IMDb RATING
6.6/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
A romanticized biography of the famous sharpshooter.A romanticized biography of the famous sharpshooter.A romanticized biography of the famous sharpshooter.
Chief Thunderbird
- Chief Sitting Bull
- (as Chief Thunder Bird)
Ernie Adams
- Wrangler at Buffalo Bill's Show
- (uncredited)
Richard Alexander
- Crown Prince Wilhelm
- (uncredited)
Philip Armenta
- Rain-in-the-Face
- (uncredited)
Frank Austin
- Friend of Lem
- (uncredited)
Brooks Benedict
- Man in Saloon
- (uncredited)
Willie Best
- Second Cook
- (uncredited)
Stanley Blystone
- Shooting Match Judge
- (uncredited)
Eddie Borden
- Man at Shooting Contest
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaReleased less than 10 years after the death of the real Annie Oakley.
- GoofsIn the movie, during the European tour, Annie shoots a cigarette out of the mouth of Crown Prince Wilhelm of Germany (later to become Germany's Kaiser). There was such an incident, but Annie didn't shoot the cigarette out of Wilhelm's mouth due to the danger but shot it out of his hand instead. During WWI Annie, reminisced that if she could do it over she'd let him put it in his mouth and then miss.
- Quotes
Toby Walker: Well dog my cats!
- Crazy creditsOpening credits prologue: No fiction is stranger than the actual life of Annie Oakley who came out of a backwoods village half a century ago to astonish the world.
- Alternate versionsAlso available in a computer colorized version.
- ConnectionsEdited into Yodelin' Kid from Pine Ridge (1937)
Featured review
George Stevens directs this biography on the early career of sharp-shooter Annie Oakley as if it were a star-crossed lovers' tale, replete with heartache and self-sacrifice. Backwoods girl from Ohio in the 1890s enters a shooting contest against world's champion Toby Walker and nearly beats him; this leads to a co-starring spot in Buffalo Bill's traveling western show, where the primrose gal becomes a star and falls in love with competitor Walker. Barbara Stanwyck was born to play Annie Oakley, yet her performance isn't the raucous hoot one might expect (this is director Stevens' fault, who lingers on Annie's sympathy and compassion for others so long, it makes her seem like a bleeding-heart). Still, Stanwyck is the reason to watch, and she's best in the film's first-half--when Annie still has a little gumshun in her and playful self-assurance. Stevens seems more interested in the budding love story between Oakley and Walker than in creating an actual document of Oakley's colorful life (which we are told at the start was stranger than any fiction). Certainly a good try, with funny bits of business happening along the sidelines and plenty of blustery character actors in support. **1/2 from ****
- moonspinner55
- Apr 5, 2010
- Permalink
Details
- Runtime1 hour 30 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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