Renoir's most successful American film, loose, free-flowing, honest.
The Southerner (1945)
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Reviews Counted:11
Fresh:10
Rotten:1
Average Rating:8/10
Runtime: 1 hr 38 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis: A harsh, unsentimental view of rural life in the Southern United States, THE SOUTHERNER stars Zachary Scott as Sam Tucker, a sharecropper who has spent his life picking cotton. Taking to heart the... A harsh, unsentimental view of rural life in the Southern United States, THE SOUTHERNER stars Zachary Scott as Sam Tucker, a sharecropper who has spent his life picking cotton. Taking to heart the dying words of his Uncle Pete (Paul E. Burns), he decides to buy a small piece of land and try to make it work as a family farm.The scrap of land he's able to afford needs a great deal of work, but his wife Nona (Betty Field) and his children Jot (Jay Gilpin) and Daisy (Bunny Sunshine) pitch in. Their misanthropic neighbor, Devers (J. Carroll Naish), allows them to use water from his well, but in the winter, when Jot becomes extremely ill, he refuses to lend them the milk the doctor prescribes. Although the boy survives, Sam finds that Devers's attitude is shared by local grocer Harmie (Percy Kilbride) and others in the mean-spirited little hamlet. Running low on food, Sam contemplates the offer of a factory job, but decides to hold out until after the harvest. William Faulkner contributed to the script of this superb portrait of struggling farmers, which director Jean Renoir considered the best of his American films. [More]
Starring: Zachary Scott, Betty Fields, Beulah Bondi, J. Carrol Naish
Starring: Zachary Scott, Betty Fields, Beulah Bondi, J. Carrol Naish, Norman Lloyd, Jack Norworth, Nestor Paiva, Estelle Taylor, Dorothy Granger, Noreen Nash, David Loew, Robert Hakim
Director: Jean Renoir
Director: Jean Renoir
Screenwriter: Hugo Butler, William Faulkner
Composer: Werner Janssen
Reviews for The Southerner
You can almost feel the land and sense the spirit guiding this most heartfelt of movies.
It may be trenchant realism, but these are times when there is a greater need. Escapism is the word.
Made while Frenchman Renoir was in Hollywood in exile, this rural portrait is a better film than Swamp Water, showing the helmer's penchant for meticulous attention to detail and lyrical realism, for which he received his only directing Oscar nomination
A rich, unusual and sensitive delineation of a segment of the American scene well worth filming and seeing.
A remarkably naturalistic portrayal of one family's struggle to start a farm in the South.
Jean Renoir is perhaps the greatest of all film directors. He is certainly the most lovable.
Jean Renoir's 1945 examination of dirt farmers in the American south is probably his finest Hollywood film, which is to say a masterpiece.
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