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Synopsis

Film adaptation of the hit Broadway musical about the early settlers on the Oklahoma plain.

Director

Original

Fred Zinnemann

Vienna-born Fred Zinnemann had childhood dreams of becoming a musician, and later planned on a law career, before his viewing of the movies of Erich Von Stroheim drew him into the movie business, initially as a cameraman. He came to the United States in 1929, and later found work as an editor, and subsequently as an assistant to documentary filmmaker Robert Flaherty, and then as an assistant to choreographer Busby Berkeley. He joined MGM in the late ‘30s as a director of comedy shorts, and won an Academy award for his 1938 short subject That Mothers Might Live. Zinnemann moved up to full-length features in 1941, but found little opportunity to work on anything but B-pictures until 1948, with The Search, a drama set in post-World War II Europe. He didn’t really become a major recognized box-office name as a director, however, until 1952 when his Western drama High Noon, starring Gary Cooper, which had been perceived by most observers as headed for commercial disaster, became a monster… read more

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Daniel S.

13Mar12

A curiosity in Fred Zinnemann's filmography. What could drive you to take a look at this improbable story that seems, at times, shot by a soviet director for the glory of the Little Father of the Peoples ? In Todd-AO and in color. Firstly there is in Oklahoma! a dream scene which literally scotch taped me in my seat then there is Gloria Grahame, yes, Gloria Grahame as a naive nymphomaniac. You can't say no to Gloria Grahame. Highly recommended.

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lizle

20Dec11

oooooohhhhhhhhhhhhhh-kla-homa!

MarcH

10Nov11

Even in 70mm and plopped amongst wide panoramas of corn fields, it still feels a bit stagy. Overall effect is better experienced on a theater screen, and not your living room TV.

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