12 reviews
The skies of Montana are red because of forest fires and this film is about the men who jump into those fires to put them out. Red Skies Of Montana's main feature is the on location cinematography in Missoula, Montana in a national park of the smoke jumpers who go in from the air like paratroopers to contain and then extinguish forest fires.
Sad to say the film is tied to a rather pedestrian plot situation. Joe Sawyer who is a veteran smoke jumper is among many killed when they're caught in a fire that springs up and overwhelms the men of Richard Widmark's crew. Widmark is the only one who survives, he's rescued by head smoke jumper Richard Boone. Widmark is suffering burns and a bad case of amnesia as to what happened.
Of course there is an inquiry, but that does not satisfy young Jeffrey Hunter who is Sawyer's son and who believes Widmark personally culpable for Sawyer's death. That's the basis for the conflict in the film and if you're any kind of veteran film watcher you know how this will resolve itself.
But the incredible location cinematography done in color and with newsreel footage of men actually fighting the fires is the main feature of Red Skies Of Montana. Some of the best you'll ever see. I'm really surprised the Motion Picture Academy did not recognize this film for both editing and color cinematography.
To see a good film about some brave men who now include women in their ranks by all means see Red Skies Of Montana.
Sad to say the film is tied to a rather pedestrian plot situation. Joe Sawyer who is a veteran smoke jumper is among many killed when they're caught in a fire that springs up and overwhelms the men of Richard Widmark's crew. Widmark is the only one who survives, he's rescued by head smoke jumper Richard Boone. Widmark is suffering burns and a bad case of amnesia as to what happened.
Of course there is an inquiry, but that does not satisfy young Jeffrey Hunter who is Sawyer's son and who believes Widmark personally culpable for Sawyer's death. That's the basis for the conflict in the film and if you're any kind of veteran film watcher you know how this will resolve itself.
But the incredible location cinematography done in color and with newsreel footage of men actually fighting the fires is the main feature of Red Skies Of Montana. Some of the best you'll ever see. I'm really surprised the Motion Picture Academy did not recognize this film for both editing and color cinematography.
To see a good film about some brave men who now include women in their ranks by all means see Red Skies Of Montana.
- bkoganbing
- Jul 31, 2010
- Permalink
This film is about the smoke-jumping U. S. Forestry Service firefighters whose dangerous profession centers on the timberlands of the American Northwest. In the leading roles are Richard Widmark, Jeffrey Hunter, Richard Boone and the lovely and beautiful Constance Smith. Widmark and Boone were the studio's tough action performers of the early fifties, and handsome, blue-eyed young Hunter in 1952, as likely a prospect for glamour stardom.
A very young Charles Bronson has a uncredited bit role in this male-oriented story. This was his 5th film he had made in Hollywood and his 1st color one. Once again Bronson/Buchinsky helps decorate the mountain wilderness location with his steely-eyed macho image while rubbing shoulders with and learning the working habits of some of Hollywood"s top professionals. He apparently became good friends with Richard Boone. Bronson guest starred on Boone's Have Gun Will Travel TV series several times and Bronson also guest starred on Medic which Boone hosted. They would work together in another film 10years later in A Thunder of Drums in 1961.
Fox executives were very nervous about Red Skies of Montana, a title they felt was more suggestive of a Roy Rogers-Dale Evans Western than the very respectable action-adventure yarn this film was. In some areas , they called it Smoke Jumpers, a no-nonsense title that The New York Times actually ran its review under.
A very young Charles Bronson has a uncredited bit role in this male-oriented story. This was his 5th film he had made in Hollywood and his 1st color one. Once again Bronson/Buchinsky helps decorate the mountain wilderness location with his steely-eyed macho image while rubbing shoulders with and learning the working habits of some of Hollywood"s top professionals. He apparently became good friends with Richard Boone. Bronson guest starred on Boone's Have Gun Will Travel TV series several times and Bronson also guest starred on Medic which Boone hosted. They would work together in another film 10years later in A Thunder of Drums in 1961.
Fox executives were very nervous about Red Skies of Montana, a title they felt was more suggestive of a Roy Rogers-Dale Evans Western than the very respectable action-adventure yarn this film was. In some areas , they called it Smoke Jumpers, a no-nonsense title that The New York Times actually ran its review under.
- gattonero975
- Jun 5, 2021
- Permalink
"Red Skies of Montana" is all about a group of firefighters who battle forest fires. Soon after the story begins, Cliff Mason (Richard Widmark) leads a crew to battle a fire and the fire turns and soon their lives are in danger...and presumed lost. However, when a rescue party arrives later, they find a survivor. Mason, dazed in incoherent, is stumbling about the rubble and brought back to camp. Not surprisingly, he has little recollection of the incident and cannot recall how he managed to survive when his coworkers perished.
Now the notion of how Mason copes with this situation could have been very interesting. Survivor Guilt and PTSD are interesting topics and were almost never talked about in 1952. However, the film choses to go a completely different direction. Instead of focusing on Mason's mental health, they introduce a new recruit, Ed Miller (Jeffery Hunter)...the son of one of the dead firefighters. This young man blames Mason for the deaths, even though this isn't rational and there isn't any evidence Mason was responsible. To make things worse, it's odd that they allowed Mason and Miller to work together with such animosity. As a result, the film becomes more a routine programmer than a film which seriously deals with trauma. Still, it's not a bad film....but one that could have been a lot better had they made the focus more on Mason and less on the annoyed son.
Now the notion of how Mason copes with this situation could have been very interesting. Survivor Guilt and PTSD are interesting topics and were almost never talked about in 1952. However, the film choses to go a completely different direction. Instead of focusing on Mason's mental health, they introduce a new recruit, Ed Miller (Jeffery Hunter)...the son of one of the dead firefighters. This young man blames Mason for the deaths, even though this isn't rational and there isn't any evidence Mason was responsible. To make things worse, it's odd that they allowed Mason and Miller to work together with such animosity. As a result, the film becomes more a routine programmer than a film which seriously deals with trauma. Still, it's not a bad film....but one that could have been a lot better had they made the focus more on Mason and less on the annoyed son.
- planktonrules
- May 4, 2023
- Permalink
Red Skies of Montana is one of a series of outstanding adventure films in which Richard Widmark starred during the 1950's. It portrays the dangerous lives of smoke jumpers, who fight fires in the great northwest by parachuting into the flames. Richard Widmark is a team leader, under suspicion after he is the sole survivor from a group of smoke jumpers killed in a massive fire. He can remember nothing of event, yet must resume life amidst the doubts of his comrades. The film adeptly the blends personal lives of the men and women involved, excellent firefighting action, and the suspense created by Richard Widmark's flashbacks of his near fatal event. Jeffrey Hunter plays the vengeful son of one of Widmark's slain team; and Richard Boone adds dimension as the stern, professional commander of the unit. This film is utterly believable. The fire scenes are awesome. Red Skies of Montana portrays a lifestyle that needs no "over the top" fiction or outlandish action to make it thrilling. I think this is a timeless film, and a truly entertaining one. And if you do enjoy it, I recommend "Destination Gobi"; another outstanding Widmark adventure.
This film is very loosely based upon an actual event known among smokejumpers -- and the entire state of Montana -- as the Mann Gulch tragedy, in which 12 out of 15 smokejumpers were burned to death. Norman Maclean, author of "A River Runs Through It" and a resident of Missoula, Montana, home to the first smokejumpers and now the principal school for them, spent the last 13 years of his life research the event, in incredible detail, and writing an utterly fascinating book, "Young Men and Fire", which I heartily recommend.
Obviously, since the book was not published until after Maclean's death in 1990, it was not the basis for the movie, but the event was.
I first saw it in a fund-raising presentation in the Wilma, an old Art Deco theater in Missoula, coincidently sitting beside a student from the Smokejumper Center. His attention was rapt. The funds, BTW, were used to recover and restore the actual DC-3 that carried the Mann Gulch smokejumpers.
There is an account of the presentations made at the 2004 National Smokejumpers Association reunion by the spotter (gives the "go" signal, on board the aircraft), the dispatcher, and one of the survivors from the Mann Gulch tragedy, found on the University of Montana Web site, at www2.umt.edu/comm/f04/airplanes.shtml. It's short but intense, and will give you an appreciation of what happened. Then the book . . .
In electing to give this a 9, I've taken into account the technology available and the style of movie making and acting of the times. I would say the acting would rank significantly lower by today's standards. But it is well worth watching.
Obviously, since the book was not published until after Maclean's death in 1990, it was not the basis for the movie, but the event was.
I first saw it in a fund-raising presentation in the Wilma, an old Art Deco theater in Missoula, coincidently sitting beside a student from the Smokejumper Center. His attention was rapt. The funds, BTW, were used to recover and restore the actual DC-3 that carried the Mann Gulch smokejumpers.
There is an account of the presentations made at the 2004 National Smokejumpers Association reunion by the spotter (gives the "go" signal, on board the aircraft), the dispatcher, and one of the survivors from the Mann Gulch tragedy, found on the University of Montana Web site, at www2.umt.edu/comm/f04/airplanes.shtml. It's short but intense, and will give you an appreciation of what happened. Then the book . . .
In electing to give this a 9, I've taken into account the technology available and the style of movie making and acting of the times. I would say the acting would rank significantly lower by today's standards. But it is well worth watching.
This action adventure film is still another great opportunity for Richard Widmark to display his great acting talent.
In this very good film, he leads men into fighting forest fires in the Montana-Idaho areas.
When tragedy strikes, a disoriented Widmark can't remember what has transpired. The film provides a wonderful supporting performance by Jeffrey Hunter, a fellow fire-fighter, who lost his father in the blaze. A suspicious Hunter feels that Widmark ran out on his men.
The film shows what these men have to go through in fighting such dangerous fires.
Heroism is the order of the day and Widmark and company respond valiantly.
In this very good film, he leads men into fighting forest fires in the Montana-Idaho areas.
When tragedy strikes, a disoriented Widmark can't remember what has transpired. The film provides a wonderful supporting performance by Jeffrey Hunter, a fellow fire-fighter, who lost his father in the blaze. A suspicious Hunter feels that Widmark ran out on his men.
The film shows what these men have to go through in fighting such dangerous fires.
Heroism is the order of the day and Widmark and company respond valiantly.
This film is based on an actual event, the Mann Gulch Fire, documented by the late Norman MacLean in his deeply moving book, "Young Men and Fire", where a team of smoke jumpers landed, confidently, on a hillside but were suddenly confronted by a firestorm, chasing them up a steep hill. One of the group, the team leader, lit a grass fire, jumped into the ashes, and survived. All but two of his comrades were burned to death in their futile attempt to escape.
MacClean wrote his book in his last years. He actually saw the Mann Gulch fire as a younger man, I would recommend this book to anyone. There are no braver people in the world than smoke jumpers.
MacClean wrote his book in his last years. He actually saw the Mann Gulch fire as a younger man, I would recommend this book to anyone. There are no braver people in the world than smoke jumpers.
- jspotter1950
- Jan 31, 2007
- Permalink
I was a kid, when it first appeared on "Saturday Night at the Movies" in the early sixties. Sat and watched it with my sister and mom. Haven't seen it listed much since then, and certainly not recently. This and the movie "The Halls of Montezuma" made me a Richard Widmark fan. And Jeffrey Hunter was a favorite as well. Made in 1952, the year of my birth, I remember it for its vivid color and mountainous beauty. Yesterday's (June 30, 2013) announcement of the death of 19 smoke-jumpers in Arizona had me spot on with the memory of "The Red Skies of Montana"! Got the name, the stars, and year of release all correct. Now, that's an impressive movie. I highly recommend it.
- jrcumminsjr
- Jun 30, 2013
- Permalink
I would say that Red Skies of Montana is a good show, but it's better than good, it is a classic and well worth the time to watch it if you can find it. It rarely shows on T.V. anymore and I can't seem to find any rental or purchasable copy anywhere. When you watch it remember it was made back before computer enhancement so when you see it getting hot it may be faked but it's faked with fire not some digitalized fakerooney of a fire, some of the antique equipment is worth watching too if you are a Wildland Firefighter there are some that no longer exist and look like they should be brought back for use today. Especially the trailmaker thingy that scuffs the dirt and tosses it aside to help smother the fire along the line of travel, cool machine. ***** (that's as close as I can get to 5 stars).
- Deputyj357
- Nov 21, 2004
- Permalink
The movie essentially focuses on the documentary side :how the fire fighters worked in the fifties,how they often risked their lives (still do today)and how(sometimes) they were unjustly accused of cowardice .their relatives are not forgotten :Widmark's wife and Hunter's mom are present and are even together when they are waiting for their men to come back after a dangerous mission.
The plot concerns a fire fighter who suffers from amnesia:he does not remember what happened during a mission in which all his men were killed:a man among them was the father of a young fire fighter who cannot forgive him because he thinks he abandoned his men to save his life.Without any flashback,we do understand the whole thing during the final mission ,much to the credit of the film.
The plot concerns a fire fighter who suffers from amnesia:he does not remember what happened during a mission in which all his men were killed:a man among them was the father of a young fire fighter who cannot forgive him because he thinks he abandoned his men to save his life.Without any flashback,we do understand the whole thing during the final mission ,much to the credit of the film.
- dbdumonteil
- Jan 1, 2012
- Permalink
- lexyladyjax
- Nov 2, 2011
- Permalink
'Red Skies of Montana' is a loose adaptation of George R. Stewart's book 'Fire.' After Stewart sold the rights to Hollywood, the story was so altered that it bore absolutely no resemblance to the book. A fourth rate movie, to be sure. Read the original book - it is a much better use of your time.