23 out of 24 people found the following comment useful :- my forty-year search rewarded, 30 enero 2005
Author:
gayeshortland de Ireland
There is little to add to the eloquent appreciations of Wild River by
other users. Still, I want to pay my tribute. My father took me to see
the film when I was a little girl and it made such an impression on me
I have been searching for it for years. Odd, since I remembered nothing
of the plot, retaining only fleeting images of autumn colours, Lee
Remick's autumnal hair, the old ferry, an indelible impression of
Montgomery Clift's face, the old woman surrounded by still 'figures in
a landscape'. And the creation of a unique atmosphere so tangible, so
lyrical, so elegiac it stayed with me for 40+ years. I've been wanting
to know why it clung to me so. And wondering why it seemed to have
disappeared without trace. This Christmas, in the fullness of time, my
niece presented me with the DVD and I have at last seen it again. Why
did it affect me so profoundly? That one's easy. Why had the film
disappeared. That one's complex, as you know. What I hadn't expected
was that stunning performance from the incomparable Jo Van Fleet. No
Oscar? Were they mad? It is intensely interesting and sobering to
reflect how politics can hold art hostage.
14 out of 16 people found the following comment useful :- An almost forgotten masterpiece, 12 abril 2001
Author:
dmwhite50 (dmwhite50@yahoo.com)
WILD RIVER is one of Elia Kazan's best films, with brilliant affecting
performances, beautiful cinematography, atmospheric settings, and a
multilayered plot with important thematic points to make about the rights
of
the individual vs. the needs of the larger society as a whole. Jo Van Fleet
gives one of the all time great performances of the screen in this film as
far as I'm concerned. The music is also beautiful and evokes the time and
place of the setting, 1930s Tennessee.Why isn't this film on video?
Wonderful, one of my favorite movies.
11 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :- Jo Van Fleet's Master Class for Actors, 22 abril 2005
Author:
DLiebert de New York, NY
Jo Van Fleet here earns the academy award she got for East of Eden. Her
every look, every intonation is stripped bare of sentiment. She subtly
creates an identification between herself and the land, the river, and
its history. When the great oak tree beside her old homestead comes
crashing to earth the sound itself is wrenching to us -it is like the
old woman herself being ripped in two.
Ms. Van Fleet in this film gives a master-class in acting. One of the
great performances.
Montgomery Clift is a complex, hurt and fascinating character and the
part is infused with his compelling and yet ambiguous sexuality. Lee
Remick is transcendent, her loneliness, sexual hunger and intensity
could have been off-putting - she shades it so exquisitely with her
wise and maternal tenderness that it works. When SHE proposes to HIM
shes says more or less "in some things you are stupid and I'm not and
you need me" Her boldness is so appealing.
It is worth noting that the racial tensions of the period are part of
the plot BUT the poor whites of Tennessee are treated with affectionate
respect and not as Hollywood stereotypes.
14 out of 17 people found the following comment useful :- The wildness of nature meets the discipline of art., 28 mayo 2003
Author:
Greg Couture de Portland, Oregon
Once again I endured American Movie Classics' merciless mangling of one of
their rarely shown archival masterpieces, "Wild River," shown
non-letterboxed, interrupted excessively by endless strings of commercials
and their completely unpalatable promotions for showings of future films and
special programs. I've complained about this in other IMDb comments I've
posted so I won't give into the almost irresistible temptation to rail
against AMC once more. That said...
This film contains one of the all-time greatest performances by an American
actress that it is possible to see. Jo Van Fleet is so convincing as the
intransigent matriarch, who refuses to leave her island, that the injustice
of her not receiving an Academy Award nomination for her performance still
rankles. Perhaps the members of the Academy could not decide to grant her a
nomination as the lead actress or as an actress in a supporting role and
muffed the chance to show their admiration. Other comments here aptly point
out all of the other outstanding elements in this film and the pain of
seeing it so diminished in this TV broadcast (I did see it during its
theatrical release, but had forgotten how eloquently most of it was done.)
was, nevertheless, worthwhile. I join others who have expressed a desire
for a DVD release (where the CinemaScope ratio would be approximated, we can
hope.) Wish we could persuade Fox Classics to see if the response to a
video audience would exceed the neglect this film was subjected to during
its first exposure to the paying public.
11 out of 12 people found the following comment useful :- Quiet brilliance, 25 enero 2006
Author:
Shannon Reardon de St. John's, NL, Canada
The brilliant acting is what makes this movie as great and as generally
underrated as it is. When you think of the over-the-top "movies" today
which are basically two hours of explosions, gunfire, and other
hijinks, when watching a quiet masterpiece like Wild River with such
rich and evocative character performances, you are reminded of how
movies were made and how they should be made.
There were two stories running concurrently in this movie. Two
conflicts. You had the broader conflict of the Garths, headed by
matriarch Ella (Jo Van Fleet), who was battling the Tennessee Valley
Authority (TVA) to retain their land from the TVA who wanted to buy it
so that their dam could produce more electricity for the area. Then you
had the eventual (and explosive once it hit) romance between TVA
official Chuck Glover (Montgomery Clift), who was sent to the Garth
homestead to convince the old lady to give up her land, and Carol Garth
Baldwin (Lee Remick), a widowed young mother with two kids who was
staying with her grandmother on the family property and had stayed
there since her husband died. You have the conflict of the individual
fighting against the state, and the more interpersonal conflict of two
people on the opposite sides of the larger conflict who are fighting
their feelings for each other. Both eventually give in, though Ella
Garth gives into her dilemma, if you will, far more begrudgingly than
Carol gives into to hers.
The scenery is also vivid and lends much to the story. Other minor
conflicts are evident in the film, such as the hostility the fairly
liberal Glover has to deal with when he hires blacks to work alongside
the local whites at the site. I enjoyed Albert Salmi's and Bruce Dern's
brief appearances in the movie, particularly since I have seen their
other, later work with Remick.
At first, I felt pretty unsympathetic towards Ella and sort of did see
her as a stubborn old lady with too much of a sentimental attachment to
her home. I felt somewhat bad for this initial reaction. I an sure
after more viewings (there will be many more) than my heart will soften
and I will perhaps even view the TVA as a bunch of mean bullies. They
didn't come across that way to me, especially when a character like
Monty Clift comes to the rescue of the organization (and to Carol's).
I could see the practicality of the TVA wanting to relocate Ella and
have her land used for the dam project, so as to generate electricity
and wealth for the common good. That is the major conflict in this
movie: The right(s) of the individual versus the right(s) of the
commonality. I found myself siding with the latter. Change in our
individual lives happens all the time, and so does greater "progress".
Carol was ready to move on with her life as the budding romance between
her and Chuck was consummated in marriage. I can see, though, how Ella
would be more heartbroken to leave and more upset about having to do
so. She presumably spent her whole live there, working the rich bottom
land as and being unceremoniously uprooted by a bunch of bureaucrats
rightfully angered and embittered her. Even in the course of this
paragraph, my feelings about her and about her predicament have
changed.
Finally, one cannot review Wild River without exploring where I read
someplace, "one of filmdom's great romances." Absolutely. Talk about
electricity! The pairing of two sensitive and elegant actors in Remick
and Clift was brilliant casting on Kazan's part. It reminded me of A
Place In The Sun and the tender and forbidden romance between Clift and
Elizabeth Taylor, though Clift's and Remick's romance in Wild River is
more powerful than even that famous one because it is so understated at
first and then explodes with sensuality and passion. Two scenes stand
out in my mind: the famous one in Chuck's car (chuck wagon?) with the
sleeping kids in back, and soon thereafter when they move into the
house and embrace again by the cupboard. Next, Carol essentially asks
Chuck to marry her. "In some things you are stupid and I'm not and you
need me." (not quite verbatim) Talk about a woman taking charge and
knowing what she wants!! Very sexy.
So in the end, after the masterful performances by Remick, Van Fleet,
and Clift, the conflicts are resolved. The dam project goes ahead and
Ella leaves her land to move in with Carol and her new family. Carol
made it out of everything happier than Ella did. I got the feeling
Carol wanted to leave the old home and wanted her grandmother to leave
as well, though she knew how much the property meant to her
grandmother. And I believe I caught Ella giving Carol the look of death
at the end of the movie when they were on the porch of the new home.
She soon died and lost the will to live, it seems, after the
relinquishment of her beloved familial land. Progress indeed comes with
a price.
8 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- Lee Remick as Carol Grath, 18 septiembre 2006
Author:
buck5134 de United States
When a movie character evoke the kind of feelings and emotion thought
only capable in real life you can't help but wonder. Yet as a young man
I literally fell in love with Carol Garth Baldwin in Eli Kazan's Wild
River. Obviously you can't help but be attracted to the beautiful Lee
Remick yet it is her portrayal of a 23 year old widowed mother of two
and the backdrop of an obscure little Tennessee town that sets the
stage for one of the true loves of my life. Jack Palance's character in
City Slickers refers to a women he saw only once at a distance as being
the love of his life. To this I can relate. Remick would go on and do
some notable work in the years that followed this 1960 production and
sadly die much to young of cancer at age 55. Yet what she and Kazan
were able to do with this story and character will always hold a place
in my heart. See Wild River, look into Carol's eyes and smell the cool
damp October air in her hair. For me it will always be hauntingly
magical.
7 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- Untilled, or discovered Kazan with heart-breaking Lee Remick and Damaged and Brilliant M. Clift!, 28 octubre 2004
Author:
shepardjessica-1 de United States
A touching unknown Kazan film ('60) that delves into the American
psyche like Welles did in Touch of Evil ('58)..kind of. The plot is too
basic and pure to explain, but it's not. This is also Bruce Dern's
first film and possibly Rip Torn's. Monty Clift is (post-accident)
still a brilliant actor (with half a shattered face for 10 years) who
conveys the ambiguity of job-man to this lovely, young mother (Lee
Remick) who was not even nominated for an Oscar, and it's down Alice's
Rabbit Hole with Jo Van Fleet (OScar winner in previous Kazan film
playing much older than she really was..again..like actors should be
able to do in famous Hollywood films) decrepit, sane, just and bigoted
...all in the same paragraph (while sitting in a rockintg chair) with
mud, dogs, Negroes, corruption, and the Tennessee commission.
A wonderful film. An 8 out of 10. Best performance = Lee Remick. There
are other gliding Southern performances that grace the Magnolia trees,
gator bait, and overalls that we have all come to love in an artistic,
American way. Find this one!
5 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :- A masterpiece of American cinema., 26 junio 2005
Author:
l-john206 de United States
I found this little gem to be an exquisite piece of ensemble work by
some of the best screen actors to ever to be in front of a lens. Elia
Kazan impeccable direction and a performance by Jo Van Fleet that could
be a learning tool for some of these putrid so-called actress that now
are being lauded as the neo-contemporary actress's of the day. When you
see a film of this artistic magnitude you can easily understand the
dumbing down process of the American cinematic media. Not one of the
so-called stars of today could measure up to Lee Remicks complex and
sensitive portrayal of Carol in Wild River. Montgomery Clift an actors
actor , there will never be another. A master of controlled raw emotion
and body language. Gone are the days indeed when this kind of movie
production will return. Not special effects or remake after loathsome
remake or some equally obnoxious star or starlet will match this
cinematic jewel.
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- Jo Van Fleet - Underrated Genius, 22 noviembre 2005
Author:
mrbentley2 de United States
This is a most remarkable film, chronicling a piece of Americana and
presenting a compelling image of the tragedy of progress. And it is Jo
Van Fleet whose utterly convincing and captivating portrayal of an
80-year old hillbilly woman (she herself was 45 years old) makes WILD
RIVER a masterpiece. To reiterate what others have stated, the fact
that her performance was not even nominated for an Oscar is an outrage!
I tend to disagree with other reviewers in regards to the subplot
between Monty Clift and Lee Remick; I feel their scene slow things down
and I find myself fast-forwarding past them to get to the match of will
between Clift and Van Fleet. I do, however, understand the necessity of
the Chuck/Carol love affair - here you have a stubborn old woman who
simply refuses to leave her lifelong home and a sensuous young woman
who simply begs to get out! And Monty Clift becomes nemesis and savior.
But their scenes together are a total yawn when the good stuff involves
the reason Clift is there to begin with - not just his cat-and-mouse
with Van Fleet, but all the other obstacles he faces from the rest of
the populace of the rural south in the 1930's.
Still, an incredible film and worth viewing over and over again.
3 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- A near-masterpiece...nearly forgotten, 23 diciembre 2005
Author:
pljewkes de Boston, MA
This nearly forgotten film from director Elia Kazan has a plot line
closer to a Stanley Kramer film, albeit without the bombast. A
government man, played by Montgomery Clift in his last great
performance, tries to persuade the matriarch of a backwoods family to
sell her land so a river can be routed through it. Clift's performance
is matched by the always terrific Jo Van Fleet (only 40ish, but playing
80ish --- Kazan clearly indulges her). Van Fleet's performance is
electrifying. Although there is a subplot involving Clift and Lee
Remick, it takes a back seat to the Clift-Van Fleet showdown. Remick is
terrific and Jay C. Flippin is a plus as one of Van Fleet's more
intelligent "boys." A couple of drawbacks: the movie's widescreen and
color photography soften its overall impact. There's no real sense that
this is the 1930s. Nonetheless, WILD RIVER remains Kazan's nearly
forgotten, near masterpiece.
Quicklinks
Top Links
trailers and videosreparto y equipo completostrivialidadesofficial sitesfrases célebresOverview
información principalinformación combinadareparto y equipo completoscréditos de compañíastv schedulePremios y críticas
comentarios de los usuarioscríticas externascríticas de grupos de usuariosawardsCalificacionesparents guiderecomendacionesmessage boardArgumento y citas
argumentoplot synopsispalabras clave del argumentosinopsis Amazon.comfrases célebresCosas divertidas
trivialidadespifiastemas musicalescréditos extravagantesotras versionesenlaces entre películaspreguntas frecuentesOtro tipo de información
enlaces a productosbox office/businessfechas de estrenolugares de rodajeespecificaciones técnicasLaserdiscDVDlecturas relacionadasNewsDeskMaterial promocional
frases comerciales trailers and videos carteles y enlaces photo galleryEnlaces externos
enlaces a cinesofficial sitesmisceláneosfotografíassound clipsvideo clipsIMDb user comments for
Wild River (1960)
23 out of 24 people found the following comment useful :-

my forty-year search rewarded, 30 enero 2005
Author: gayeshortland de Ireland
There is little to add to the eloquent appreciations of Wild River by other users. Still, I want to pay my tribute. My father took me to see the film when I was a little girl and it made such an impression on me I have been searching for it for years. Odd, since I remembered nothing of the plot, retaining only fleeting images of autumn colours, Lee Remick's autumnal hair, the old ferry, an indelible impression of Montgomery Clift's face, the old woman surrounded by still 'figures in a landscape'. And the creation of a unique atmosphere so tangible, so lyrical, so elegiac it stayed with me for 40+ years. I've been wanting to know why it clung to me so. And wondering why it seemed to have disappeared without trace. This Christmas, in the fullness of time, my niece presented me with the DVD and I have at last seen it again. Why did it affect me so profoundly? That one's easy. Why had the film disappeared. That one's complex, as you know. What I hadn't expected was that stunning performance from the incomparable Jo Van Fleet. No Oscar? Were they mad? It is intensely interesting and sobering to reflect how politics can hold art hostage.
14 out of 16 people found the following comment useful :-

An almost forgotten masterpiece, 12 abril 2001
Author: dmwhite50 (dmwhite50@yahoo.com)
WILD RIVER is one of Elia Kazan's best films, with brilliant affecting performances, beautiful cinematography, atmospheric settings, and a multilayered plot with important thematic points to make about the rights of the individual vs. the needs of the larger society as a whole. Jo Van Fleet gives one of the all time great performances of the screen in this film as far as I'm concerned. The music is also beautiful and evokes the time and place of the setting, 1930s Tennessee.Why isn't this film on video? Wonderful, one of my favorite movies.
11 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :-

Jo Van Fleet's Master Class for Actors, 22 abril 2005
Author: DLiebert de New York, NY
Jo Van Fleet here earns the academy award she got for East of Eden. Her every look, every intonation is stripped bare of sentiment. She subtly creates an identification between herself and the land, the river, and its history. When the great oak tree beside her old homestead comes crashing to earth the sound itself is wrenching to us -it is like the old woman herself being ripped in two.
Ms. Van Fleet in this film gives a master-class in acting. One of the great performances.
Montgomery Clift is a complex, hurt and fascinating character and the part is infused with his compelling and yet ambiguous sexuality. Lee Remick is transcendent, her loneliness, sexual hunger and intensity could have been off-putting - she shades it so exquisitely with her wise and maternal tenderness that it works. When SHE proposes to HIM shes says more or less "in some things you are stupid and I'm not and you need me" Her boldness is so appealing.
It is worth noting that the racial tensions of the period are part of the plot BUT the poor whites of Tennessee are treated with affectionate respect and not as Hollywood stereotypes.
14 out of 17 people found the following comment useful :-
The wildness of nature meets the discipline of art., 28 mayo 2003
Author: Greg Couture de Portland, Oregon
Once again I endured American Movie Classics' merciless mangling of one of their rarely shown archival masterpieces, "Wild River," shown non-letterboxed, interrupted excessively by endless strings of commercials and their completely unpalatable promotions for showings of future films and special programs. I've complained about this in other IMDb comments I've posted so I won't give into the almost irresistible temptation to rail against AMC once more. That said...
This film contains one of the all-time greatest performances by an American actress that it is possible to see. Jo Van Fleet is so convincing as the intransigent matriarch, who refuses to leave her island, that the injustice of her not receiving an Academy Award nomination for her performance still rankles. Perhaps the members of the Academy could not decide to grant her a nomination as the lead actress or as an actress in a supporting role and muffed the chance to show their admiration. Other comments here aptly point out all of the other outstanding elements in this film and the pain of seeing it so diminished in this TV broadcast (I did see it during its theatrical release, but had forgotten how eloquently most of it was done.) was, nevertheless, worthwhile. I join others who have expressed a desire for a DVD release (where the CinemaScope ratio would be approximated, we can hope.) Wish we could persuade Fox Classics to see if the response to a video audience would exceed the neglect this film was subjected to during its first exposure to the paying public.
11 out of 12 people found the following comment useful :-

Quiet brilliance, 25 enero 2006
Author: Shannon Reardon de St. John's, NL, Canada
The brilliant acting is what makes this movie as great and as generally underrated as it is. When you think of the over-the-top "movies" today which are basically two hours of explosions, gunfire, and other hijinks, when watching a quiet masterpiece like Wild River with such rich and evocative character performances, you are reminded of how movies were made and how they should be made.
There were two stories running concurrently in this movie. Two conflicts. You had the broader conflict of the Garths, headed by matriarch Ella (Jo Van Fleet), who was battling the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) to retain their land from the TVA who wanted to buy it so that their dam could produce more electricity for the area. Then you had the eventual (and explosive once it hit) romance between TVA official Chuck Glover (Montgomery Clift), who was sent to the Garth homestead to convince the old lady to give up her land, and Carol Garth Baldwin (Lee Remick), a widowed young mother with two kids who was staying with her grandmother on the family property and had stayed there since her husband died. You have the conflict of the individual fighting against the state, and the more interpersonal conflict of two people on the opposite sides of the larger conflict who are fighting their feelings for each other. Both eventually give in, though Ella Garth gives into her dilemma, if you will, far more begrudgingly than Carol gives into to hers.
The scenery is also vivid and lends much to the story. Other minor conflicts are evident in the film, such as the hostility the fairly liberal Glover has to deal with when he hires blacks to work alongside the local whites at the site. I enjoyed Albert Salmi's and Bruce Dern's brief appearances in the movie, particularly since I have seen their other, later work with Remick.
At first, I felt pretty unsympathetic towards Ella and sort of did see her as a stubborn old lady with too much of a sentimental attachment to her home. I felt somewhat bad for this initial reaction. I an sure after more viewings (there will be many more) than my heart will soften and I will perhaps even view the TVA as a bunch of mean bullies. They didn't come across that way to me, especially when a character like Monty Clift comes to the rescue of the organization (and to Carol's).
I could see the practicality of the TVA wanting to relocate Ella and have her land used for the dam project, so as to generate electricity and wealth for the common good. That is the major conflict in this movie: The right(s) of the individual versus the right(s) of the commonality. I found myself siding with the latter. Change in our individual lives happens all the time, and so does greater "progress". Carol was ready to move on with her life as the budding romance between her and Chuck was consummated in marriage. I can see, though, how Ella would be more heartbroken to leave and more upset about having to do so. She presumably spent her whole live there, working the rich bottom land as and being unceremoniously uprooted by a bunch of bureaucrats rightfully angered and embittered her. Even in the course of this paragraph, my feelings about her and about her predicament have changed.
Finally, one cannot review Wild River without exploring where I read someplace, "one of filmdom's great romances." Absolutely. Talk about electricity! The pairing of two sensitive and elegant actors in Remick and Clift was brilliant casting on Kazan's part. It reminded me of A Place In The Sun and the tender and forbidden romance between Clift and Elizabeth Taylor, though Clift's and Remick's romance in Wild River is more powerful than even that famous one because it is so understated at first and then explodes with sensuality and passion. Two scenes stand out in my mind: the famous one in Chuck's car (chuck wagon?) with the sleeping kids in back, and soon thereafter when they move into the house and embrace again by the cupboard. Next, Carol essentially asks Chuck to marry her. "In some things you are stupid and I'm not and you need me." (not quite verbatim) Talk about a woman taking charge and knowing what she wants!! Very sexy.
So in the end, after the masterful performances by Remick, Van Fleet, and Clift, the conflicts are resolved. The dam project goes ahead and Ella leaves her land to move in with Carol and her new family. Carol made it out of everything happier than Ella did. I got the feeling Carol wanted to leave the old home and wanted her grandmother to leave as well, though she knew how much the property meant to her grandmother. And I believe I caught Ella giving Carol the look of death at the end of the movie when they were on the porch of the new home. She soon died and lost the will to live, it seems, after the relinquishment of her beloved familial land. Progress indeed comes with a price.
8 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-

Lee Remick as Carol Grath, 18 septiembre 2006
Author: buck5134 de United States
When a movie character evoke the kind of feelings and emotion thought only capable in real life you can't help but wonder. Yet as a young man I literally fell in love with Carol Garth Baldwin in Eli Kazan's Wild River. Obviously you can't help but be attracted to the beautiful Lee Remick yet it is her portrayal of a 23 year old widowed mother of two and the backdrop of an obscure little Tennessee town that sets the stage for one of the true loves of my life. Jack Palance's character in City Slickers refers to a women he saw only once at a distance as being the love of his life. To this I can relate. Remick would go on and do some notable work in the years that followed this 1960 production and sadly die much to young of cancer at age 55. Yet what she and Kazan were able to do with this story and character will always hold a place in my heart. See Wild River, look into Carol's eyes and smell the cool damp October air in her hair. For me it will always be hauntingly magical.
7 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-

Untilled, or discovered Kazan with heart-breaking Lee Remick and Damaged and Brilliant M. Clift!, 28 octubre 2004
Author: shepardjessica-1 de United States
A touching unknown Kazan film ('60) that delves into the American psyche like Welles did in Touch of Evil ('58)..kind of. The plot is too basic and pure to explain, but it's not. This is also Bruce Dern's first film and possibly Rip Torn's. Monty Clift is (post-accident) still a brilliant actor (with half a shattered face for 10 years) who conveys the ambiguity of job-man to this lovely, young mother (Lee Remick) who was not even nominated for an Oscar, and it's down Alice's Rabbit Hole with Jo Van Fleet (OScar winner in previous Kazan film playing much older than she really was..again..like actors should be able to do in famous Hollywood films) decrepit, sane, just and bigoted ...all in the same paragraph (while sitting in a rockintg chair) with mud, dogs, Negroes, corruption, and the Tennessee commission.
A wonderful film. An 8 out of 10. Best performance = Lee Remick. There are other gliding Southern performances that grace the Magnolia trees, gator bait, and overalls that we have all come to love in an artistic, American way. Find this one!
5 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :-

A masterpiece of American cinema., 26 junio 2005
Author: l-john206 de United States
I found this little gem to be an exquisite piece of ensemble work by some of the best screen actors to ever to be in front of a lens. Elia Kazan impeccable direction and a performance by Jo Van Fleet that could be a learning tool for some of these putrid so-called actress that now are being lauded as the neo-contemporary actress's of the day. When you see a film of this artistic magnitude you can easily understand the dumbing down process of the American cinematic media. Not one of the so-called stars of today could measure up to Lee Remicks complex and sensitive portrayal of Carol in Wild River. Montgomery Clift an actors actor , there will never be another. A master of controlled raw emotion and body language. Gone are the days indeed when this kind of movie production will return. Not special effects or remake after loathsome remake or some equally obnoxious star or starlet will match this cinematic jewel.
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-
Jo Van Fleet - Underrated Genius, 22 noviembre 2005
Author: mrbentley2 de United States
This is a most remarkable film, chronicling a piece of Americana and presenting a compelling image of the tragedy of progress. And it is Jo Van Fleet whose utterly convincing and captivating portrayal of an 80-year old hillbilly woman (she herself was 45 years old) makes WILD RIVER a masterpiece. To reiterate what others have stated, the fact that her performance was not even nominated for an Oscar is an outrage! I tend to disagree with other reviewers in regards to the subplot between Monty Clift and Lee Remick; I feel their scene slow things down and I find myself fast-forwarding past them to get to the match of will between Clift and Van Fleet. I do, however, understand the necessity of the Chuck/Carol love affair - here you have a stubborn old woman who simply refuses to leave her lifelong home and a sensuous young woman who simply begs to get out! And Monty Clift becomes nemesis and savior. But their scenes together are a total yawn when the good stuff involves the reason Clift is there to begin with - not just his cat-and-mouse with Van Fleet, but all the other obstacles he faces from the rest of the populace of the rural south in the 1930's.
Still, an incredible film and worth viewing over and over again.
3 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-

A near-masterpiece...nearly forgotten, 23 diciembre 2005
Author: pljewkes de Boston, MA
This nearly forgotten film from director Elia Kazan has a plot line closer to a Stanley Kramer film, albeit without the bombast. A government man, played by Montgomery Clift in his last great performance, tries to persuade the matriarch of a backwoods family to sell her land so a river can be routed through it. Clift's performance is matched by the always terrific Jo Van Fleet (only 40ish, but playing 80ish --- Kazan clearly indulges her). Van Fleet's performance is electrifying. Although there is a subplot involving Clift and Lee Remick, it takes a back seat to the Clift-Van Fleet showdown. Remick is terrific and Jay C. Flippin is a plus as one of Van Fleet's more intelligent "boys." A couple of drawbacks: the movie's widescreen and color photography soften its overall impact. There's no real sense that this is the 1930s. Nonetheless, WILD RIVER remains Kazan's nearly forgotten, near masterpiece.
Add another comment
Related Links