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The Far Country 1954 123movies

The Far Country 1954 123movies

RENEE...the innocent...and the untamed...BEN...the gambler...and the loser...GANNON...the law...and the noose...RUBE...the friendless...and the afraid.Feb. 12, 195497 Min.
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Synopsis

Watch: The Far Country 1954 123movies, Full Movie Online – In 1896, Jeff Webster sees the start of the Klondike gold rush as a golden opportunity to make a fortune in beef, and woe betide anyone standing in his way. He drives a cattle herd from Wyoming to Seattle, by ship to Skagway, and (after a delay caused by larcenous town boss Gannon) through the mountains to Dawson. There, he and his partner Ben Tatum get into the gold business themselves. Two lovely women fall for misanthropic Jeff, but he believes in every-man-for-himself, turning his back on growing lawlessness, until it finally strikes home..
Plot: In 1896, Jeff Webster sees the start of the Klondike gold rush as a golden opportunity to make a fortune in beef…and woe betide anyone standing in his way! He drives a cattle herd from Wyoming to Seattle, by ship to Skagway, and (after a delay caused by larcenous town boss Gannon) through the mountains to Dawson. There, he and his partner Ben Tatum get into the gold business themselves. Two lovely women fall for misanthropic Jeff, but he believes in every-man-for-himself, turning his back on growing lawlessness…until it finally strikes home.
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Ratings:

7.1/10 Votes: 7,736
100% | RottenTomatoes
N/A | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 123 Popularity: 7.276 | TMDB

Reviews:

Mann/Stewart Western (actually, a Northern) shot in spectacular Jasper National Park, Alberta
RELEASED IN 1954 and directed by Anthony Mann, “The Far Country” stars Jimmy Stewart as a self-centered cattleman, Jeff Webster, who conflicts with a crooked, self-appointed lawman (John McIntire) while driving cattle through Skagway, Alaska, to Dawson during the 1896 Klondike gold rush. Ruth Roman plays a formidable woman he meets on the steamship, who unfortunately works for Gannon (McIntire). Walter Brennan plays Jeff’s best friend while Corinne Calvet plays a tough foreign settler with romantic inclinations.

This was the fourth of five Westerns Mann did with Stewart. These were uncompromisingly harsh, psychological Westerns featuring themes of revenge, obsession, rage and redemption. They were spectacularly shot on location, rather than in the studio, providing a backdrop of authentic rugged beauty. This one was shot in Jasper National Park, Alberta, Canada, with one episode involving Athabasca Glacier.

The opening sequence on the steamship is memorable for the way Jeff (Stewart) escapes ship authorities with the assistance of Ruth Roman’s character. Roman is stalwart, stunning and surprisingly vivacious (for her role as a woman in the rough NW wilderness). Gannon (McIntire) is an interesting antagonist due to the way he joyfully basks in his power and overt corruption.

THE MOVIE RUNS 97 minutes. WRITER: Borden Chase. ADDITIONAL CAST: Jay C. Flippen, Harry Morgan and Jack Elam.

GRADE: B

Review By: Wuchakk
The best Western movie I’ve ever seen.
Now, admittedly, I’m no ardent student of the genre. As a matter of fact, I’ve tended always to shy away from Westerns because, in spite of all their critical cachet as America’s primal stories (or whatever), they seem to me to forever devolve into tiresome retreads of either “shoot up the Injuns,” “the big gunfight,” or “Hey, let’s form a posse!” In other words, it always seemed to me a genre so rooted in and tied to convention, that it left precious little room for surprise or originality. (And yes, I HAVE seen at least some of the so-called “greats”, and unapologetically lump them into this negative assessment – including Stagecoach, Rio Bravo, My Darling Clementine, and of course the infamous [but profoundly dull] Clint Eastwood-Sergio Leone teamups in the ’60s.)

But when I saw this movie on TV – as part of a commemorative Jimmy Stewart weekend upon his death – I finally GOT IT: I understood, at least in theory, what the Western mythos has to offer as a serious thematic preoccupation (aside from just action and thrills). It is the push-pull between lawlessness and order; the American West represented freedom, but also the prospect of the wild, the untamed. Respectable folk could get hurt out there. Which, of course, meant that perhaps – just perhaps – it wasn’t meant for respectable folk, and that the only residents should be the amoral and the shifty, those who dispensed justice strictly from the barrel of their revolvers, and where kill or be killed would ever be the law of the land. In such an environment, of course, the true heroes are the ones who are ornery and free-spirited enough to be out there in the first place (and so reject “society,” at least as it manifested itself on the Eastern seaboard), and yet have enough sense of justice to believe that a society based on chaos and fear just IS NOT RIGHT. Catching and examining that disparity between law and disorder IN THE MAIN CHARACTER HIMSELF is, I believe (after seeing this movie), the highest and truest goal of any Western. Sadly, it is so often not the case, as the white hats are completely white, the black ones completely black (and let’s not even get started talking about the Indians, ok) and there is precious little shades of gray in between.

Not in this one. Jimmy Stewart plays a blatant fortune hunter who follows the trail of miners before him into the Alaskan wilderness to prospect for gold. He is joined in this by his lifelong buddy, played by Walter Brennan (perhaps the Western cliché character to end them all – but nevertheless enjoyable here, as always) – and no one else. Pointedly, they are out for themselves, and while Stewart displays his patented charm (come on, we could never really dislike the guy, now could we?), we are left with little doubt that his is basically a self-centered, self-interested character: none of his “Gosh” or “Oh golly gee” humanism is allowed to come through. Or, rather, it has to be EARNED, by the end of the picture, in the way I described above. He must confront the lawlessness in himself, and weigh it against the need for order and justice which are so blatantly lacking in the border town which serves as the miners’ starting point on their gold dust trail. This town is ruled tightly by its wicked sheriff, Mr. Gannon, played by John McIntire in one of the best “bad guy” performances I’ve ever seen. He comes on with so much charm and humor, and has such a relaxed and interesting rapport with Stewart, that it actually takes awhile to recognize that he *is* the bad guy – so that when it finally sinks in, it does so with double force. Further, by establishing a type of breezy (if necessarily guarded) camaraderie between McIntire and Stewart, the film plays up the notion of how close in temperament they really are – and so how far a moral distance Stewart must walk by the end of the film.

I won’t go through all the twists and turns the plot takes – see those for yourself (as well as the rugged and gorgeous Alaskan scenery – filmed on location, mind you, not cheap painted stills that the studio made up). What’s key here is how much this story focuses upon character, with great dialogue and character interaction substituting for gunplay much of the time – although the film has just enough action and adventure to prevent it from ever being static (read: “talky”). Definitely one of the greatest performances I’ve seen from Stewart, showing he could play the renegade, the “man’s man” just as convincingly as the decent and upright guy next door. If anything, in fact, his “everyman” qualities lend greater strength to his characterization, making him seem less mythic or overblown – -like, say, Eastwood or John Wayne – and more a three-dimensional personage. His relationship with Brennan is well-played: understated, but nevertheless touching (with a faint suggestion of George and Lenny from “Of Mice and Men” – an altogether different type of “western”).

I certainly have more Westerns to see, but this is for now my favorite, and the yardstick by which I will necessarily judge all the others. It deserves to be much better known and appreciated than it is.

Review By: krumski

Other Information:

Original Title The Far Country
Release Date 1954-02-12
Release Year 1954

Original Language en
Runtime 1 hr 37 min (97 min)
Budget 0
Revenue 0
Status Released
Rated Passed
Genre Romance, Western
Director Anthony Mann
Writer Borden Chase
Actors James Stewart, Ruth Roman, Corinne Calvet
Country United States
Awards N/A
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix Mono (Western Electric Recording)
Aspect Ratio 1.85 : 1
Camera N/A
Laboratory Technicolor, Hollywood (CA), USA (color)
Film Length N/A
Negative Format 35 mm
Cinematographic Process Spherical
Printed Film Format 35 mm

The Far Country 1954 123movies
The Far Country 1954 123movies
The Far Country 1954 123movies
The Far Country 1954 123movies
The Far Country 1954 123movies
The Far Country 1954 123movies
The Far Country 1954 123movies
Original title The Far Country
TMDb Rating 6.878 123 votes

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