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poster of The Winning of Barbara Worth
Rating: 6.6/10 by 19 users

The Winning of Barbara Worth (1926)

While building an irrigation system for a Southwestern desert community, an engineer vies with a local cowboy for the affections of a rancher's daughter.

Directing:
  • Henry King
Writing:
  • Rupert Hughes
  • Frances Marion
Stars:
Release Date: Thu, Oct 14, 1926

Rating: 6.6/10 by 19 users

Alternative Title:
La conquête de Barbara Worth - FR
몽상의 낙원 - KR

Country:
United States of America
Language:
No Language
Runtime: 01 hour 29 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: engineer, wasteland, desert, silent film, land developer, irrigation

Ronald Colman
Willard Holmes
Vilma Banky
Barbara Worth
Charles Lane
Jefferson Worth
E.J. Ratcliffe
James Greenfield
Ed Brady
McDonald
Sammy Blum
Horace Blanton
Fred Esmelton
George Cartwright
Bill Patton
Little Rosebud (as William Patton)

CinemaSerf

This is a great example of a silent film that captures some of the original pioneering spirit of those American settlers determined to make a go of it - even in the harshest of circumstances. Charles Lane is "Jefferson Worth" - a rancher who rescues orphaned "Barbara" (Vilma Bánky) and brings her up as his own daughter. Years pass and as she grows, so do the ambitions of the territory - and when a developer arrives with an engineering project that could irrigate the arid land, they jump at the chance. Problem is, the developer skimps on the construction of the dam, and so at the first heavy rainfall upstream it all goes a bit awry. Meantime, both the stepson of the crooked developer "Willard" (Ronald Colman) and her father's ranch foreman "Abe" (Gary Cooper) are fighting for the favour of "Barbara" and it's not long before everything comes to a head. Technically, the imagery is super - the film copes well with what must have been very intense sunlight, and the detail is perfect. Maybe just the odd too many inter-titles that can break up the pace a bit, but in the round it's a well made, enjoyable piece of cinema history with a decent story and lovely score from Ted Henkel played on the Wurlitzer to boot.


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