PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
6,2/10
1 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
La vida del pionero del siglo XIX, Jim Bowie.La vida del pionero del siglo XIX, Jim Bowie.La vida del pionero del siglo XIX, Jim Bowie.
Anthony Caruso
- Black Jack Sturdevant
- (as Tony Caruso)
Nedrick Young
- Henri Contrecourt
- (as Ned Young)
John Alban
- Casino Patron
- (sin acreditar)
John Albright
- Casino Patron
- (sin acreditar)
Leon Alton
- Riverboat Passenger
- (sin acreditar)
John Alvin
- Impatient Man in Tailor's Shop
- (sin acreditar)
Ernest Anderson
- Riverboat Cabin Boy
- (sin acreditar)
Walter Bacon
- Casino Patron
- (sin acreditar)
Salvador Baguez
- Mexican Artist
- (sin acreditar)
Richard Bartell
- Horse Race Starter
- (sin acreditar)
John Barton
- Gambling House Patron
- (sin acreditar)
Argumento
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesThis film was physically hard on Alan Ladd - he injured a knee during the shoot and broke a hand on the last day of filming.
- PifiasThe knife-maker claims the meteorite he found is made of steel. Steel is a man-made substance using iron and carbon. Metallic meteorites contain an iron-nickel alloy.
- Citas
Jim Bowie: Ma...I killed a man.
Mrs. Bowie: Did he need killin'?
Jim Bowie: About as much as any man ever did.
- Créditos adicionalesPrologue: "Historical truth is sometimes stranger than fiction. James Bowie was an example--literally carving his name in history to become an American legend."
- ConexionesReferenced in El globo rojo (1956)
Reseña destacada
The Iron Mistress (1952)
I don't get the whole call of honor that leads to duels at the slightest provocation (or less). In some movies it's a fabulous dramatic point, but here it's a nagging and recurring trick, a reason for some male chest-thumping and a little bloodshed. It also represents the way the movie depends on forced drama to make the events jump.
There are exceptions, like a really beautiful and unusual hand-to-hand knife/sword fight occurring in a darkened room, with an occasional bolt of lightning like a strobe going off. This is cinema trickery, a real pleasure, not part of the real story, but it's a moment of relief from the costume drama and dueling the rest of the time.
This is how this movie goes. Moments of unique drama are followed by long stretches of stiff plot development. I'm not sure how the movie reflects the real story of James Bowie, whose name was given to the famous Bowie knife (knives naturally have a big role in the movie, including the forging of the first true Bowie knife). But what works best is the sense of period sets and time-travel to pre-Civil War Louisiana. The romance isn't highly romantic, and the plot is generally stiff, but it is a kind of history story come to life. If you overlook the obvious liberties and gaffes, it's not an unwatchable movie, just a routine one. Alan Ladd, it must be said, is a little cool even for Alan Ladd (an understated actor).
The film does lay out the gradual shift in cultivation of the South to cotton farming, and brings out lots of old rules like the fact divorce was impossible in Louisiana without an act of the legislature. People interested in this certain kind of movie making, for its own sake, should check out "Drums Along the Mohawk" (a better movie by far, but with a similar feel somehow). Here, the camera-work by the talented John Seitz is strangely dull (though it is in true Technicolor), and the scored music by the incomparable Max Steiner is straight up functional. Most of all, the many ordinary parts are put together without great art or intensity.
I don't get the whole call of honor that leads to duels at the slightest provocation (or less). In some movies it's a fabulous dramatic point, but here it's a nagging and recurring trick, a reason for some male chest-thumping and a little bloodshed. It also represents the way the movie depends on forced drama to make the events jump.
There are exceptions, like a really beautiful and unusual hand-to-hand knife/sword fight occurring in a darkened room, with an occasional bolt of lightning like a strobe going off. This is cinema trickery, a real pleasure, not part of the real story, but it's a moment of relief from the costume drama and dueling the rest of the time.
This is how this movie goes. Moments of unique drama are followed by long stretches of stiff plot development. I'm not sure how the movie reflects the real story of James Bowie, whose name was given to the famous Bowie knife (knives naturally have a big role in the movie, including the forging of the first true Bowie knife). But what works best is the sense of period sets and time-travel to pre-Civil War Louisiana. The romance isn't highly romantic, and the plot is generally stiff, but it is a kind of history story come to life. If you overlook the obvious liberties and gaffes, it's not an unwatchable movie, just a routine one. Alan Ladd, it must be said, is a little cool even for Alan Ladd (an understated actor).
The film does lay out the gradual shift in cultivation of the South to cotton farming, and brings out lots of old rules like the fact divorce was impossible in Louisiana without an act of the legislature. People interested in this certain kind of movie making, for its own sake, should check out "Drums Along the Mohawk" (a better movie by far, but with a similar feel somehow). Here, the camera-work by the talented John Seitz is strangely dull (though it is in true Technicolor), and the scored music by the incomparable Max Steiner is straight up functional. Most of all, the many ordinary parts are put together without great art or intensity.
- secondtake
- 16 jun 2010
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- How long is The Iron Mistress?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Duración1 hora 50 minutos
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1
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By what name was La novia de acero (1952) officially released in India in English?
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