The Big Trail (1930)

  • Year: 1930
  • Released: 01 Nov 1930
  • Country: United States
  • Adwords: 1 win
  • IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0020691/
  • Rotten Tomatoes: https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/The_Big_Trail
  • Available in: 720p,
  • Language: English
  • MPA Rating: Passed
  • Genre: Adventure, Romance, Western
  • Runtime: 125 min
  • Writer: Hal G. Evarts, Marie Boyle, Jack Peabody
  • Director: Raoul Walsh, Louis R. Loeffler
  • Cast: John Wayne, Marguerite Churchill, El Brendel
  • Keywords: 19th century, black and white, pre-code, mississippi river, wagon train,
7.1/10

The Big Trail Storyline

Breck leads a wagon train of pioneers through Indian attack, storms, deserts, swollen rivers, down cliffs and so on while looking for the murder of a trapper and falling in love with Ruth.

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The Big Trail Movie Reviews

What if someone made a western 20 years ahead of its time and nobody came?,

By 1930, Fox had already conquered making sound movies outdoors due to being an early adopter of sound on film versus sound on disc. Next they tried their hand at widescreen films. Known as 70mm Grandeur, Fox shot three films in this process, this film and two musicals – The Fox Movietone Follies of 1929 and Happy Days (1929). The process was successful, the business end of their widescreen process was not. Due to the Great Depression, theaters could not afford to install the equipment necessary to show films in the Grandeur process. It’s interesting to note that if sound itself had come into feature films in 1929 rather than 1927, that silent films would probably have been the majority of films made until 1940 for this same reason.

The Big Trail itself is a wonderfully modern-seeming western compared to other entries of the early sound era. It has an air of authenticity about it, as there is almost a documentary feel of the film in its depiction of harsh life on the Oregon Trail. Finally, there is the reason most people view this film – the birth of John Wayne’s cowboy persona, not a cartoon character with either a black or white hat as many actors in the early westerns were, but a character of flesh and blood whose motivations you could understand and empathize with. Also note the presence of Ward Bond in a supporting role who, along with John Wayne, was a staple of the later John Ford westerns.

Despite its technical beauty and the presence of John Wayne, this film flopped at the box office. John Wayne went back into obscurity and did not emerge again until nine years later in “Stagecoach”, where he played a part very similar to the one he plays here.

For 1930, this was a dandy Western

My giving this film a score of 8 is relative to other feature-length films from 1930. By the standards of films made just a few years later, this film might receive a score of only 6 or 7–mostly because the sound quality was so poor. Now it is possible that the film sounded better and the Fox Movie Channel did show a degraded print (it DID have a lot of lines and scratches), but I assume the sound problem was always an issue. That’s because sound in movies was still a novelty in 1930 and many of the Hollywood talking pictures of 1930 sounded terrible–with background characters often drowning out the leads, characters huddled together to make sure they are picked up by the microphones or inconsistent quality (such as what was seen in THE BISHOP MURDER CASE, HELL’S ANGELS and other films of the day). This was all made much worse in THE BIG TRAIL because most of the film was shot outside–something unheard of at the time. Quite an innovation but also something that really stretched the talents of the sound technicians! So, while the film was very hard to listen to, I realize that they had to start somewhere, so I can forgive this–especially since the outdoor scenes are breathtaking–a major innovation for 1930.

The plot is rather similar to CIMARRON–a Western that came out the following year and which captured the Oscar for Best Picture. Unfortunately, CIMARRON isn’t all that great a film and I actually like THE BIG TRAIL more due to the scope of the film. While some might balk at THE BIG TRAIL’s slow-moving pace, I saw it as a great history lesson about the hardships endured by those traveling West on wagon trains. Plus, the whole thing just looked so beautiful, as director Raoul Walsh went to significant trouble to film on location and THE BIG TRAIL looks almost like a film version of some Ansel Adams prints.

As for the acting, it was pretty good. This was a major break for young John Wayne–as his previous screen appearances were, at best, minor and unremarkable. Here, he was given the lead and did a dandy job–though he was obviously young and a little less “John Wayne-ish” than he was in later films, as his screen persona was not yet firmly established. Another interesting part was played by Tyrone Power II (Tyrone Power’s father). He looked nothing like his extremely handsome son and looked and sounded almost exactly like Bluto from the Popeye cartoons! He made very few sound films–dying just a year after making this film–so it’s a rare opportunity to see and hear this once famous actor.

Overall, the film is well worth seeing despite some sound problems and a few overly long scenes here and there. For 1930, it was a remarkable achievement–more so than the much more famous and award-winning CIMARRON made the following year. Much of the reason THE BIG TRAIL didn’t win an Oscar most likely was because ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT came out the same year and it is truly one of the great films.

Trailblazing,…..sort of

John Wayne is one of the few players in film history to have failed at his first big break and then succeed on the second time around. Of course everyone knows the second time was the classic Stagecoach with John Ford directing.

But we’re here to talk about The Big Trail. John Ford’s fellow director Raoul Walsh spotted this tall kid on the set of one of Ford’s films and thought he had potential. He wanted to make him the lead in a big budget western that Fox was planning to do. The film as planned would be an homage to the famous classic silent western The Covered Wagon.

In watching The Big Trail I was struck by how similar Wayne’s character of Breck Coleman here is to the Ringo Kid in Stagecoach. Both characters were likable young cowpokes, but both were also on a mission of vengeance. And of course both films were done on location and show the expense in making them. No studio product here with a backlot western set.

I also don’t think that it was an accident that Wayne got this break at the beginning of the sound era. Raoul Walsh, I’m guessing looked around Hollywood and probably didn’t think a whole lot of movie cowboys would have staying power in sound. That’s something else Walsh spotted in Wayne.

According to what I’ve read The Big Trail flopped because after spending all that money to make the film in an early wide screen process, some genius at Fox realized that their theaters weren’t equipped with the wide screen to show it. And when the Great Depression hit there would be no money to widen those screens at Fox movie houses. So The Big Trail got a limited release, even in what we would call a formatted version, and lost money big for Fox films.

Marguerite Churchill is fine as the crinoline heroine who Duke wins, loses and wins again from Ian Keith. Keith, Charles Stevens and F. Tyrone Power are the trio of villains Wayne has to deal with.

F. Tyrone Power is the father of the famous movie legend Tyrone Power. He was a big burly man with a grand background in classic roles on screen and on stage. I wouldn’t be surprised if his son who would have been 15 at the time might not have been hanging around the set.

Also look for Ward Bond though you might have trouble spotting him under a big bushy beard.

Watching The Big Trail now it is interesting to speculate where John Wayne’s career might have gone if The Big Trail had been a big hit.