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Stars in My Crown

United States

1950

89 Min
Black and White
1.37:1
English
  • Currently 4.3/5 Stars.
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DIR Jacques Tourneur

PROD William H. Wright

SCR Joe David Brown, Margaret Fitts

DP Charles Edgar Schoenbaum

CAST Joel McCrea, Ellen Drew, Dean Stockwell

Synopsis

Civil War veteran Josiah Grey comes to a small town to be a gospel minister. In time he has a family and many friends, but he also finds friction with a few of his parishioners. A young doctor grates at what he feels is the parson’s interference in the scientific treatment of patients, and a mine owner resents Grey’s protection of an old sharecropper whose small plot of land stands in the way of his continued mining. Grey must face a public health crisis and a lynch mob as a result, all seen and described through the eyes and memory of Grey’s young nephew John. —IMDb

Director

Original

Jacques Tourneur

The first director Val Lewton hired for his RKO unit was Jacques Tourneur, and the first picture made by that unit was Cat People, an original screenplay by DeWitt Bodeen.

When Tourneur’s father, Maurice, returned to Paris after a number of years in America, Jacques had gone with him, working as assistant director and editor for his father. In 1933, he made a few directorial solos in the French language and then returned to Hollywood, where he became an assistant director at MGM. It was at this time that he first met Val Lewton, and the two young men worked as special unit directors for Jack Conway on A Tale of Two Cities ; it was Lewton and Tourneur who staged the storming of the Bastille sequence for that film.

Tourneur remained at MGM, directing over 20 short subjects, and Lewton eventually went on to become David O. Selznick’s story editor. When Lewton left Selznick to head his own production unit at RKO, he had already made up his mind that Tourneur would direct his… read more

Wall

Displaying 3 wall posts.
Picture of ruby stevens

ruby stevens

15Sep11

i think i enjoyed this more than 'to kill a mockingbird' altho that climactic scene is pure movie fantasy

Picture of Jerry Johnson

Jerry Johnson

13Sep11

Tourneur does Ford. Or rather, Freud does Will Rogers. What's psychological in Tourneur is sociological in Ford. Which is why Tourneur's racists don white hoods while Ford's are out in open flesh. Watch this and Ford's Steamboat Around the Bend together.

Picture of Dave

Dave

25May11

The first Tourneur film that actually let me down. I apparently don't see the hidden brilliance in this one that so many others do.

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