also has the advantage of great locations near Sonora in the High Sierras and a pretty good script by Howard Estabrook. However, the famous line "Smile when you call me that" is actually "If you want to call me that, smile" in the film. One of the most famous misquoted lines in cinema history, right up there with "Play it again, Sam." Cooper's performance is fine, it is just strange to see him so young. It really does not seem like Gary Cooper to me, but that is my problem. This film was so successful that it was actually re-issued by Paramount in 1935 and it still holds up when compared to the other versions of the story.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
When movie cowboys started talking . . ., October 17, 2004
This review is from: The Virginian [VHS] (VHS Tape)
For fans of Owen Wister's 1902 novel, this early talkie will seem like a Little Golden Book version of the well-loved story, condensed and woven together from a few key scenes in the book. While the book is sometimes talky, the movie seems even more so, and Cooper struggles manfully with pages of aw-shucks dialogue. There are only glimpses of the powerful laconic screen presence he became known for in later films. Physically, the tall and lean and still-young Cooper is perfect for the role, though unlike old-time cowboys, he seems far more comfortable on his feet than riding a horse. The only totally realized characterization in the film is Walter Huston's Trampas, and he is fun to watch, though he has little of the menace of Wister's original villain.
The footage of herding cattle across a river gives a note of authenticity, and the film comes to life visually when the technology of early sound recording doesn't slow things down. In the many scenes with dialogue, the camera doesn't move, giving that stiffly wooden feel of early talkies. I noticed only one interior tracking shot, in the saloon, as Trampas and his boys enter and walk to the bar.
Dramatically the film comes to life in two or three scenes, both of which are improvements on Wister's novel. One is the hanging, as the three cattle thieves approach the nooses waiting for them, and one man recoils in horror. In the book, Wister's narrator chooses not to witness the hangings, so it goes undescribed. The other is the final shootout between the Virginian and Trampas. Wister, writing before the movie conventions of gun-duels, doesn't draw out the suspense, but director Fleming allows us to see hero and villain walking the empty streets of town until they find each other and pull their guns.
Altogether, the film is worth watching for the place it holds in the history of the western. This one and Gary Cooper's "High Noon" would make an interesting pair of movie bookends.
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