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The Prairie (film)

1947 film by Frank Wisbar From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Prairie (film)
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The Prairie is a 1947 American Western film based on the novel The Prairie by James Fenimore Cooper.

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Cast

  • Lenore Aubert as Ellen Wade
  • Alan Baxter as Paul Hover
  • Russ Vincent as Abiram White
  • Jack Mitchum as Asa Bush
  • Charles Evans as Ishmael Bush
  • Edna Holland as Esther Bush
  • Chief Thundercloud as Eagle Feather
  • Fred Coby as Abner Bush
  • Bill Murphy as Jess Bush
  • David Gerber as Gabe Bush
  • Don Lynch as Enoch Bush
  • George Morrell as Luke

Production

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The film was made by a new company, a co-operative venture between director Frank Wisbar, production manager Edward Finney and writer Arthur St Claire. The financed, cast and made the picture themselves.[3] Reportedly Wisbar raised some finance from his family back in Germany.[4]

It was shot at a new studios, the Motion Picture Center, over 12 days at an estimated $10,000 a day.[3]

"This is an interesting, a desperate, attempt to break the deadlock on independent production", said Wisbar. "The other boys and I made up our minds to finance, cast and film a picture as well as it could be done, without interference from the "front office", distributors, or anyone else. We did this knowing a low budget can be – and usually is – the ruin of a good picture. I know. I've made them; bad ones."[3]

Wisbar said they picked Cooper's novel because it was in the public domain and also "because it keeps the rootin', tootin', and shootin' to a minimum and stresses the human element, the story of a man who was a law unto himself. We wrote our script straight, cutting out every scene that was not absolutely necessary."[3]

Wisbar said the film was made in a style that was "realistic but stylised. Camera treatment is modern in what I would call highly poetic."[3]

The film marked the acting debut for Robert Mitchum's brother John.[5]

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Reception

The Los Angeles Times said "I wish I could say the film makes some claim on artistry."[6]

Associated Producers Inc announced a new version of the book would be filmed on 2 March 1959 but it appears to have not been made.[7]

References

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