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poster of The Big Trail
Rating: 6.7/10 by 110 users

The Big Trail (1930)

Young scout Breck Coleman leads a wagon train along the dangerous trail to Oregon as he tries to get the affection of the beautiful pioneer Ruth Cameron and plans his revenge on the harsh scoundrels who murdered a friend of his in the past.

Release Date: Sat, Nov 01, 1930

Rating: 6.7/10 by 110 users

Alternative Title:
Der grosse Treck - DE
Mod lykkens land - DK
Suuri lännen tie - FI
ビッグ・トレイル - JP
Biggu toreiru - JP
Raoul Walsh's The Big Trail - US
The Oregon Trail - US

Country:
United States of America
Language:
English
Español
Runtime: 02 hour 02 minutes
Budget: $2,000,000
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: mississippi river, pre-code, river crossing, wagon train, frontier justice, pioneers, buffalo herd, 19th century, far west, vengeance, oregon trail, western expansion, crossing frontiers

John Wayne
Breck Coleman
David Rollins
Dave Cameron
Ian Keith
Bill Thorpe
Louise Carver
Gus' Mother-in-law
Beth Nagel
Pioneer (uncredited)
Victor Adamson
Wagon Train Man (uncredited)
Phyllis Bainbridge
Pioneer (uncredited)
Chief John Big Tree
Indian (uncredited)
Ward Bond
Sid Bascom (uncredited)
Martin Cichy
Pioneer (uncredited)
Don Coleman
Wrangler (uncredited)
Nancy Crowley
Pioneer Child (uncredited)
Curley Dresden
Pioneer (uncredited)
Adabelle Driver
Pioneer (uncredited)
Emslie Emerson
Sairey (uncredited)
Alphonse Ethier
Marshal (uncredited)
Theresa Garon
Pioneer (uncredited)
William Gillis
Pioneer (uncredited)
Dannie Mac Grant
Pioneer Boy (uncredited)
Virginia Griffith
Pioneer (uncredited)
Marcia Harris
Mrs Riggs (uncredited)
Marilyn Harris
Pioneer Girl (uncredited)
Al Haskell
Pioneer (uncredited)
DeWitt Jennings
Boat Captain Hollister (uncredited)
Jack Kenny
Pioneer (uncredited)
Bert Keys
Pioneer (uncredited)
John Lawrence Kneedy
Wagon Driver (uncredited)
Ann Kunde
Pioneer (uncredited)
Marjorie Leet
Mildred Riggs (uncredited)
Marion Lessing
Pioneer Girl (uncredited)
Frances Martinson
Pioneer (uncredited)
Frank McGrath
Pioneer (uncredited)
William V. Mong
Wellmore (uncredited)
Pete Morrison
Wrangler (uncredited)
Dodo Newton
Abigail Vance (uncredited)
Artie Ortego
Pioneer (uncredited)
Jack Padjan
Pioneer (uncredited)
Helen Parrish
Honey Girl Cameron (uncredited)
Robert Parrish
Pioneer Boy (uncredited)
Harvey Parry
Pioneer (uncredited)
Jack Peabody
Bill Gillis (uncredited)
Russ Powell
Windy Bill (uncredited)
Frank Rainboth
Ohio Man (uncredited)
Apache Bill Russell
Indian Scout (uncredited)
Lucile Sewall
Pioneer (uncredited)
Andy Shuford
Ohio Man's Son (uncredited)
Tom Smith
Pioneer (uncredited)
Jean Stoddard
Pioneer (uncredited)
Gertrude Van Lent
Sister From Missouri (uncredited)
Lucille Van Lent
Sister From Missouri (uncredited)
Whitehorse
Indian (uncredited)

CinemaSerf

There is a scene very near the start of this film where John Wayne ("Breck") walks through a doorway, bedecked in his finely crafted suede leathers and you almost want to applaud - like it was the entrance of great actor onto a stage. There can been no doubt that Raoul Walsh and his bosses at Fox were determined to make a big star of their man - and have thrown pretty much everything at it. The story concerns pioneers on a long and dangerous wagon trail leaving the Mississippi heading west into the unknown, It's the epitome of an American adventure film - the travellers face perils both human and natural as they head for their promised land, and the scale of the production is of a high quality with beautiful and grand cinematography contributing really well to our sense of just how tough their task was. Wayne oozes charm, his smile explains a great deal about why Hollywood and the public at large fell in love with this decent, honourable young man. A competent Marguerite Campbell ("Ruth") provides his suitably feisty love interest and the rest of this slightly over-long tale is held together by a relatively small cast who keep the story interesting and focused. Sure, it isn't without it's idealism - the all American boy blazes a trail against the odds, gets the gal, makes friends wherever he goes (largely), but there are some more sincere touches - "Breck" isn't quite so good with his alcohol! At times this borders a little too much on the documentary, but that doesn't really impact detrimentally on the overall narrative - it further reinforces the scale of this unyoked land and to a considerable extent helps us to understand what drove these folks to suffer all the hardships this hostile environment could throw at them. As cinema goes, this is proper stuff - and seeing it on a big screen even now (90 years later) is still quite an experience.


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