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Paint Your Wagon Poster

Paint Your Wagon

Stake Your Claim To The Musical Goldmine of '69!
1969 | 164m | English

(15830 votes)

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Popularity: 3 (history)

Details

A Michigan farmer and a prospector form a partnership in the California gold country. Their adventures include buying and sharing a wife, hijacking a stage, kidnapping six prostitutes, and turning their mining camp into a boom town. Along the way there is plenty of drinking, gambling, and singing. They even find time to do some creative gold mining.
Release Date: Oct 15, 1969
Director: Joshua Logan
Writer: Alan Jay Lerner, Paddy Chayefsky
Genres: Comedy, Music, Western
Keywords mining, polyamory, prospector
Production Companies Paramount Pictures, Malpaso Productions, Alan Jay Lerner Productions
Box Office Revenue: $31,678,778
Budget: $20,000,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Lee Marvin Ben Rumson
Clint Eastwood "Pardner"
Jean Seberg Elizabeth Woodling
Ray Walston "Mad Jack" Duncan
Harve Presnell "Rotten Luck Willie"
Tom Ligon Horton Fenty
Alan Dexter Parson
Terry Jenkins Joe Mooney
Paula Trueman Mrs. Fenty
H.B. Haggerty Steve Bull
Benny Baker Haywood Holbrook
William O'Connell Horace Tabor
Geoffrey Norman Foster
Robert Easton Ezra Atwell
Alan Baxter Mr. Fenty
Karl Bruck Schermerhorn
John Mitchum Jacob Woodling
Sue Casey Sarah Woodling
Eddie Little Sky Indian
Harvey Parry Higgins
H.W. Gim Wong
William Mims Frock-Coated Man
Roy Jenson Hennessey
Patrick Hawley Clendennon
Tony Colti Miner (uncredited)
Roger Herren Miner (uncredited)
Name Job
Alan Jay Lerner Lyricist, Musical, Screenplay
William A. Fraker Director of Photography
Larry Hampton Special Effects
Joe Smith Gaffer
Loyal Griggs Second Unit Cinematographer
Joseph J. Lilley Music Consultant, Music Arranger
Joseph Curtis Dialogue Coach
Frank McCoy Makeup Artist
Carl Braunger Art Direction
Nelson Tyler Aerial Camera
Tom May Key Grip
Bill Jobe Costume Supervisor
Tom Shaw Second Unit Director
Ruth Santarone Catering
Frederick Loewe Songs, Music
Robert C. Jones Editor
John Truscott Production Design, Costume Design
Anne Laune Costume Coordinator
Jonas Halperin Producer's Assistant
Cheryl Crawford Other
Bobby Byrne Assistant Camera
David M. Walsh Camera Operator
Maurice Ayers Special Effects
Marshall J. Wolins Script Supervisor
David Stone Martin Title Designer
Roger Wagner Conductor
Carl Beringer Production Manager
Alfred Schultz Transportation Coordinator
Willard Jones Orchestrator
Robert Eaton Props
Jack Baker Choreographer
Jack Roe First Assistant Director
James L. Berkey Set Decoration
Fred Lemoine Second Unit Director, Production Manager
Al Murphy Second Unit First Assistant Director
Vivienne Walker Hairdresser
Gene Levy Production Coordinator
Fred Hynes Recording Supervision
Dominic Santarone Catering
Joshua Logan Director
Paddy Chayefsky Adaptation
William Randall Jr. Sound Mixer
Nelson Riddle Original Music Composer, Conductor
André Previn Additional Music
Dar Robinson Stunts
Bob Herron Stunts
Name Title
Tom Shaw Associate Producer
Alan Jay Lerner Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 18 24 12
2024 5 20 29 12
2024 6 18 37 10
2024 7 21 36 12
2024 8 17 29 10
2024 9 15 23 8
2024 10 17 42 9
2024 11 13 20 8
2024 12 14 22 9
2025 1 12 18 9
2025 2 9 15 3
2025 3 5 14 1
2025 4 1 1 1
2025 5 1 1 1
2025 6 1 1 1
2025 7 1 4 1
2025 8 1 2 1
2025 9 2 3 1
2025 10 2 3 1

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Reviews

PoodleDaddy
N/A

Paint Your Wagon is a classic musical set in the mountains of California. A Great cast and pure entertainment. Despite the generally silly plot, the movie provides fun spirited viewing. Besides who knew that Clint Eastwood could sing (well sort of). ...

Jun 23, 2021
r96sk
5.0

2hrs 40mins... 160 whole minutes... Why? What an absolute bore, and a waste, <em>'Paint Your Wagon'</em> turns into. Why did they make this so long? The plot needn't be that extended, the music doesn't carry it either. It has a few decent parts, but they are surrounded by excess fat. Lee Marvi ... n, Clint Eastwood and Jean Seberg stopped me from hating this, I will say, because that trio are all solid despite the aforementioned. It's amusing, at first anyway, to see Marvin and Eastwood sing, as they aren't the types you'd expect to do so. I'm not saying they can sing per se, but it's comically positive - which is the film's intentional, after all. I wish it was shorter, you could easily take an hour off this and not lose anything. It's a right drag, unfortunately.

Jan 13, 2022
Geronimo1967
6.0

This is a fine adaptation of Lerner & Loewe's tale of the escapades of two prospectors on the hunt for gold, whisky and a wife... Clint Eastwood, the slightly more sophisticated tea-totaller, is actually quite a revelation as "Pardner"; yep - he can actually hold a tune alongside the wonderfully cur ... mudgeonly Lee Marvin "Ben Rumson". When a Mormon gent arrives in "No Name City" he decides to auction one of his wives; Marvin makes a purchase and soon there is an uniquely amicable little ménage à trois going on with "their" wife Jean Seberg - the no-nonsense "Elizabeth". The story does take quite a while to get going, but the three principals with the help of some wonderful orchestrations (Nelson Riddle at the helm) of "Wandrin' Star"; "They Call the Wind Maria" & "I Talk to the Trees" all deliver really rather well (if, perhaps not quite so tunefully by Marvin). The actors are having great fun amongst the rain, mud and poverty - and that fun can at times be quite contagious; there are some really enjoyable ensemble scenes/numbers too. The story is, however, strung out far too thinly over what seemed like an age and though there are some quite pithy one liners, the comedy is equally sparsely distributed throughout this all but three hour film. The last ten minutes are quite an achievement for the scenery/props folks as we almost end up where we started... It's entertaining fun....

Jun 03, 2023