Lone Star

The Battle for Texas and the Battle of the Sexes!

5.6
19521h 34m

Rip-roaring big star, big budget semi-historical story about cattle baron Devereaux Burke, who is enlisted by an aging Andrew Jackson to dissuade Sam Houston from establishing Texas as a republic. Burke must fight state senator Thomas Craden, in the process winning the heart of Craden's newspaper-editor girlfriend Martha Ronda.

Production

Logo for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

Available For Free On

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Cast

Photo of Clark Gable

Clark Gable

Devereaux Burke

Photo of Ava Gardner

Ava Gardner

Martha Ronda

Photo of Broderick Crawford

Broderick Crawford

Thomas Craden

Photo of Lionel Barrymore

Lionel Barrymore

Andrew Jackson

Photo of Beulah Bondi

Beulah Bondi

Minniver Bryan

Photo of Ed Begley

Ed Begley

Anthony Demmet

Photo of James Burke

James Burke

Luther Kilgore

Photo of William Farnum

William Farnum

Tom Crockett

Photo of Lowell Gilmore

Lowell Gilmore

Captain Elliott

Photo of Moroni Olsen

Moroni Olsen

Sam Houston

Photo of Russell Simpson

Russell Simpson

Maynard Cole

Photo of George Hamilton

George Hamilton

Noah (uncredited)

Photo of Emmett Lynn

Emmett Lynn

Josh, Printer

Photo of Charles Sherlock

Charles Sherlock

Senator (uncredited)

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Reviews

J

John Chard

6/10

I'm frightened. For the first time in my life, I am frightened for the future of the United States.

1845 Texas, Independent, survived Alamo, Goliad and San Jacinto ... But Annexation?

Quite often the joy in being a fan of genre film making, in this case Westerns/Southerns et al, is that a pic can coerce you into reading up on real instances. Thus making this particular picture a requisite requirement for literature delving.

Directed by Vincent Sherman and written by Borden Chase (who would supposedly be irked by the depiction of his writing) and Howard Estabrook, Lone Star comes off as an "A" list film given "B" list production values. Nothing wrong with cast performances, Gable still has charisma in his fifties, Gardner oozes sexuality and Crawford dominates like a great presence should. However, it looks stagy, is overly talky as the makers try to make a politico pot boiler out of a sow's behind, while the action - in spite of a grandiose battering ram finale - just doesn't have an oomph factor.

Romantic love triangle feels pointless in the context of such historical filmic tellings, but this is off set by the Sam Houston and Native American splinter of the narrative. Rendering this as a frustrating whole, not without merits, and above average for sure, but difficult to recommend as one to seek out as a must. 6/10

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