Movie Reviews for The Big Trees

The Big Trees

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Movie Reviews of The Big Trees

Movie Review: You like me, don't you?
Summary: 3 Stars

THE BIG TREES starts out with a great deal of promise - Kirk Douglas stars as Jim Fallon, a Wisconsin timber baron who plans to take advantage of a new law that will allow him to `harvest' California's giant sequoias and make a fortune in the process.
The movie opens in Wisconsin where Fallon is facing down a growling work crew. The pay is late, again, and the men have just about had it. Drawing on his deep well of nerve and blarney and charm, as well as a well-timed gunshot from soon-to-be sidekick `Yukon' Burns (Edgar Buchanan), Fallon not only avoids a bloody mutiny but he even manages to talk the crew into migrating to California where, seemingly, money does indeed grow on trees.
So far so good. THE BIG TREES might be a cut above. The first scene in California (the movie was filmed in Orlick) has Fallon and Yukon measuring the diameter of a giant redwood. It measures out at twenty-eight feet, and the scene is only slightly jarred by the shadow of the camera and boom during this attractive tracking shot.
The hitch in Fallon's plans take the form of Friends, or Quakers, who regard the ancient redwoods as sacred objects. They hold their religious services outdoors, nestled in this majestic sequoia cathedral. Nestled in the bosom of the Quaker community is the beautiful Alicia Chadwick (Eve Miller) (the dvd biography on Miller tells us she was a Playmate of the Month a couple years after THE BIG TREES was released.)
Love trumps Greed and, the last time I looked, Beauty is batting 1.000 against the Beast. Fallon doesn't stand a chance, but before this movie loses all momentum and devolves into a group tree-hug a second group of lumber hungry sociopaths make their presence felt.
It's about then that THE BIG TREES took a big turn and morphed into a Starched Shirt western. Characters chop down trees and wrestle the bad guy on a shaky rope bridge spanning a deep gorge and then show up in the next scene in a spotlessly clean starched shirt. The last half of this movie is corny and formulaic, and betrays the promising start.
Still and all THE BIG TREES is entertaining, well-acted, and good looking.

Movie Review: Good old Kirk...good or bad...he's always fun to watch
Summary: 3 Stars

Kirk Douglas is a real actor considering the crap we get these days that dont
like to get dirty and please not too physical...they might break a nail.
So old movies are not as thrilling as today's special effect movies...but old
movies had something special....real actors ...who actually had to work for a living.
Anyway, in this film we have Kirk as a bad guy, good with his twisted tongue to
keep his workers interested in the big money comming from chopping down the
biggest trees which reside on land that have a Religious bunch living on it.
So who gets the trees....Kirk...the religious community..or others who wants in.
I guess you will have to watch this film to know the ending.
I would like to mention that the choosen music for the first portion of the film
is very good...i was so surprised......ahhh old films.....get better with age...
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