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Shenandoah

 
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Shenandoah

  • Director: Andrew V. McLaglen
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: War
  • Movie Type: Family Drama, War Epic
  • Themes: Death of a Child, Out For Revenge, Fathers and Sons
  • Main Cast: James Stewart, Doug McClure, Glenn Corbett, Patrick Wayne, Rosemary Forsyth
  • Release Year: 1965
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 105 minutes

Plot

The year is 1863. Wealthy Virginia landowner Charlie Anderson (James Stewart), a man of peace despite his autocratic behavior, steadfastly refuses to take sides in the Civil War. Bit by bit, Anderson's isolationism--and his way of living--is torn apart.

Charlie's daughter, Jannie Anderson (Rosemary Forsyth) falls in love with Confederate soldier Sam (Doug McClure). His youngest son, Boy Anderson (Philip Alford) is captured by the Confederate army and taken prisoner. Meanwhile, another son, James (Patrick Wayne) and his wife, Ann (Katherine Ross), are murdered by looters. And his oldest son, Jacob Glenn Corbett, is accidentally killed. How all of these personal tragedies culminate in a successfully sentimental finale is the peculiar charm of Shenandoah, which proved to be a hit with audiences on both sides of the Mason-Dixon line. James Lee Barrett's screenplay was later adapted into a successful Broadway musical, starring Northern Exposure's John Cullum in the Stewart role. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Review

Shenandoah's wholesome characters and emphasis on family values resemble the ingredients of a 1950s Walt Disney production. But the film's strong antiwar and human-rights themes separate it from typical Disney fare. The production builds its story on Virginia farmer and widower Charlie Anderson's opposition to the Civil War. As an opponent of slavery, Anderson (James Stewart) cannot support the Confederate forces. As a Virginian, he cannot support the Union forces. War is nonsense anyway, he believes, and he forbids his six sons to fight. But the war ensnares the family anyway after Union forces seize one of Anderson's sons in the mistaken belief that he is a Confederate soldier. Tragedy strikes, tearing the family asunder, but in the end, the Anderson clan endure. Filmed in 1965 when America was embroiling itself in racial strife and the unpopular Vietnam conflict, the motion picture was certainly timely. Stewart delivers a fine performance as the idealistic but autocratic father who refuses to compromise his beliefs, and the performances of the supporting cast -- though not on a par with Stewart's -- are good. The vibrant cinematography enhances the production with its depiction of the fury of war against the tranquility of corn fields and peaceful farm life. Although the blatant sentimentality of some scenes -- in particular the ending -- lowers the film's artistic value, Shenandoah is a good family film with a message that is easy to grasp. ~ Mike Cummings, All Movie Guide

Cast

Philip Alford - Boy Anderson; Katharine Ross - Ann Anderson; Jim McMullan - John Anderson; Tim McIntire - Henry Anderson; Paul Fix - Dr. Tom Witherspoon; Denver Pyle - Pastor Bjoerling; George Kennedy - Col. Fairchild; James Best - Carter; Tom Simcox - Lt. Johnson; Berkeley Harris - Capt. Richards; Harry Carey, Jr. - Jenkins; Kevin Hagen - Mule; Dabbs Greer - Abernathy; Strother Martin - Engineer; Kelly Thordsen - Carroll; Rayford Barnes - Horace; Lane Bradford - Tinkham; John Daheim - Osborne; Edward Faulkner - Union Sergeant; Buzz Henry - Rider; Leroy Johnson - Rider; Warren Oates - Billy Packer; Gregg Palmer - Union Guard; Bob Steele - Guard; Henry Wills; Joe Yrigoyen - Marshal; David Cass - Ray; Hoke Howell - Crying Prisoner; James Carter - Rider; George Fisher - Confederate Soldier; Charles Knox Robinson III - Nathan Anderson

Credit

Alexander Golitzen - Art Director, Alfred Sweeney - Art Director, Rosemary Odell - Costume Designer, Terence Nelson - First Assistant Director, Andrew V. McLaglen - Director, Otho Lovering - Editor, Frank Skinner - Composer (Music Score), Joseph E. Gershenson - Musical Direction/Supervision, Bud Westmore - Makeup, Frank Westmore - Makeup, Hank Edds - Makeup, Rolf Miller - Makeup, William H. Clothier - Cinematographer, Robert Arthur - Producer, Oliver Emert - Set Designer, John McCarthy - Set Designer, William Russell - Sound/Sound Designer, James Lee Barrett - Screenwriter

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Shenandoah

movie poster by Reynold Brown
Directed by Andrew V. McLaglen
Produced by Robert Arthur
Written by James Lee Barrett
Starring James Stewart
Doug McClure
Katharine Ross
Music by Frank Skinner
Cinematography William H. Clothier
Editing by Otho Lovering
Distributed by Universal
Release date(s) June 3, 1965
Running time 105 min.
Language English

Shenandoah is a 1965 Civil War film starring James Stewart and directed by Andrew V. McLaglen. Though set during the American Civil War, the film's strong antiwar and humanitarian themes reflect attitudes at the time of the movie's release, toward the Vietnam War. Upon its release, the film was praised for its message, as well as its technical production. In 1966, the film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Sound. Due in part to her performance in Shenandoah, Rosemary Forsyth was nominated for a Golden Globe for Most Promising Newcomer - Female.

Contents

Plot

Charlie Anderson (James Stewart) is a widowed farmer in Shenandoah, Virginia during the Civil War. He hopes to keep his family out of the war, believing that it is not "his" war. Confederate recruiters visit his farm in an unsuccessful attempt to enlist the young men in the Anderson family. Anderson's daughter, Jennie (Rosemary Forsyth), gets married to a young Confederate officer early in the film. Anderson is able to keep his family uninvolved in the war even as combat takes place on his land. His new son-in-law is immediately posted to his unit as his wedding ends.

One day while out fishing, the youngest Anderson son finds a discarded Confederate cap. He begins wearing it each time he is out. One day, this time out hunting, he is taken prisoner by a Union Army patrol who believe him to be a Confederate soldier (this is made even more complex because another group of Union soldiers nearby had just been ambushed). The boy denies he is a soldier at all, but his rifle and cap make it impossible to convince the Union soldiers. His friend, a local slave named Gabriel (Gene Jackson), is told by the soldiers that he is now free. Gabriel runs nonstop to Mr. Anderson's house to tell him that the boy has been taken by the Union men. Mr. Anderson then decides it is "our war". That night, he assembles most of his sons to go after the boy. He leaves behind one son, his daughter-in-law, and his young granddaughter. As the boys assemble to leave, Mr. Anderson's recently-married daughter also prepares to go on the search. Although the father wants her to stay behind, she points out that she can out-ride and out-shoot most of the boys. He relents, and the group sets off. He rides off to find the nearest Union encampment, believing that if he talks to a commander he can sort out the issue and free his son.

Meanwhile, Gabriel asks Jennie what it means to be free. She tells him he is free to go anywhere he wants. Gabriel runs down the road towards an unknown destination.

Anderson visits a Union Army camp and finds a sympathetic officer who has a son of his own at school in Boston. But he also finds that the prisoners have been sent to another location. The officer gives him a note which will enable Anderson to get his son back. The boy, now a prisoner of war, befriends other prisoners. Eventually a small group escapes, taking the boy with them, and attempts to return to Confederate lines. After a period of wandering through rural Virginia, they succeed in joining a Confederate unit.

The Anderson group arrives at the train station, hoping the boy was taken there. Anderson shows the note to the commander in charge, who refuses to help him. Anderson will not be so easily defeated, and he obstructs the railroad a few miles away, and free the prisoners, coincidentally freeing Mr. Anderson's new son-in-law. Mr. Anderson then asks his son-in-law what he wants done with the train, and he orders the prisoners to burn the train. The freed Confederates burn the train and then move on.

Eventually, sensing their cause is hopeless, the boys confront the father, saying they should return home. Mr. Anderson agrees, but says that they had to try; he tells them "if we don't try, we don't do, and if we don't do, why are we here?". They head for home. While the rest of the Andersons have been away, stragglers have killed his son and daughter-in-law. Only the grandchild Martha (Kimberly Randolph and Beverly Randolph) survives, due to the timely arrival of the local doctor.

The boy, now truly a soldier in the Confederate Army, finds himself in battle. During a Union attack he is shot in the leg; as a Union soldier rushes up to finish him off with his bayonet, the boy looks up and sees that he is Gabriel, the former slave. Gabriel recognizes the boy and carries him to safety under cover before rejoining his unit.

In the final scene, the Andersons go to church on Sunday. In a repeat of one of the opening scenes, the family is late arriving and a bit disruptive as they take their seats. The family is sadly much reduced in number from the opening scene. As a hymn begins the film reaches its emotional climax - the rear doors open and the youngest son, leaning on a crutch, walks into the church and rejoins his family.

James Stewart's background/personal life and this film

In view of the decidedly anti-war tone of this film, and that of the character of Charlie Anderson, it is worth noting that James Stewart was a brigadier general in the US Air Force Reserve at the time of its filming, and had been a decorated bomber pilot and squadron commander in World War II; he would fly as an observer and additional pilot on one B-52 mission in Vietnam as part of his reserve duty a year after the film's release. Even more notable is that Stewart's own son Ronald (adopted from his wife's first marriage) would be killed in action in Vietnam as a US Marine Corps officer a few years later. Stewart had four children: twin daughters Kelly Stewart and 'Judy Stewart-Murray', who acted with their parents in "Password" (1961). He adopted his wife's two sons from a previous marriage—Ronald (5) and Michael (2)—when they married.

Cast

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