How the West Was Won Page #10

Synopsis: Setting off on a journey to the west in the 1830s, the Prescott family run into a man named Linus, who helps them fight off a pack of thieves. Linus then marries daughter Eve Prescott (Carroll Baker), and 30 years later goes off to fight in the Civil War with their son, with bloody results. Eve's sister, Lily, heads farther west and has adventures with a professional gambler, stretching all the way to San Francisco and into the 1880s.
Genre: Western
Production: Warner Home Video
  Won 3 Oscars. Another 7 wins & 5 nominations.
 
IMDB:
7.1
Rotten Tomatoes:
90%
G
Year:
1962
164 min
1,072 Views


- Well, let's move.

It's a long way from here to that gold.

There's no danger. Just keep going.

It's Rawlings.

Back this train up!

And fast!

How come we're leaving so early, Pa?

We got a long way to go, son.

Here.

Auntie, when we going to your house?

Your daddy will decide

when we get to your home.

Auntie, can we take Sam with us?

I think Sam is taking us.

Pa, how much further is it

to Aunt Lilith's ranch?

Well, son, it's around the next bend,

the next bend...

...and the valley beyond.

- Oh.

- Aunt Lilith, do you know that song?

LINUS:
That's our song.

Your song?

I sang that song

long before your pa was ever born.

Come on.

Zeb.

The West that was won by its pioneers,

settlers, adventurers is long gone now.

Yet it is theirs forever.

For they left tracks in history

that will never be eroded by wind or rain...

... never plowed under by tractors,

never buried in the compost of events.

Out of the hard simplicity of their lives,

out of their vitality...

... their hopes and their sorrows...

... grew legends of courage and pride...

... to inspire their children

and their children's children.

From soil enriched by their blood...

... out of their fever to explore and build...

... came lakes where once

were burning deserts...

... came the goods of the earth,

mines and wheat fields...

... orchards and great lumber mills...

... all the sinews of a growing country.

Out of their rude settlements,

their trading posts, came cities...

... to rank among the great ones

of the world.

All the heritage of a people

free to dream...

... free to act,

free to mold their own destiny.

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James R. Webb

James R. Webb (October 4, 1909 – September 27, 1974) was an American writer. He won an Academy Award in 1963 for How the West Was Won.Webb was born in Denver, Colorado, and graduated from Stanford University in 1930. During the 1930s he worked both as a screenwriter and a fiction writer for a number of national magazines, including Collier's Weekly, Cosmopolitan and the Saturday Evening Post. Webb was commissioned an army officer in June 1942 and became a personal aide to General Lloyd R. Fredendall who was commander of the II Corps (United States). Webb accompanied Fredendall to England in October 1942 and participated in the invasion of North Africa in November 1942 when the Second Corps captured the city of Oran. The Second Corps then attacked eastward into Tunisia. In February 1943 the German army launched a counterattack at Kasserine Pass which repulsed the Second Corps and nearly broke through the Allied lines. The Supreme Commander Dwight D. Eisenhower relieved Fredendall of command in March 1943 and sent him back to the United States where he became deputy commander of the Second United States Army at Memphis, Tennessee. Webb returned to the United States with Fredendall and later served in the European Theater. Webb left the Army after the war and returned to Hollywood, California, where he continued his work as a screenwriter. He died on September 27, 1974, and was buried in Los Angeles National Cemetery. more…

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Submitted on August 05, 2018

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