The Shepherd of the Hills (1941 film) explained

The Shepherd of the Hills
Director:Henry Hathaway
Producer:Jack Moss
Screenplay:
Starring:
Music:Gerard Carbonara
Cinematography:
Editing:Ellsworth Hoagland
Studio:Paramount Pictures
Distributor:Paramount Pictures
Runtime:98 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

The Shepherd of the Hills is a 1941 American drama film starring John Wayne, Betty Field and Harry Carey.[1] The supporting cast includes Beulah Bondi, Ward Bond, Marjorie Main and John Qualen. The picture was Wayne's first film in Technicolor and was based on the novel of the same name by Harold Bell Wright. The director was Henry Hathaway, who directed several other Wayne films including True Grit almost three decades later.

The story was filmed previously in the silent era by author Wright, in 1919, released on State Rights basis. It was filmed again in The Shepherd of the Hills (1928 film), starring Molly O'Day at First National Pictures, and later, in color in 1964.

The film also features two uncredited pieces of music. The first is used as a leit motif to represent the spirit of Young Matt's deceased mother: the Wiegenlied ("Guten Abend, gut' Nacht" [1868]) of Johannes Brahms, commonly known in English as the Brahms Lullaby. The second uncredited composition was "There's A Happy Hunting Ground," words and music by Sam Coslow, sung by "Fuzzy" Knight, accompanied by an a cappella onscreen chorus in multi-voiced harmony; the song is sung again by the chorus alone over the closing credits.

Cast

Production

Filming took place in Big Bear Lake and Moon Ridge, California.[2]

Critical Assessment

Literary critic Kingsley Canham reports that The Shepherd of the Hills is considered the best of the director’s “mountain feud” films dealing with inter-family conflicts in rural settings. The movie is the first of Hathaway’s six pictures to star John Wayne.[3]

Differences from the novel

Only a few plot elements and characters from the novel are used in the 1941 film, and those are depicted differently, so it is basically a different story.

While the novel interposed fiction with portrayals of actual persons residing in the Missouri Ozarks, in the early Branson area, the film departed markedly from the book's presentations. Old Matt, a patriarch, mill owner and influential person within the community, is presented in the film as a doddering fool, henpecked by his wife, Aunt Mollie. In the novel she's a nurturing, kindly, loyal wife and friend, but in this film she is a shrill, nasty moonshiner. The "Shepherd" of the title, a cultured, sympathetic visitor from Chicago who contributes positively to the society he's visiting, in this film is an aging ex-convict. In total odds with the book, he is here Young Matt's (John Wayne's) messianic father, with a shootout perpetrated by "Big John." Other characters differ as markedly from Wright's novel.

See also

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Shepherd of the Hills . September 28, 2016 . New York Times.
  2. Web site: AFI Catalog of Feature Films. Los Angeles, California. American Film Institute. The Shepherd of the Hills. April 5, 2020.
  3. Canham, 1973 p. 144, p. 148: “...John Wayne on six…” of his films.