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The Adventures of Mark Twain (1944 film)

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Director
  
Music director
  
Duration
  

Language
  
English

7/10
IMDb

Genre
  
Adventure, Biography, Drama

Producer
  
Jesse L. Lasky

Country
  
United States

The Adventures of Mark Twain (1944 film) movie poster

Release date
  
July 22, 1944 (1944-07-22)

Writer
  
Harry Chandlee (additional dialogue), Alan Le May (adaptation), Alan Le May (screenplay), Harold M. Sherman (adaptation), Harold M. Sherman (play)

Cast
  
(Samuel Langhorne Clemens (Mark Twain)), (Olivia Langdon Clemens), (J.B. Pond),
Alan Hale
(Steve Gillis),
C. Aubrey Smith
(Oxford Chancellor), (Bret Harte)

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Tagline
  
The Life Story of the Creator of Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn - His keen pen wove a fabric of wit into the lives of Americans !

The Adventures of Mark Twain is a 1944 American biographical film starring Fredric March as Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain) and Alexis Smith as his wife, Olivia. It was produced at Warner Brothers, and directed by Irving Rapper, with music by Max Steiner. The film was nominated for three Oscars.

Contents

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Max steiner the adventures of mark twain selections from the film music 1944


Plot

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A group of people are watching Halley's Comet overhead when Judge Clemens is called away for the birth of his son, Samuel Clemens. The film proceeds to mix in elements of many of Clemens' best-known stories as if they actually occurred. Thus, as he grows up, Sam plays with his friends Huck, Tom, and the slave boy Jim on a raft on the Mississippi, providing a fictitious "real–life" basis for the novels Tom Sawyer and The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.

The Adventures of Mark Twain (1944 film) movie poster

The teenage Sam goes to work for his brother Orion, publisher of the Hannibal Journal newspaper, at his now-widowed mother's urging, but after three unhappy years, runs away to become a river boat pilot. After a rough start, he thrives under the tutelage of Captain Horace Bixby and becomes a highly skilled pilot on the Mississippi River.

The Adventures of Mark Twain (1944 film) wwwgstaticcomtvthumbdvdboxart473p473dv8a

One day, he spots a pickpocket robbing Charles Langdon, a passenger aboard his ship. Among the possessions Sam forces the thief to return is a small portrait of Charles's sister Olivia. After seeing it, Sam falls deeply in love. As they become friends, Sam tells Charles that he is going to marry Olivia. To that end, he gives up his job to seek his fortune with his friend Steve, prospecting for gold or silver (with little success) in the west.

The Adventures of Mark Twain (1944 film) The Adventures of Mark Twain 1944

When he finally gives up, he becomes a newspaper reporter in Nevada. Steve persuades him to enter a jumping frog contest against Bret Harte. The plot is taken from Twain's real first major story, "The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County". Steve cheats by secretly feeding lead buckshot to Harte's champion frog. Their frog wins easily as a result. However, Sam later sheepishly admits to Steve that he bet all their money on the champ. Sam then writes the story and sends it off, under the pen name Mark Twain, to try to get it published.

The Adventures of Mark Twain (1944 film) Lauras Miscellaneous Musings Tonights Movie The Adventures of

When the Civil War begins, Sam leaves Nevada, narrowly missing J. B. Pond, who has come all the way from the east to find the writer of the frog story. (In real life, Clemens went to Nevada after the war started, partly to get away from the conflict.) The "Jumping Frog of Calaveras County" is published in the newspapers and is widely read and greatly enjoyed as a welcome change from the grim war news.

The Adventures of Mark Twain (1944 film) The Adventures of Mark Twain 1944 film Alchetron the free

When the Civil War ends, Pond finally finds Sam. He signs him up for a lecture tour. Charles and Olivia ("Livy") Langdon are in the audience of his very first lecture, where his humor and wit make him an immediate success. He marries his beloved Livy, despite her father's initial opposition, and becomes a famous writer and lecturer.

The Adventures of Mark Twain (1944 film) The Adventures of Mark Twain 1944

However, Sam wants to become more than just a humorist. He invests in a typesetting machine and establishes a publishing company. Both ventures require more and more capital, so Sam has to keep writing furiously for years. Finally fed up with his constant money troubles, he turns to businessman Henry Huttleston Rogers to extricate him from his financial mess. Rogers tells him he can avoid bankruptcy, but only if he does not honor his overly-generous contract to publish Ulysses S. Grant's memoirs. Sam agrees to go see the former president. Dismayed to find Grant poverty-stricken and dying, he decides that the country owes the great man such a debt of gratitude that going bankrupt is a small price to pay. (In reality, the company did publish Grant's memoirs—about eight years before Clemens met Rogers—and the venture was a huge success. The business did, in fact, eventually go bankrupt, but not because of Grant.) Though Rogers gets the creditors to accept half payment, Sam is determined to pay in full his staggering debt of $250,000. To do so, he embarks on a strenuous worldwide lecture tour, leaving behind Livy to care for their daughters.

The Adventures of Mark Twain (1944 film) The Adventures of Mark Twain 1944

At last, he manages to pay everything off and is reunited with his now-ailing wife in Florence. She is very proud when she receives word just before she dies that her husband is to receive an honorary doctorate from Oxford University, which she considers the greatest honor a writer can attain.

Sam himself dies when Halley's Comet returns in 1910. Afterward, his spirit is called away by Tom and Huck to join them in the afterlife.

Cast

  • Fredric March as Samuel Langhorne Clemens (Mark Twain)
  • Alexis Smith as Olivia "Livy" Langdon Clemens
  • Donald Crisp as J.B. Pond
  • Alan Hale as Steve Gillis
  • C. Aubrey Smith as Oxford Chancellor
  • John Carradine as Bret Harte
  • William Henry as Charles Langdon (as Bill Henry)
  • Robert Barrat as Horace E. Bixby
  • Walter Hampden as Jervis Langdon
  • Joyce Reynolds as Clara Clemens
  • Whitford Kane as Joe Goodwin
  • Percy Kilbride as Billings
  • Nana Bryant as Mrs. Langdon
  • Jackie Brown as Samuel Clemens – age 12
  • Dickie Jones as Samuel Clemens – age 15
  • Russell Gleason as Orion Clemens
  • Joseph Crehan as Riverboat Captain / Ulysses S. Grant
  • Douglas Wood as William Dean Howells
  • Reception

    Contemporary assessments were mixed. Bosley Crowther gave a generally negative review in The New York Times, calling it a "lengthy and desultory picture" and "a spotty and often inaccurate chronicle", and complaining "This spotty character of the picture is due not alone to the script but also to the direction, which is strangely inconsistent throughout." He continued by saying "Mr. March's performance of Twain is agreeable," but called Alexis Smith's portrayal "colorless and conventional". Variety ran a positive review, calling it "an educational yet highly entertaining biography of the immortal American ... The stars, notably, perform their assignments with extraordinary compassion and understanding, particularly March in the title role." Harrison's Reports was also positive, calling it "an excellently produced, heart-warming human-interest drama, well acted and directed. Fredric March portrays Twain with deep understanding." David Lardner of The New Yorker dismissed the film, writing that it wasn't much worse than most biographical films and "does have its good moments", but "once more biographical inaccuracy is rampant, and once more the best dramatic possibilities have been overlooked."

    The Adventures of Mark Twain has been called "perhaps the most impressive of all Forties large-scale biopics" by Charles Higham and Joel Greenberg in their book Hollywood in the Forties.

    The film was nominated the Academy Award three times at the 17th Academy Awards:

  • Best Art Direction-Interior Decoration, Black-and-WhiteJohn Hughes and Fred M. MacLean
  • Best Effects, Special EffectsPaul Detlefsen and John Crouse (photographic), and Nathan Levinson (sound); and
  • Best Music, Scoring of a Dramatic or Comedy Picture – Max Steiner.
  • References

    The Adventures of Mark Twain (1944 film) Wikipedia
    The Adventures of Mark Twain (1944 film) IMDb The Adventures of Mark Twain (1944 film) themoviedb.org