Bend of the River (1952)

Bend of the River (1952)
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Another of the collaborations between actor James Stewart and director Anthony Mann, Bend of the River casts Stewart as a former outlaw, now working as trail guide for a group of Oregon-bound farmers. He is aided in this endeavor by Arthur Kennedy, a far-from-reformed horse thief. Upon arriving in Portland, Stewart gets in the middle of a scam operated by trader Howard Petrie, who has reneged on his promise to ship goods to the settlers. Unable to take action through legal channels, Stewart and farmer Jay C. Flippen steal the provision and scurry back to the settlement by boat. On their return, they discover that Kennedy has sold out to the crooked Petrie and intends to reclaim the supplies, taking Flippen and his daughter Julie Adams as hostages to ensure safe passage. It's up to Stewart to turn the tables on his former friend and save the day. As in the other Stewart-Mann productions, Jimmy breaks away from his usual easygoing screen persona to play a tough, self-serving rugged individual, whose true motives and loyalties remain in doubt until the very end of the film. Bend of the River was adapted by Borden Chase from Bill Gulick's novel Bend of the Snake. Watch for Stepin Fetchit, Rock Hudson, Royal Dano, and Frances Bavier in minor roles. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
James StewartArthur Kennedy, (more)
Director(s):
Anthony Mann
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Bend of the River

Another of the collaborations between actor James Stewart and director Anthony Mann, Bend of the River casts Stewart as a former outlaw, now working as trail guide for a group of Oregon-bound farmers. He is aided in this endeavor by Arthur Kennedy, a far-from-reformed horse thief. Upon arriving in Portland, Stewart gets in the middle of a scam operated by trader Howard Petrie, who has reneged on his promise to ship goods to the settlers. Unable to take action through legal channels, Stewart and farmer Jay C. Flippen steal the provision and scurry back to the settlement by boat. On their return, they discover that Kennedy has sold out to the crooked Petrie and intends to reclaim the supplies, taking Flippen and his daughter Julie Adams as hostages to ensure safe passage. It's up to Stewart to turn the tables on his former friend and save the day. As in the other Stewart-Mann productions, Jimmy breaks away from his usual easygoing screen persona to play a tough, self-serving rugged individual, whose true motives and loyalties remain in doubt until the very end of the film. Bend of the River was adapted by Borden Chase from Bill Gulick's novel Bend of the Snake. Watch for Stepin Fetchit, Rock Hudson, Royal Dano, and Frances Bavier in minor roles. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
92 mins

Complete Cast of Bend of the River


Director(s):
Anthony Mann
Writer(s):
Borden Chase
Producer(s):
Aaron Rosenberg
Categories:
Westerns
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    James V.

    What a wonderful, intelligent time you'll have watching BEND OF THE RIVER, the Anthony Mann/James Stewart 1952 western that may approach some sort of high-water mark in the genre--certainly so far as good old-fashioned scenic western adventure goes. This one has a lynching, Indians (that initial arrow is quite the little shocker), a wagon train, gold, a riverboat, plenty of action, early Rock Hudson plus Stephin Fetchit and Francis Bavier, interesting characters and the kind of rock-solid economic/social/morality questions that this genre seems to handle better than any other. The cast--including Stewart, Julie Adams, a fine Arthur Kennedy and Jay C. Flippen--does sterling work, and the movie even offers an intelligent alternative to everyone's favorite bit of cracker-barrel philosophy about the "bad apple." Superior in every way to the badly transferred 1953 Stewart/Mann "Naked Spur" that was just released to DVD, "Bend" is a real beauty.

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    Sally G.

    Wonderful. Riverboats, gold mining, indian raids, double dealing. Arthur Kennedy & James Stuart have left behind their outlaw pasts and meet up in Oregon by chance. Travelling with wagon train of settlers through hostile Shoshoni country onto a bustling river town. Will either of them stay on the straight and narrow path? And why? What changes in a man? Doesn't lag. One of those great Stuart/ Mann films. Very famous unique western.

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    David S.

    This movie was ok. Donna S

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