Madonna (album) and How the West Was Won (film): Difference between pages

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{{Infobox_Film |
{{Infobox Album | <!-- See Wikipedia:WikiProject_Albums -->
| Name = Madonna
name = How the West Was Won |
| Type = [[Album]]
image = How the west was won322.jpg |
caption = original film poster by [[Reynold Brown]]|
| Artist = [[Madonna (entertainer)|Madonna]]
| Cover = Madonna (album).jpg
imdb_id = 0056085|
writer = [[James R. Webb (writer)|James R. Webb]] |
| Released = [[July 27]] [[1983]] ([[United States|US]])<br>August 1985 ([[Europe]])<br> May 21, 2001 (Remastered)
starring = [[Carroll Baker]]<br />[[Lee J. Cobb]]<br />[[Henry Fonda]]<br />[[Carolyn Jones]]<br />[[Karl Malden]]<br />[[Gregory Peck]]<br />[[George Peppard]]<br />[[Robert Preston (actor)|Robert Preston]]<br />[[Debbie Reynolds]]<br />[[James Stewart (actor)|James Stewart]]<br />[[Eli Wallach]]<br />[[John Wayne]]<br />[[Richard Widmark]]<br />[[Walter Brennan]]<br />[[Andy Devine]]<br />[[Raymond Massey]]<br />[[Agnes Moorehead]]<br />[[Thelma Ritter]]<br /> |
| Recorded = 1982, Sigma Sound Studios, New York
director = [[John Ford]]<br />[[Henry Hathaway]]<br />[[George Marshall (director)|George Marshall]]<br />[[Richard Thorpe]] |
| Genre = [[Pop music|Pop]], [[Dance music|Dance]]
| Length = 40:47
narrator = [[Spencer Tracy]] |
| Label = [[Sire Records|Sire]], [[Warner Bros. Records|Warner Bros.]]
producer = [[Bernard Smith]] |
cinematography = [[William H. Daniels, ASC]]<br />[[Milton Krasner, ASC]]<br />[[Charles Lang, Jr., ASC]]<br />[[Joseph LaShelle, ASC]]<br /> |
| Producer = [[Reggie Lucas]], [[John "Jellybean" Benitez]], [[Mark Kamins]]
| Reviews =
music = [[Alfred Newman]] |
editing = [[Harold F. Kress]] |
*[[All Music Guide]] {{rating-5|5}} [http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:mneq97u7krht link]
distributor = [[MGM]] / [[Cinerama]]|
*[[Robert Christgau]] (A-) [http://www.robertchristgau.com/get_artist.php?name=madonna link]
released = November 1, [[1962 in film|1962]] |
*''[[Rolling Stone]]'' {{rating-5|3}} [http://www.rollingstone.com/reviews/album/_/id/213974/rid/6068215/ link]
runtime = 162 min. |
|
language = English, Arapaho |
| Last album =
budget = estimated $15,000,000<ref>{{cite web |url=http://movies.amctv.com/movie?showID=MV000011520000&pageNav=synopsis&title=How%20the%20West%20Was%20Won |title=How the West was Won - Synopsis |author=Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide |publisher=amctv.com}}</ref>|
| This album = '''''Madonna'''''<br />(1983)
| Next album = ''[[Like a Virgin]]''<br />(1984)
| Misc = {{Extra album cover 2
| Upper caption = 1985 re-release
| Type = studio
| Cover = Madonna_-_the_first_album.jpg
| Lower caption = Cover to the 1985 re-release '''''Madonna - The First Album'''''. This version was released internationally except for the United States, where it retained its original artwork and title. This version has been deleted since the 2001 Remastered version was released.
}}
{{Singles
| Name = Madonna Slut
| Type = studio
| single 1 = [[Everybody (Madonna song)|Everybody]]
| single 1 date = October 1982
| single 2 = [[Burning Up]]
| single 2 date = (AA side with "Physical Attraction" in some countries) March 1983
| single 3 = [[Holiday (Madonna song)|Holiday]]
| single 3 date = September 1983<br> January 1984 (U.K./Japan)<br>August 1985 (U.K. re-issue)<br> June 1991 (UK re-issue)<br>February 1999 (Japan re-issue)
| single 4 = [[Lucky Star (song)|Lucky Star]]
| single 4 date = September 1983 (U.K.)<br>August 1984 (Worldwide)
| single 5 = [[Borderline (song)|Borderline]]
| single 5 date = February 1984<br> June 1984 (U.K.)<br> January 1986 (U.K. re-issue)
|
}}
}}
}}


'''''How the West Was Won''''' is a [[1962 in film|1962]] [[Epic Western|epic]] [[Western (genre)|Western film]] which follows four generations of a family (starting as the Prescotts) as they move ever westward, from western [[New York]] state to the [[Pacific Ocean]]. Filmed in the [[Cinerama]] curving [[widescreen]] process, the movie is set between [[1839]] and [[1889]].
'''''Madonna''''' is the debut album by [[United States|American]] singer-songwriter [[Madonna (entertainer)|Madonna]], released on [[July 27]], [[1983]] by [[Sire Records]]. The album was re-released in 1985 for the European market and re-packaged as ''Madonna - The First Album''. In 2001, [[Warner Bros. Records|Warner Bros.]] released a remastered version with two bonus remix tracks. The RIAA certified it Gold on May 31, 1984 & 5x platinum on Oct 3, 2000, denoting 5 million shipments throughout the United States alone. Worldwide, the album has sold at least 8 million copies.<ref name="w4m">[http://www.world4madonna.com/charts/ Madonna charts and sale figures]</ref><ref name = "amazon">[http://www.amazon.co.uk/Top-Biggest-Selling-Madonna-Albums/lm/37BXBHN8JKB68 Amazon.co.uk: Madonna Discography]</ref>.


The all-star cast includes [[Carroll Baker]], [[Walter Brennan]], [[Lee J. Cobb]], [[Andy Devine]], [[Henry Fonda]], [[Carolyn Jones]], [[Karl Malden]], [[Harry Morgan]], [[Gregory Peck]], [[George Peppard]], [[Robert Preston (actor)|Robert Preston]], [[Debbie Reynolds]], [[James Stewart (actor)|James Stewart]], [[Eli Wallach]], [[John Wayne]], and [[Richard Widmark]]. The introductory, intermediate, and closing narration is voiced by [[Spencer Tracy]].
==Album history==
After achieving success on the dance charts (if not the pop charts) with the first two singles, "[[Everybody (Madonna song)|Everybody]]," and "Physical Attraction," [[Sire Records]] gave Madonna the green light to record this full-length album. Though Madonna told New York [[disc jockey|DJ]] [[Mark Kamins]] she would let him produce the entire album if he got her a record deal (which he did), when it was time to record the full length album, she decided to go with a more experienced producer in [[Reggie Lucas]]. This left Kamins credited with producing one song, "Everybody." After production on the album began, Madonna and Lucas clashed, as they each had different ideas of how they wanted the final product to sound. When the album was completed, a dissatisfied Madonna called upon her friend [[John "Jellybean" Benitez]] for additional production.


The movie consists of five segments, three directed by [[Henry Hathaway]] ("The Rivers", "The Plains" and "The Outlaws"), and one each by [[John Ford]] ("The Civil War") and [[George Marshall (director)|George Marshall]] ("The Railroad"), with transitional sequences by the uncredited [[Richard Thorpe]]. The screenplay was written by John Gay (uncredited) and [[James R. Webb (writer)|James R. Webb]]. Popular western author [[Louis L'Amour]] wrote a novelization based on the screenplay.<ref>[http://www.louislamour.com/novels/howthewest.htm How the West Was Won - A novel by Louis L'Amour<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
Madonna originally intended for the song "Ain't No Big Deal" to be included on the album, however, [[Stephen Bray]], a former boyfriend and collaborator on the song, had sold the song rights to another label, leaving Madonna and her producers to find another track. The song that made it onto the album was “[[Holiday (Madonna song)|Holiday]],” written by Curtis Hudson and [[Lisa Stevens]]. "Holiday" had originally been offered to, but turned down by, singer and original [[Supremes]] member, [[Mary Wilson (singer)|Mary Wilson]].


In 1997, ''How the West Was Won'' was selected for preservation in the United States [[National Film Registry]] by the [[Library of Congress]] as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".
The artwork that was featured on the original release of the album started the public fascination with Madonna. On the cover she has short-cropped, platinum hair, and stretches a dog chain roughly around her throat. Madonna's navel is prominent on the inner sleeve of the album, which became one of her trademarks.


==Plot summary==
The album was originally slated to be titled ''Lucky Star'', after [[Lucky Star (song)|the track of the same name]]. It is unknown why the title was changed, but the original artwork created for the album was scrapped and a new, darker direction was taken. The original album title was kept on early pressings of the [[Gramophone record|LP]] in [[South Africa]] and contained a 3:41 version of "Burning Up."<ref>[http://www.madonnadirect.co.uk/madonna.html http://www.madonnadirect.co.uk/madonna.html] ''Madonnadirect.co.uk'' </ref>
===The Rivers (1830s)===
[[Image:Westwon trailer rivers.png|left|thumb|300px|The settlers' raft is caught in rapids.]]
The film opens with a spectacular shot of the western mountains, signifying the young America and the untamed west--except for a few persons of note like the the [[Mountain men]]. Meanwhile in the East, the [[Erie Canal]] is opened to traffic, attracting settlers. Among these are a group of settlers led by Zebulon Prescott (Karl Malden) and his family. They later head west down the [[Ohio River]] to the [[Illinois country]]. While resting in one shore, Mountain man Linus Rawlings (James Stewart) is returning east to [[Pittsburgh]] to trade his furs when he meets the Prescotts. His daughter Eve (Carroll Baker) and Linus are attracted to each other, but he isn't ready to settle down, and he leaves her.


Linus stops at an isolated trading post run by a murderous clan headed by "Colonel" Hawkins ([[Walter Brennan]]). Linus is betrayed when he accompanies pretty Dora Hawkins ([[Brigid Bazlen]]) into a cave to see a "varmint". She stabs him in the back and pushes him into a deep hole. Fortunately, Linus is not seriously wounded, and is able to rescue the Prescott party from a similar fate. The bushwhacking thieves ([[Lee Van Cleef]] was one), including Dora, are dispatched with rough frontier justice in a melee.
The European pressing of the LP contained a different mix of "Burning up," but the CD pressing had the same version as the American pressing.


The settlers continue down the river, but their raft is caught in [[rapids]], and Zebulon and his wife Rebecca ([[Agnes Moorehead]]) drown. Linus, finding that he cannot live without Eve, reappears and marries her, even though she insists on homesteading at the spot where her parents died.
==Track listing==

===The Plains (1850s)===
[[Image:Westwon trailer plains.png|left|thumb|300px|The wagon train is attacked by Cheyenne Indians.]]
Eve's sister Lily (Debbie Reynolds) chooses to go to [[St. Louis]], where she finds work performing in a [[dance hall]]. She attracts the attention of professional gambler Cleve Van Valen (Gregory Peck). After overhearing that she has just inherited a [[California Gold Rush|California gold mine]] (and to avoid paying his debts), Cleve joins the [[wagon train]] that will take her there. He and wagonmaster Roger Morgan (Robert Preston) court her along the way, but she turns them both down, much to the dismay of her new friend and fellow traveler Agatha Clegg ([[Thelma Ritter]]).

Surviving an attack by [[Cheyenne]] Indians, Lily and Cleve arrive at the mine, only to find that it is now worthless. Cleve leaves. Lily returns to work in a dance hall in a literal "Camp Town", living out of a covered wagon. Morgan finds her and again proposes marriage in a rather unromantic way. She tells him, "No, not ever."

Later, Lily is singing in the music salon of a [[riverboat]]. By chance, Cleve is a passenger. When he hears Lily's voice, he leaves the poker table (and a winning hand) to propose to her, telling her of the opportunities waiting in the rapidly growing city of [[San Francisco]]. She accepts.

===The Civil War (1861~1865)===
[[Image:Westwon trailer civilwar.png|right|thumb|300px|American Civil War.]]
In [[Springfield, Illinois]], [[Abraham Lincoln]] ([[Raymond Massey]]), then a young lawyer, foresees a "house divided" that will soon befell the nation--and which he will later lead. Meanwhile, Linus joins the Union army in the [[American Civil War]]. Despite Eve's wishes, their son Zeb ([[George Peppard]]) eagerly enlists as well, looking for glory and an escape from farming. In one poignant scene as Zeb leaves, Eve goes to the graves of her parents and explains her sadness in failing to stop him. "He's Linus' boy" she says. Corporal Peterson ([[Andy Devine]]) assures them the conflict won't last very long. But the bloody [[Battle of Shiloh]] shows Zeb that war is nothing like he imagined and, unknown to him, his father, Linus, dies there. He encounters a similarly disillusioned Confederate ([[Russ Tamblyn]]) who suggests deserting, to which Zeb agrees.

However, by chance, they overhear a private conversation between Generals [[Ulysses S. Grant]] ([[Harry Morgan]]) and [[William Tecumseh Sherman]] ([[John Wayne]]). The rebel realizes he has the opportunity to rid the South of two of its greatest enemies and tries to shoot them, leaving Zeb no choice but to kill him. Afterwards, Zeb rejoins the army. And the war goes on.

When the war finally ends, he returns home, only to find his mother has died: She had lost the will to live after learning that Linus had been killed. Zeb gives his share of the family farm to his brother and leaves in search of a more interesting life.

===The Railroad (1860s)===
[[Image:Westwon trailer railroad.png|right|thumb|300px|The construction of railroad.]]
Following the daring riders from the [[Pony Express]] and the construction of the [[Telegraphy|transcontinental telegraph line]] in the early 1860s, two ferociously competing railroad lines, the [[Central Pacific Railroad]] and the [[Union Pacific Railroad]], one building west and the other east, open up new territory to eager settlers.

Zeb becomes a lieutenant in the U.S. cavalry, trying to maintain peace with the Indians with the help of grizzled buffalo hunter Jethro Stuart ([[Henry Fonda]]), an old friend of Linus. When ruthless railroad man Mike King ([[Richard Widmark]]) violates a treaty by building on Indian territory, the [[Arapaho]] Indians retaliate by stampeding buffalo through his camp, killing many, including women and children. Disgusted, Zeb resigns and heads to Arizona.

===The Outlaws (1880s)===
[[Image:Westwon trailer outlaws.png|right|thumb|300px|The desperadoes who want to rob the train.]]
The cowboys were finally domesticated, but new frictions arose as other farming modes like sheep were introduced. Lawlessness became rife, but the citizenry and the law finally have the upper hand in taming it. Meanwhile, in San Francisco, widowed Lily auctions off her possessions (she and Cleve had made and spent several fortunes) to pay her debts. She travels to Arizona, inviting Zeb and his family to oversee her remaining asset, a ranch.

Zeb (now a marshal), his wife Julie ([[Carolyn Jones]]) and their children meet Lily at Gold City's train station. However, Zeb also runs into an old enemy there, outlaw Charlie Gant ([[Eli Wallach]]). When Gant makes veiled threats against his family, Zeb turns to his friend and Gold City's marshal, Lou Ramsey ([[Lee J. Cobb]]), but Gant is not wanted for anything in that territory, so there is little Ramsey can do. Zeb decides he has to act rather than wait for Gant to show up someday. This causes friction between Zeb and Julie. Suspecting Gant of planning to rob an unusually large gold shipment being transported by train, he prepares an ambush with Ramsey's reluctant help. Gant and his gang (one member played by [[Harry Dean Stanton]]) are killed in the train shootout. In the end, Lily and the Rawlings travel to their new home.

===Epilogue (1962)===
A short epilogue shows the growth of the West in 80 years in various panoramic vistas: The spectacular [[Hoover Dam]], an open copper mine, a [[Great Plains]] wheat field, the [[San Joaquin Valley]] and its harvests, a logging scene, [[Los Angeles]] in the early 1960s with the famous four-level freeway interchange downtown, and [[San Francisco]] with its famous [[Golden Gate Bridge]] as the sung theme reaches its climax.

==Cast==
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
!align=center|Actor
! # !! Title !! Composers !! Production credits !! Time
!align=center|Character
<!--!align=center|Notes-->
|-
|-
|[[Carroll Baker]]
| 01 || "[[Lucky Star (song)|Lucky Star]]" ||Madonna||Reggie Lucas<br>Remixed by John "Jellybean" Benitez|| 5:37
|Eve Prescott Rawlings
|-
|-
|[[Lee J. Cobb]]
| 02 || "[[Borderline (song)|Borderline]]" ||Reggie Lucas||Reggie Lucas || 5:20
|Marshal Lou Ramsey
|-
|-
|[[Henry Fonda]]
| 03 || "[[Burning Up]]" ||Madonna ||Reggie Lucas <br>Remixed by John "Jellybean" Benitez|| 3:45<br>4:47 <sup>2</sup>
|Jethro Stuart
|-
|-
|[[Carolyn Jones]]
| 04 || "I Know It" ||Madonna|| Reggie Lucas|| 3:47
|Julie Rawlings
|-
|-
|[[Karl Malden]]
| 05 || "[[Holiday (Madonna song)|Holiday]]" || Curtis Hudson, Lisa Stevens || John "Jellybean" Benitez|| 3:51<br>6:10
|Zebulon Prescott
|-
|-
|[[Harry Morgan]]
| 06 || "Think of Me" ||Madonna||Reggie Lucas|| 4:54
|[[Ulysses S. Grant|Gen. Ulysses S. Grant]]
|-
|-
|[[Gregory Peck]]
| 07 || "Physical Attraction" ||Reggie Lucas||Reggie Lucas<br> Remixed by John "Jellybean" Benitez|| 6:39
|Cleve Van Valen
|-
|-
|[[George Peppard]]
| 08 || "[[Everybody (Madonna song)|Everybody]]" ||Madonna||Mark Kamins|| 4:57<br>6:02 <sup>1</sup>
|Zeb Rawlings
|-
|-
|[[Robert Preston]]
! colspan="4" bgcolor="#ebf5ff" | 2001 Remastered version bonus tracks||
|Roger Morgan
|-
|-
|[[Debbie Reynolds]]
| 09 || "Burning Up" (12" version) ||Madonna||Reggie Lucas<br>Remixed by John "Jellybean" Benitez|| 5:59
|Lilith 'Lily' Prescott
|-
|-
|[[James Stewart (actor)|James Stewart]]
| 10 || "Lucky Star" ("New mix") ||Madonna||Reggie Lucas and John "Jellybean" Benitez || 7:15
|Linus Rawlings
|-
|[[Eli Wallach]]
|Charlie Gant
|-
|[[John Wayne]]
|[[William Tecumseh Sherman|Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman]]
|-
|[[Richard Widmark]]
|Mike King
|-
|[[Brigid Bazlen]]
|Dora Hawkins
|-
|[[Walter Brennan]]
|Col. Jeb Hawkins
|-
|[[Andy Devine]]
|Corporal Peterson
|-
|[[Raymond Massey]]
|[[Abraham Lincoln|President Abraham Lincoln]]
|-
|[[Agnes Moorehead]]
|Rebecca Prescott
|-
|[[Thelma Ritter]]
|Agatha Clegg
|-
|[[Spencer Tracy]]
|Narrator
|-
|-
|}
|}


==Academy Awards and nominations==
*<sup>1</sup> This longer version is only available on the 2001 Remastered Version. Original album version is 4:57 minutes in duration.
*<sup>2</sup> Original album version: does not contain the electric guitar sound, originally with electronic synthesizer laser sound. Originally available on the first LP and cassette pressings. Later replaced with the rock guitar shorter version. This version is similar in sound to the bonus 12" Version track.


The movie won three [[Academy Awards]] for:
== Album credits ==
*[[Academy Award for Writing Original Screenplay|Best Writing, Story and Screenplay &mdash; Written Directly for the Screen]] ([[James R. Webb (writer)|James R. Webb]])
===Personnel===
*[[Academy Award for Film Editing|Best Film Editing]]
*Madonna - [[vocals]], background vocals, [[cowbell]]
*[[Academy Award for Sound|Best Sound]]
*Tina B. - background vocals
*Christine Faith - background vocals
*Dean Gant - [[synthesizer]], [[piano]], [[electric piano]]
*[[Gwen Guthrie]] - background vocals
*Curtis Hudson - [[guitar]]
*Raymond Hudson - [[bass guitar|bass]]
*Anthony Jackson - electric bass
*Bashiri Johnson - [[percussion instrument|percussion]]
*[[Reggie Lucas]] - [[guitar]]
*Bob Malach - [[tenor saxophone]]
*Paul Pesco - [[guitar]]
*Ira Siegel - [[guitar]]
*Ed Walsh - [[synthesizer]]
*Brenda White - background vocals
*[[Norma Jean Wright]] - background vocals
*Fred Zarr - synthesizer, [[piano]], [[drums]], electric piano, [[Moog synthesizer]], [[Fender Rhodes]], Moog bass


It was also nominated for:
===Production===
*[[Academy Award for Best Picture|Best Picture]]
*Produced by Reggie Lucas for Kalisa, Inc.
*[[Academy Award for Best Art Direction]] &mdash; Set Decoration, Color
*Engineered by Jim Dougherty
*[[Academy Award for Best Cinematography|Best Cinematography, Color]]
*Recorded at Sigma Sound Studios NYC.
*[[Academy Award for Costume Design|Best Costume Design, Color]]
*[[Academy Award for Original Music Score|Best Music, Score &mdash; Substantially Original]] ([[Alfred Newman]] and [[Ken Darby]])


==Production==
"Holiday":
<!-- Image with inadequate rationale removed: [[Image:How The West Was Won screenshot.png|left|thumb|330px|A scene showing the visible joins resulting from the three-strip [[Cinerama]] process.]] -->
*Produced by John "Jellybean" Benitez for Jellybean Productions Inc.
*Arranged by Curtis Hudson, co-arranged by Fred Zarr
*Recording Engineer: Michael Hutchinson
*Mixing Engineer: Jay Mark


''How the West Was Won'' is one of only two dramatic feature films (the other being ''[[The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm]]'') made using the three-strip [[Cinerama]] process. Although the picture quality when projected onto curved screens in theatres was stunning, attempts to convert the movie to a smaller screen suffer from that process's technical shortcomings. When shown on [[television]] in a [[Cinemascope]] print made from the original three-strip version, the joins between the three frames are clearly and sometimes glaringly visible; when seen in [[letterbox]] format the actors' faces are nearly indistinguishable in long shots. There have been efforts to put the three parts of the image together in a better way, and to make the Cinerama image look better on a flat screen, led by [[Hewlett-Packard|HP]].<ref>[http://www.hpl.hp.com/news/2006/apr-jun/movie.html HP Labs - Movie makeover : HP and Warner Bros. give old movies new life <br><!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> The [[aspect ratio (image)|aspect ratio]] of Cinerama was [[List of film formats|2:59:1]], although Warner's new DVD release of the film claims the ratio was 2.89:1.
"Everybody":
*Produced by Mark Kamins
*Engineered by Butch Jones


[[John Ford]] complained about having to dress such huge sets since Cinerama photographed a much wider view than the standard single camera process to which [[Hollywood]] directors had become accustomed.
"Lucky Star", "Burning Up" and "Physical Attraction":
*Remixed by John "Jellybean" Benitez
*Remix Engineer: Jay Mark


Stuntman Bob Morgan, husband of [[Yvonne De Carlo]], was severely injured and lost a leg during an accident while filming.<ref>http://www.snopes.com/movies/films/westwon.htm</ref>
"Lucky Star" ("New" Mix)
*Produced by Reggie Lucas for Kalisa, Inc. and John "Jellybean" Benitez for Jellybean Productions Inc.
*Mixed by John "Jellybean" Benitez
*Mixing Engineer: Michael Hutchinson


The film would later inspire an [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]] [[How the West Was Won (TV series)|television series of the same name]].
===Design===
*Art direction: Carin Goldberg
*Photography: Gary Heery
*Photography: George Holy (''Madonna - The First Album'')


==Gallery==
==Certifications, peaks & sales==
<gallery>
Image:Westwon trailer Stewart.png|James Stewart
Image:Westwon trailer Fonda.png|Henry Fonda
Image:Westwon trailer Peck.png|Gregory Peck
Image:Westwon trailer Wayne.png|John Wayne
Image:Westwon trailer Baker.png|Carroll Baker
Image:Westwon trailer Brennan Bazlen.png|Walter Brennan and Brigid Bazlen
Image:Westwon trailer Cobb.png|Lee J. Cobb
Image:Westwon trailer Jones.png|Carolyn Jones
Image:Westwon trailer Malden Moorehead.png|Karl Malden and Agnes Moorehead
Image:Westwon trailer Peppard.png|George Peppard
Image:Westwon trailer Preston.png|Robert Preston
Image:Westwon trailer Reynolds.png|Debbie Reynolds
Image:Westwon trailer Ritter.png|Thelma Ritter
Image:Westwon trailer Wallach.png|Eli Wallach
Image:Westwon trailer Widmark.png|Richard Widmark
</gallery>


==See also==
{| class="wikitable"
*[[How the West Was Won (TV series)]]
!align="left"|Country

!align="left"|Peak position
==References==
!align="left"|Certification (if any)
{{reflist}}
!align="left"|Sales/shipments

|-
==External links==
|Austria
*{{imdb title|id=0056085|title=How the West Was Won}}
|align="center"|15
*{{tcmdb title|id=2016|title=How the West Was Won}}
|3x Platinum <ref>[http://www.ifpi.at/edelmetal.php3 IFPI Austria]</ref>
|100,000+
|-
|Brazil
|align="center"|3
|Diamond<ref>[http://www.madonnaonline.com.br MadonnaOnline Brasil - MOL - Feels like home!<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
|500,000
|-
|France
|align="center"|8
|Platinum<ref>[http://www.chartsinfrance.com.br]</ref>
|300,000+
|-
|Germany
|align="center"|16
|Gold<ref>[http://www.ifpi.de/wirtschaft/gpergebnis.php?strAktion=suche&txtSuche=The%20First%20Album IFPI Germany]</ref>
|150,000+
|-
|Ireland
|align="center"|
|Gold
|9,195
|-
|Netherlands
|align="center"|7
|Platinum<ref>[http://www.nvpi.nl/nvpi/pagina.asp?pagkey=60461&formposted=no&pagenr=2 NVPI]</ref>
|100,000+
|-
|Sweden
|align="center"|2
|Platinum<ref>[http://www.alaskajim.com/charts/decadealbums/1980s.asp Decade Albums Charts - Best of 1980s<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
|45,000+
|-
|United Kingdom
|align="center"|6
|Platinum<ref>[http://www.bpi.co.uk/platinum/platinumright.asp?rq=search_plat&r_id=23812 BPI]</ref>
|300,000+
|-
|United States
|align="center"|8
|5x Platinum<ref>[http://www.billboard.biz/bbbiz/search/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1001015119 Billboard – Ask Billboard]</ref>
|5,000,000+
|}


{{John Ford}}
== References ==
[[Category:1962 films]]
{{reflist|1}}
[[Category:United States National Film Registry films]]
{{Madonna}}
[[Category:Western films]]
[[Category:MGM films]]
[[Category:English-language films]]
[[Category:Algonquian-language films]]
[[Category:Films directed by Henry Hathaway]]
[[Category:Films directed by Richard Thorpe]]
[[Category:Films directed by John Ford]]
[[Category:Films directed by George Marshall]]
[[Category:Films whose editor won the Best Film Editing Academy Award]]
[[Category:Films whose writer won the Best Original Screenplay Academy Award]]
[[Category:American Civil War films]]
[[Category:Rafting films]]
[[Category:Films set in the 1830s]]
[[Category:Films set in the 1840s]]
[[Category:Films set in the 1850s]]
[[Category:Films set in the 1870s]]
[[Category:Films set in the 1880s]]


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[[de:Das war der Wilde Westen]]
[[Category:Madonna albums]]
[[es:La conquista del Oeste]]
[[Category:Dance-pop albums]]
[[fr:La Conquête de l'Ouest (film)]]
[[ar:مادونا (ألبوم)]]
[[it:La conquista del West (film 1962)]]
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[[pl:Jak zdobywano Dziki Zachód]]
[[es:Madonna (álbum)]]
[[fr:Madonna (album)]]
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Revision as of 09:45, 12 October 2008

How the West Was Won
File:How the west was won322.jpg
original film poster by Reynold Brown
Directed byJohn Ford
Henry Hathaway
George Marshall
Richard Thorpe
Written byJames R. Webb
Produced byBernard Smith
StarringCarroll Baker
Lee J. Cobb
Henry Fonda
Carolyn Jones
Karl Malden
Gregory Peck
George Peppard
Robert Preston
Debbie Reynolds
James Stewart
Eli Wallach
John Wayne
Richard Widmark
Walter Brennan
Andy Devine
Raymond Massey
Agnes Moorehead
Thelma Ritter
Narrated bySpencer Tracy
CinematographyWilliam H. Daniels, ASC
Milton Krasner, ASC
Charles Lang, Jr., ASC
Joseph LaShelle, ASC
Edited byHarold F. Kress
Music byAlfred Newman
Distributed byMGM / Cinerama
Release date
November 1, 1962
Running time
162 min.
LanguagesEnglish, Arapaho
Budgetestimated $15,000,000[1]

How the West Was Won is a 1962 epic Western film which follows four generations of a family (starting as the Prescotts) as they move ever westward, from western New York state to the Pacific Ocean. Filmed in the Cinerama curving widescreen process, the movie is set between 1839 and 1889.

The all-star cast includes Carroll Baker, Walter Brennan, Lee J. Cobb, Andy Devine, Henry Fonda, Carolyn Jones, Karl Malden, Harry Morgan, Gregory Peck, George Peppard, Robert Preston, Debbie Reynolds, James Stewart, Eli Wallach, John Wayne, and Richard Widmark. The introductory, intermediate, and closing narration is voiced by Spencer Tracy.

The movie consists of five segments, three directed by Henry Hathaway ("The Rivers", "The Plains" and "The Outlaws"), and one each by John Ford ("The Civil War") and George Marshall ("The Railroad"), with transitional sequences by the uncredited Richard Thorpe. The screenplay was written by John Gay (uncredited) and James R. Webb. Popular western author Louis L'Amour wrote a novelization based on the screenplay.[2]

In 1997, How the West Was Won was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".

Plot summary

The Rivers (1830s)

The settlers' raft is caught in rapids.

The film opens with a spectacular shot of the western mountains, signifying the young America and the untamed west--except for a few persons of note like the the Mountain men. Meanwhile in the East, the Erie Canal is opened to traffic, attracting settlers. Among these are a group of settlers led by Zebulon Prescott (Karl Malden) and his family. They later head west down the Ohio River to the Illinois country. While resting in one shore, Mountain man Linus Rawlings (James Stewart) is returning east to Pittsburgh to trade his furs when he meets the Prescotts. His daughter Eve (Carroll Baker) and Linus are attracted to each other, but he isn't ready to settle down, and he leaves her.

Linus stops at an isolated trading post run by a murderous clan headed by "Colonel" Hawkins (Walter Brennan). Linus is betrayed when he accompanies pretty Dora Hawkins (Brigid Bazlen) into a cave to see a "varmint". She stabs him in the back and pushes him into a deep hole. Fortunately, Linus is not seriously wounded, and is able to rescue the Prescott party from a similar fate. The bushwhacking thieves (Lee Van Cleef was one), including Dora, are dispatched with rough frontier justice in a melee.

The settlers continue down the river, but their raft is caught in rapids, and Zebulon and his wife Rebecca (Agnes Moorehead) drown. Linus, finding that he cannot live without Eve, reappears and marries her, even though she insists on homesteading at the spot where her parents died.

The Plains (1850s)

The wagon train is attacked by Cheyenne Indians.

Eve's sister Lily (Debbie Reynolds) chooses to go to St. Louis, where she finds work performing in a dance hall. She attracts the attention of professional gambler Cleve Van Valen (Gregory Peck). After overhearing that she has just inherited a California gold mine (and to avoid paying his debts), Cleve joins the wagon train that will take her there. He and wagonmaster Roger Morgan (Robert Preston) court her along the way, but she turns them both down, much to the dismay of her new friend and fellow traveler Agatha Clegg (Thelma Ritter).

Surviving an attack by Cheyenne Indians, Lily and Cleve arrive at the mine, only to find that it is now worthless. Cleve leaves. Lily returns to work in a dance hall in a literal "Camp Town", living out of a covered wagon. Morgan finds her and again proposes marriage in a rather unromantic way. She tells him, "No, not ever."

Later, Lily is singing in the music salon of a riverboat. By chance, Cleve is a passenger. When he hears Lily's voice, he leaves the poker table (and a winning hand) to propose to her, telling her of the opportunities waiting in the rapidly growing city of San Francisco. She accepts.

The Civil War (1861~1865)

American Civil War.

In Springfield, Illinois, Abraham Lincoln (Raymond Massey), then a young lawyer, foresees a "house divided" that will soon befell the nation--and which he will later lead. Meanwhile, Linus joins the Union army in the American Civil War. Despite Eve's wishes, their son Zeb (George Peppard) eagerly enlists as well, looking for glory and an escape from farming. In one poignant scene as Zeb leaves, Eve goes to the graves of her parents and explains her sadness in failing to stop him. "He's Linus' boy" she says. Corporal Peterson (Andy Devine) assures them the conflict won't last very long. But the bloody Battle of Shiloh shows Zeb that war is nothing like he imagined and, unknown to him, his father, Linus, dies there. He encounters a similarly disillusioned Confederate (Russ Tamblyn) who suggests deserting, to which Zeb agrees.

However, by chance, they overhear a private conversation between Generals Ulysses S. Grant (Harry Morgan) and William Tecumseh Sherman (John Wayne). The rebel realizes he has the opportunity to rid the South of two of its greatest enemies and tries to shoot them, leaving Zeb no choice but to kill him. Afterwards, Zeb rejoins the army. And the war goes on.

When the war finally ends, he returns home, only to find his mother has died: She had lost the will to live after learning that Linus had been killed. Zeb gives his share of the family farm to his brother and leaves in search of a more interesting life.

The Railroad (1860s)

The construction of railroad.

Following the daring riders from the Pony Express and the construction of the transcontinental telegraph line in the early 1860s, two ferociously competing railroad lines, the Central Pacific Railroad and the Union Pacific Railroad, one building west and the other east, open up new territory to eager settlers.

Zeb becomes a lieutenant in the U.S. cavalry, trying to maintain peace with the Indians with the help of grizzled buffalo hunter Jethro Stuart (Henry Fonda), an old friend of Linus. When ruthless railroad man Mike King (Richard Widmark) violates a treaty by building on Indian territory, the Arapaho Indians retaliate by stampeding buffalo through his camp, killing many, including women and children. Disgusted, Zeb resigns and heads to Arizona.

The Outlaws (1880s)

The desperadoes who want to rob the train.

The cowboys were finally domesticated, but new frictions arose as other farming modes like sheep were introduced. Lawlessness became rife, but the citizenry and the law finally have the upper hand in taming it. Meanwhile, in San Francisco, widowed Lily auctions off her possessions (she and Cleve had made and spent several fortunes) to pay her debts. She travels to Arizona, inviting Zeb and his family to oversee her remaining asset, a ranch.

Zeb (now a marshal), his wife Julie (Carolyn Jones) and their children meet Lily at Gold City's train station. However, Zeb also runs into an old enemy there, outlaw Charlie Gant (Eli Wallach). When Gant makes veiled threats against his family, Zeb turns to his friend and Gold City's marshal, Lou Ramsey (Lee J. Cobb), but Gant is not wanted for anything in that territory, so there is little Ramsey can do. Zeb decides he has to act rather than wait for Gant to show up someday. This causes friction between Zeb and Julie. Suspecting Gant of planning to rob an unusually large gold shipment being transported by train, he prepares an ambush with Ramsey's reluctant help. Gant and his gang (one member played by Harry Dean Stanton) are killed in the train shootout. In the end, Lily and the Rawlings travel to their new home.

Epilogue (1962)

A short epilogue shows the growth of the West in 80 years in various panoramic vistas: The spectacular Hoover Dam, an open copper mine, a Great Plains wheat field, the San Joaquin Valley and its harvests, a logging scene, Los Angeles in the early 1960s with the famous four-level freeway interchange downtown, and San Francisco with its famous Golden Gate Bridge as the sung theme reaches its climax.

Cast

Actor Character
Carroll Baker Eve Prescott Rawlings
Lee J. Cobb Marshal Lou Ramsey
Henry Fonda Jethro Stuart
Carolyn Jones Julie Rawlings
Karl Malden Zebulon Prescott
Harry Morgan Gen. Ulysses S. Grant
Gregory Peck Cleve Van Valen
George Peppard Zeb Rawlings
Robert Preston Roger Morgan
Debbie Reynolds Lilith 'Lily' Prescott
James Stewart Linus Rawlings
Eli Wallach Charlie Gant
John Wayne Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman
Richard Widmark Mike King
Brigid Bazlen Dora Hawkins
Walter Brennan Col. Jeb Hawkins
Andy Devine Corporal Peterson
Raymond Massey President Abraham Lincoln
Agnes Moorehead Rebecca Prescott
Thelma Ritter Agatha Clegg
Spencer Tracy Narrator

Academy Awards and nominations

The movie won three Academy Awards for:

It was also nominated for:

Production

How the West Was Won is one of only two dramatic feature films (the other being The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm) made using the three-strip Cinerama process. Although the picture quality when projected onto curved screens in theatres was stunning, attempts to convert the movie to a smaller screen suffer from that process's technical shortcomings. When shown on television in a Cinemascope print made from the original three-strip version, the joins between the three frames are clearly and sometimes glaringly visible; when seen in letterbox format the actors' faces are nearly indistinguishable in long shots. There have been efforts to put the three parts of the image together in a better way, and to make the Cinerama image look better on a flat screen, led by HP.[3] The aspect ratio of Cinerama was 2:59:1, although Warner's new DVD release of the film claims the ratio was 2.89:1.

John Ford complained about having to dress such huge sets since Cinerama photographed a much wider view than the standard single camera process to which Hollywood directors had become accustomed.

Stuntman Bob Morgan, husband of Yvonne De Carlo, was severely injured and lost a leg during an accident while filming.[4]

The film would later inspire an ABC television series of the same name.

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide. "How the West was Won - Synopsis". amctv.com.
  2. ^ How the West Was Won - A novel by Louis L'Amour
  3. ^ HP Labs - Movie makeover : HP and Warner Bros. give old movies new life
  4. ^ http://www.snopes.com/movies/films/westwon.htm

External links