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Cimarron (1931 film)

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Genre
  
Drama, Western

Budget
  
1.5 million USD

Country
  
United States

6/10
IMDb

Director
  
Wesley Ruggles

Initial DVD release
  
January 31, 2006

Duration
  

Language
  
English

Cimarron (1931 film) movie poster

Release date
  
January 26, 1931 (1931-01-26) (Premiere-New York City) February 9, 1931 (1931-02-09) (US)

Based on
  
the novel, Cimarron  by Edna Ferber

Writer
  
Edna Ferber (novel), Howard Estabrook (screen version), Howard Estabrook (dialogue)

Cast
  
Richard Dix
(Yancey Cravat),
Irene Dunne
(Sabra Cravat),
Estelle Taylor
(Dixie Lee),
Nance O'Neil
(Felice Venable),
William Collier
(The Kid),
Roscoe Ates
(Jesse Rickey (as Rosco Ates))

Similar movies
  
Zodiac
,
Never Been Kissed
,
All the President's Men
,
Citizen Kane
,
Breathless
,
State of Play

Tagline
  
Terrific as all creation!

Cimarron is a 1931 Pre-Code Western film directed by Wesley Ruggles, starring Richard Dix and Irene Dunne, and featuring Estelle Taylor and Roscoe Ates. The Oscar-winning script was written by Howard Estabrook based on the Edna Ferber novel Cimarron. It would be RKO's most expensive production up to that date, and its winning of the top Oscar for Best Production would be only one of two ever won by that studio. It is also one of the few Westerns to ever win the top honor at the Academy Awards. Epic in scope, spanning forty years from 1889 to 1929, it was a critical success, although it did not recoup its production costs during its initial run in 1931.

Contents

Cimarron (1931 film) movie scenes

Hollywood s wild west 8 cimarron 1931


Plot

Cimarron (1931 film) wwwgstaticcomtvthumbmovieposters7591p7591p

The Oklahoma land rush of 1889 prompts thousands to travel to the Oklahoma Territory to grab free government land; Yancey Cravat (Richard Dix), his young bride, Sabra (Irene Dunne) and their son, Cim, join the throngs. In the ensuing race, Yancey is outwitted by a young prostitute, Dixie Lee (Estelle Taylor), who takes the prime piece of real estate, the Bear Creek claim, that Yancey had targeted for himself.

Cimarron (1931 film) Cimarron 1931 film Wikipedia

His plans for establishing a ranch thwarted, Yancey moves into the town of Osage, a boomer town, where he confronts and kills Lon Yountis (Stanley Fields), an outlaw who has killed the prior publisher of the local newspaper. Having a background in publishing himself, Yancey establishes the Osage Wigwam, a weekly newspaper, to help turn the frontier camp into a respectable town. After the birth of their daughter, Donna, a gang of outlaws threatens Osage, led by "The Kid" (William Collier Jr.), who happens to be an old acquaintance of Yancey's. To save the town, Yancey faces and kills The Kid.

Cimarron (1931 film) Cimarron 1931

Beset by guilt over his killing of The Kid, when another land rush appears, Yancey leaves Sabra and his children to participate in settling the Cherokee Strip. After his departure, Sabra takes over the publication of the Osage Wigwam, and raises her children until Yancey returns five years later, just in time to represent Dixie Lee and win her acquittal.

Cimarron (1931 film) Cimarron 1931 Review with Richard Dix and Irene Dunn PreCodeCom

Osage continues to grow, as does the Territory of Oklahoma, that gains statehood in 1907 and benefits from the early oil boom of the 1900s, including the Native American tribes, that Yancey supports, through editorials in his newspaper, after which Yancey once again disappears from Osage for several years. At the time, Sabra is vehemently against Yancey's viewpoint, despite her son's involvement with an Indian woman. Years later, when Sabra becomes the first female congresswoman from the state of Oklahoma, she lauds the virtues of her then Indian daughter-in-law.

Cimarron (1931 film) Amazoncom Cimarron Special Edition William LeBaron Wesley

Sabra and Yancey are reunited one final time when she rushes to his side after he has rescued numerous oil drillers from a devastating explosion. He dies in her arms.

Cast

Cimarron (1931 film) Cimarron 1931 Review with Richard Dix and Irene Dunn PreCodeCom

  • Richard Dix as Yancey Cravat
  • Irene Dunne as Sabra
  • Estelle Taylor as Dixie Lee
  • Nance O'Neil as Felice
  • William Collier, Jr. as The Kid
  • Roscoe Ates as Jesse Rickey
  • George E. Stone as Levy
  • Stanley Fields as Yountis
  • Robert McWade as Louis Hefner
  • Edna May Oliver as Tracy Wyatt
  • Judith Barrett as Donna
  • Eugene Jackson as Isaiah
  • Dennis O'Keefe (uncredited)

  • Cimarron (1931 film) The History of the Academy Awards Best Picture 19301931 News

    (Principal cast list as per AFI database, and The RKO Story)

    Production

    Cimarron (1931 film) Cimarron Did You See That One

    Despite being in the depths of the Great Depression, RKO Radio Pictures invested more than $1.5 million into their production of Ferber's novel. Filming began in the summer of 1930 at Jasmin Quinn Ranch outside of Los Angeles, California, where the land rush scenes were shot. More than twenty-eight cameramen, and numerous camera assistants and photographers, were used to capture scenes of more than 5,000 costumed extras, covered wagons, buckboards, surreys, and bicyclist as they raced across grassy hills and prairie to stake their claim. Cinematographer Edward Cronjager planned out every take (that recalled the scenes of Intolerance some fifteen years earlier) in accordance with Ferber's descriptions. In order to film key scenes for this production, RKO purchased 89 acres in Encino where construction of Art Director Max Ree's Oscar-winning design of a complete western town and a three block modern main street were built to represent the fictional Oklahoma boomtown of Osage. These award-winning sets eventually formed the nucleus for RKO's expansive movie ranch, in Encino, where other RKO (and non-RKO) films were later lensed.

    Reception

    RKO Radio Pictures premiered Cimarron at the RKO Palace Theatre (Broadway) in New York City on January 26, 1931, to much praise, and then on February 6 a Los Angeles Orpheum Theatre premiere followed, that also included personal appearances of Richard Dix and Irene Dunne, a stage show and an augmented orchestra. Three days later, the movie was released to theaters throughout the nation. Despite being a critical success, the extremely high budget and ongoing Depression combined against the film. While it was a commercial success in line with other films of the day, RKO Pictures could not at first recoup their heavy investment in the film, that ended up losing $565,000. However, it earned more money on a 1935 re-release that enjoyed another premiere in Oklahoma City at the (John Eberson designed) Midwest Theatre. The movie remained RKO's most expensive film until 1939's Gunga Din (that filmed exteriors around the Sierra Nevada Alabama Hills range, but had one scene shot on RKO's movie ranch in Encino).

    Reviews by film critics were overwhelmingly positive at the time. Variety led off their review with, "An elegant example of super film making and a big money picture. This is a spectacular western away from all others. It holds action, sentiment, sympathy, thrills and comedy – and 100% clean. Radio Pictures has a corker in 'Cimarron'." The review went on to praise the actors, particularly Dix and Oliver, as well as the direction, stating, "Wesley Ruggles apparently gets the full credit for this splendid and heavy production. His direction misses nothing in the elaborate scenes, as well as in the usual film making procedure." The magazine specifically pointed out the quality of the make-up in the aging of the principle players, who have to go through forty years on-screen.

    Mordaunt Hall of the New York Times also gave the film a stellar review, calling it, "A graphic and engrossing screen conception of Edna Ferber's widely read novel ...", and also praised the handling of the passage of time in this epic. Hall also singled out the performance of Dunne. Motion Picture Magazine raved, "A great and worthy effort, this transcription of early Oklahoma life will be hailed as one of the high-spots of the year. It has everything. RKO seems to have placed no restrictions upon making it a lavish, bona-fide epic."

    John Mosher of The New Yorker praised the "great care" that had been taken with the historical accuracy of the film's visual details, that he thought "as good as anything that has come out of Hollywood, and because of this expertness the film gains especial value." He also write that Richard Dix was "certainly at his best in this role." His only criticisms concerned the second half of the film, that he thought had "sagging moments" and an ending that was too abrupt. The Evening Independent called it "a notable addition to the small list of pictures that the years have given to the American theater. For in "Cimarron" is vested stirring drama, stark beauty, daring and adventure on a plane that is seldom seen on the screen." The West Seattle Herald declared that it was "even more powerful than the great story read by millions in America. "Cimarron" the picture is all that is gripping in "Cimarron" the story. Spectacular scenes abound in this production."

    More recent appraisals of the film have not been as positive. Cimarron currently holds a 50% favorable rating on Rotten Tomatoes, based on 14 reviews. Assessing the film in 2009, James Berardinelli called it "an excellent study of how tastes have changed over the years. Critically lauded at the time of its release, Cimarron was beloved by most who saw it. Eight decades later, it is frequently cited on lists of the most undeserving Academy Award winners and is rightfully impugned for racist overtones and scattershot storytelling." Steve Evans of DVD Verdict wrote, "Seen with contemporary eyes, the film is badly dated, slow moving, and pocked with racist caricatures....The recreation of the great 1889 Oklahoma Land Rush remains an exciting spectacle....Unfortunately, the film never manages to top this opening shot."

    Awards and honors

    At the 1931 Academy Awards ceremony at the Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles, Cimarron was the first film to receive more than six Academy Awards nominations and nominated for the Big Five awards (Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor, Best Actress, and Best Writing). Additionally, it is one of only two films (the other being Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?) to receive nominations in every eligible category. It won for three of them, including best picture. It would win the first of only two Best Picture Oscars for the studio, the other being awarded to 1946's The Best Years of Our Lives. It was the first Western to win the Best Picture award, and it would not be until 1990 when Dances With Wolves won, that another Western would garner that honor.

    References

    Cimarron (1931 film) Wikipedia
    Cimarron (1931 film) IMDbCimarron (1931 film) Rotten TomatoesCimarron (1931 film) themoviedb.org