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Buffalo Bill

His adventure made him a hero.His showmanship made him a legend.
1944 | 90m | English

(1803 votes)

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Popularity: 3 (history)

Details

Scout William F. Cody (Joel McCrea) marries a U.S. senator's daughter (Maureen O'Hara), fights the Cheyenne and leads a Wild West show.
Release Date: Apr 02, 1944
Director: William A. Wellman
Writer: Frank Winch, Æneas MacKenzie, Clements Ripley, Cecile Kramer
Genres: Action, Drama, Western
Keywords historical fiction, buffalo bill
Production Companies 20th Century Fox
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Aug 03, 2024
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Joel McCrea William Frederick 'Buffalo Bill' Cody
Maureen O'Hara Louisa Frederici
Linda Darnell Dawn Starlight
Thomas Mitchell Ned Buntline
Edgar Buchanan Sgt. Chips McGraw
Anthony Quinn Chief Yellow Hand
Moroni Olsen Sen. Frederici
Frank Fenton Murdo Carvell
Matt Briggs General Blazier
George Lessey Mr. Schyler Vandervere
Sidney Blackmer Theodore Roosevelt (uncredited)
Evelyn Beresford Queen Victoria (uncredited)
Name Job
William A. Wellman Director
Frank Winch Story
Æneas MacKenzie Screenplay
Clements Ripley Screenplay
Cecile Kramer Screenplay
David Buttolph Music
Leon Shamroy Director of Photography
James B. Clark Editor
James Basevi Art Direction
Lewis H. Creber Art Direction
Thomas Little Set Decoration
René Hubert Costume Design
Guy Pearce Makeup Artist
Name Title
Darryl F. Zanuck Executive Producer
Harry Sherman Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


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Reviews

John Chard
7.0

Buffalo and Bison, Bison and Buffalo. Buffalo Bill is directed by William A. Wellman and collectively written by Aeneas MacKenzie, Clements Ripley, Cecile Kramer and Frank Winch. It stars Joel McCrea, Maureen O’Hara, Linda Darnell, Anthony Quinn, Thomas Mitchell and Edgar Buchanan. A Technicolor ... production out of 20th Century Fox, with music by David Buttolph and cinematography by Leon Shamroy. The Sioux and the Cheyenne must strike together. No history lessons to be learned here, just the core essence of one William F. Cody and his life trajectory is used for entertainment purpose. Which if history is not what you are after, makes this a grandish production worth spending time with. 99% of the pic is given to his time out on the ranges as a pioneer, his romance with Louisa Frederici, and his political movements. His move into the Wild West showmanship that he would become famous for, is sadly dealt with in what is little more than a coda at story’s end. Damn the East! As the story arc moves into the Indian War territory, this lets Wellman show his skills as a constructor of action sequences. The Sioux and the Cheyenne have joined forces and in spite of the arrogant claims by the army suits that the War will be over in a week, it proves to be anything but that. The battle here is that of Warbonnet Creek (AKA: Hat Creek), and it’s brilliantly crafted by Wellman and his team, the highlight of the pic for sure, and a merciful change in direction after previously we had witnessed some on screen Buffalo killings, which while not shying from the reality of that moment in history, is still upsetting and tough to watch. I don't hold with General Sherman that a good Indian is a dead Indian. Other notable tech accomplishments are attained by Buttolph and Shamroy’s respective work, while Wellman continues his fine direction with some nifty locomotive sequences. Acting wise the performances are just about good enough. McCrea and Quinn as Buffalo Bill and Yellow Hand (AKA: Yellow Hair) respectively, have the required amount of machismo and emotional fortitude to make the roles work, and crucially they convince in action scenes. O’Hara and Darnell get poorly written roles, but both are radiantly beautiful and costumed up to the nines, whilst Mitchell and Buchanan are solid as usual. Lively, colourful, emotional and fanciful, good entertainment for the Western movie lover, but maybe not the Western purists. 7/10

May 16, 2024