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Across the Wide Missouri

  • 1951
  • Approved
  • 1h 18m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
2.4K
YOUR RATING
Across the Wide Missouri (1951)
Trapper Flint Mitchell and other mountain men from the Rendezvous join forces to enter virgin trapping territory but must contend with a resentful Blackfoot chief.
Play trailer2:25
1 Video
42 Photos
Costume DramaMountain AdventureAdventureDramaRomanceWestern

Trapper Flint Mitchell and other mountain men from the Rendezvous join forces to enter virgin trapping territory but must contend with a resentful Blackfoot chief.Trapper Flint Mitchell and other mountain men from the Rendezvous join forces to enter virgin trapping territory but must contend with a resentful Blackfoot chief.Trapper Flint Mitchell and other mountain men from the Rendezvous join forces to enter virgin trapping territory but must contend with a resentful Blackfoot chief.

  • Director
    • William A. Wellman
  • Writers
    • Talbot Jennings
    • Frank Cavett
    • Bernard DeVoto
  • Stars
    • Clark Gable
    • Ricardo Montalban
    • John Hodiak
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    2.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • William A. Wellman
    • Writers
      • Talbot Jennings
      • Frank Cavett
      • Bernard DeVoto
    • Stars
      • Clark Gable
      • Ricardo Montalban
      • John Hodiak
    • 35User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:25
    Official Trailer

    Photos42

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    Top cast43

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    Clark Gable
    Clark Gable
    • Flint Mitchell
    Ricardo Montalban
    Ricardo Montalban
    • Ironshirt
    John Hodiak
    John Hodiak
    • Brecan
    Adolphe Menjou
    Adolphe Menjou
    • Pierre
    J. Carrol Naish
    J. Carrol Naish
    • Looking Glass
    Jack Holt
    Jack Holt
    • Bear Ghost
    Alan Napier
    Alan Napier
    • Capt. Humberstone Lyon
    George Chandler
    George Chandler
    • Gowie
    Richard Anderson
    Richard Anderson
    • Dick Richardson
    María Elena Marqués
    María Elena Marqués
    • Kamiah
    Bobby Barber
    Bobby Barber
    • Gardipe
    • (uncredited)
    Maurice Brierre
    • French Trapper
    • (uncredited)
    Timothy Carey
    Timothy Carey
    • Baptiste DuNord
    • (uncredited)
    Gene Coogan
    Gene Coogan
    • Marcelline
    • (uncredited)
    Frankie Darro
    Frankie Darro
    • Cadet
    • (uncredited)
    Michael Dugan
    • Gordon
    • (uncredited)
    Tatzumbia Dupea
    Tatzumbia Dupea
    • Indian Woman
    • (uncredited)
    Evelyn Finley
    Evelyn Finley
    • Squaw
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • William A. Wellman
    • Writers
      • Talbot Jennings
      • Frank Cavett
      • Bernard DeVoto
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews35

    6.22.4K
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    Featured reviews

    dbdumonteil

    Honesty.

    Honesty seems the first quality of this Wellmann work:it uses no less than three different languages:English,Indian language and French:it's really great fun to hear the cast sing on Xmas day the Canadian "Alouette gentille alouette" en Français dans le texte...even if the words have nothing to do with Christ's birth.

    The second strong point is scenery:the landscapes are breathtakingly beautiful and the color is splendid indeed.Mountains and forest are lovingly filmed .

    A lot of people will probably note similarities with Delmer Daves's famous "Broken arrow" which was released the precedent year .It's almost the same ending.I would favor Daves's work over Wellmann's because his characters are more endearing , his story more absorbing and the relationship characters/nature more convincing.But "Across the wide Missouri" is worth watching :the story is told by Gable's son who appears as a baby in the movie and shortly as a child .One scene is particularly touching,even if we realize it only afterward:Gable and his Indian wife are kissing each other while the small child is watching.There are a lot of deaths in this often cruel story,but neither the White nor the Indians are demeaned.
    6Slim-4

    Respectable effort to portray the life of the mountain man in the opening of the West.

    This film does a good job of portraying the story of the mountain men who trapped beaver in the Rocky Mountains and played a significant role in winning the West. Clark Gable is the star of this film. He plays a trapper who falls in love with a Blackfoot maiden (Maria Elena Marquez). He buys her from a Nez Perce chief hoping to use her to get into the good graces of her grandfather, a Blackfoot leader. Ultimately, he falls in love with her.

    The romance between Gable and Marquez is the real story of this film. It is much more believable than the relationship between James Stewart and Debra Paget in "Broken Arrow". In the first place, the two of them can't talk to each other. Gable needs an interpreter to talk to his wife. The relationship compares to the forced marriage between Robert Redford and a Flathead girl in "Jeremiah Johnson". Gable's affection for his Blackfoot wife is obvious throughout the film.

    The film paints a much kinder picture of Native American life than many Westerns. Like Dewey Martin's character in "The Big Sky" Gable returns in the end to the Blackfeet. He has learned to value Indian life and wants to raise his son with her mother's people.

    The film portrays the real life capture of fur trapper John Colter by the Blackfeet. Captured by a young chief named Iron Shirt Gable must run for his life. The film should have taken more time with this exciting scene. It is far too short and not nearly as exciting as it should have been. I enjoyed Henry Fonda's run for his life in "Drums Along the Mohawk", but it was very poorly done here. Colter's successful escape from his Blackfeet captors deserves a better rendering.

    This film is worth watching for the beautiful high mountain scenery and the romance between Gable and Marques. The soundtrack is not particularly original, giving us constant variation on the old standard "Shenandoah", but it is pleasant listening. Enjoy it.
    6hitchcockthelegend

    Trees lie where they fall, and men were buried where they died.

    One of the most frustrating things in cinema is that of the interfering studio. Too many films, since cinema became the medium so massively loved by so many, have fallen victim to this most poisonous fly in the cinematic ointment. One such film to suffer greatly is the William A. Welman directed Western, Across The Wide Missouri. All the elements were in place, a fine story written by Talbot Jennings & Frank Cavett, which is worked from Bernard DeVoto's historical study of the American fur trade in the 1830s. Wellman (The Call Of The Wild/Beau Geste/Battleground) at the helm, Hollywood's golden boy Clark Gable in the lead, and a sumptuous location shoot around the San Juan Mountains to be photographed by William Mellor. With all the talk coming out of MGM that they wanted to make an "epic" picture, hopes were high for the early 1950s to have a Western classic on its hands. Enter studio boss Dore Schary who promptly cut the piece to ribbons. So much so that the film, where once it was epic, is now a choppy and episodic 78 minute experience. With a narration by Howard Keel tacked on by Schary just so we can try to make sense of what is (has) gone on. Wellman was rightly miffed and tried to get his name taken off the credits.

    Amazingly, what remains is still a recommended piece of film for the discerning Western fan. The locations are just breath taking, expertly shot in Technicolor by Mellor, at times rugged and biting, at others simply looking like God's garden. This part of the world is the perfect back drop for the story as the white man's greed brings them into conflict with the Native Americans. The film also boasts an array of interesting characters, we got the Scots and the French represented alongside the usual suspects, while the tracking and fighting sequences are expertly filmed by the astute Wellman. It was a tough shoot all told as well. Ricardo Montalban {Blackfoot Indian Ironshirt} was involved in a horse riding accident, the consequence of which would severely affect him later in his life, while stunt man Fred Kennedy suffered a broken neck when his intentional fall from a horse did not go as planned. The horses too you can see really earned their oats, trekking up hill across sharp jagged rocks and ploughing through snow drifts, magnificent beasts they be. Joining Gable and Montalban in the cast are John Hodiak, James Whitmore, María Elena Marqués, Adolphe Menjou and Alan Napier. David Raskin provides a suitably at one with the atmosphere score. With Gable on form mixing with the high points that Schary left alone, Across The Wide Missouri is more than just a time filler. But the problems do exist and it's impossible not to be affected by the annoyance that comes with the old "what might have been" that gnaws away at the viewer at every other turn. 6/10
    8bkoganbing

    The Mountain Men, Our Real Pioneers

    When one watches western films of the latter half of the 19th century, the settlement of the west was on a course that was nothing but bad for the American Indian. As good as some westerns are, always lingering in the back of any viewer's mind is the thought that no matter what the predicament of a given hero/heroine in any film is the fact that the might and power of the United States Cavalry will ultimately tip the balance towards the white man.

    But the fur trappers of the early half of that century faced a far different situation. They were few and the Indians at that point outnumbered them. These people as typified by Clark Gable and the rest of the cast in Across the Wide Missouri were the really brave ones in our history. They wanted to trap their beaver and sell their pelts and the last thing they wanted was wholesale immigration of settlers. It took a lot of nerve to live in that lonely existence, days and weeks at a time where you couldn't count on a troop of soldiers to bail you out of trouble.

    I'm a big old sucker for films about the earlier west and two good ones came out at this time, this one and the following year from RKO, The Big Sky. I give the nod to this one thought because it was done in color and on location.

    Gable gets one of his best post World War II parts as the sturdy Flint Mitchell, mountain man who falls big time for Indian princess Maris Elena Marques. While grandfather Jack Holt approves of a white husband for his granddaughter, the match don't sit well at all with Ricardo Montalban his successor. The climatic duel between Gable and Montalban is staged very well indeed and quite thrilling.

    Playing various fur trapper roles are Alan Napier, James Whitmore, John Hodiak and most of all Adolphe Menjou. Though one normally expects the debonair Mr. Menjou in tuxedo, he's really quite good as the French Canadian trapper and sidekick to Gable.

    Maria Elena Marquess got her first of two chances in Hollywood and did well as the Indian princess. She was already a name in Mexican cinema and became an even bigger star down there due to this film with Clark Gable.

    This film marked the farewell performance of Jack Holt who died soon after it was completed. His career spanned all the way back to the earliest years of Hollywood. He makes a very impressive chief of the Blackfeet.

    Gable was a rugged outdoors-man in real life, he liked to fish and hunt and brought his fourth wife, Lady Sylvia Ashley on location. Unfortunately Lady Sylvia was not a big fan of the great outdoors and her experiences roughing it contributed to the Gables getting unhitched.

    Director William Wellman kept things going at a good clip and though Across the Wide Missouri is slightly over 75 minutes for an A film, it's still a great item and rates being an A film for its cast and its production values.
    skookumsteve

    The Chinook Trading Jargon

    This movie, for me, is just plain fun and it invokes a lot of memories at 68 years old. My grandfather, 1879-1966, used to speak the Chinook Trading Jargon. The Jargon was a trade language made up of English, French and Indian. It was primarily used on the west coast and as far east as Montana as a common language for trading etc. When I was a little boy my granddad and I used to talk back and forth in Chinook. What we hear in the movie is quite accurate, although they speak too fast for me to keep up with. Needless to say, that with the passage of time, the language has all but disappeared from everyday use. There are, however, people dedicated to keeping it alive and they sometimes have a yearly "rendezvous" where it is spoken and lessons are taught.

    Thank you very one for your time. Klahowya Sikhs. (Goodbye friends).

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Clark Gable was ill during filming. He did not like the way he appeared in the movie, believing he looked too bloated and red in the face. He was widely felt to be too old for his character.
    • Goofs
      Early in the movie (at the 7:12 mark), when Kamiah is talking to Flint about trading horses for a wife, there is a motor vehicle in the lower left corner driving along a road in the distance, although this story took place long before the automobile was invented.
    • Quotes

      Narrator: Trees lie where they fall, and men were buried where they died.

    • Connections
      Featured in The Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Story (1951)
    • Soundtracks
      Across The Wide Missouri
      Words & Music by Ervin Drake & Jimmy Shirl

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    FAQ15

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 21, 1951 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
      • North American Indian
    • Also known as
      • Kroz Misuri
    • Filming locations
      • Durango, Colorado, USA
    • Production company
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $5,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 18m(78 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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