The Virginian backdrop
The Virginian

The Virginian

The All-Time Best-Selling Love Story of the West... Now On the Screen In Spectacular Technicolor!

6.2 / 1019461h 27m

Synopsis

Arriving at Medicine Bow, eastern schoolteacher Molly Woods meets two cowboys, irresponsible Steve and the "Virginian," who gets off on the wrong foot with her. To add to his troubles, the Virginian finds that his old pal Steve is mixed up with black-hatted Trampas and his rustlers...then finds himself at the head of a posse after said rustlers; and Molly hates the violent side of frontier life.

Genre: Western

Status: Released

Director: Stuart Gilmore

Website:

Main Cast

Joel McCrea

Joel McCrea

The Virginian

Brian Donlevy

Brian Donlevy

Trampas

Sonny Tufts

Sonny Tufts

Steve Andrews

Barbara Britton

Barbara Britton

Molly Wood

William Frawley

William Frawley

Honey Wiggen

Fay Bainter

Fay Bainter

Mrs. Taylor

Henry O'Neill

Henry O'Neill

Mr. Taylor

Tom Tully

Tom Tully

Nebraska

Bill Edwards

Bill Edwards

Sam Bennett

Paul Guilfoyle

Paul Guilfoyle

Shorty

Trailer

User Reviews

CinemaSerf

To give her her due, "Molly" (Barbara Britton) is full of vim and vigour as she arrives at a remote outpost town to take up a post teaching it's kids. The law has yet to arrive in this place, so they have their own hands-on approach to those who break their fairly simple rules. That's the start of her problems as she meets "Steve" (Sonny Tufts) and the enigmatically monikered "Virginian" (Joel McCrea). The former is mixed up with some castle rustlers and their leader "Trampas" (Brian Donlevy) whilst the latter has been charged with clearing these criminals out of town. He and "Steve" are friends of old, and he even warns his pal to stop putting fake brands on the cattle, but in the end you just know that it's all going to come down to a reckoning with "Trampas" and his men. There is something disappointingly pedestrian about this whole ninety minutes. McCrae just isn't at the races and the black-clad Donlevy is about as menacing as "Daffy Duck" as he waddles about the saloon in as unmenacingly fashion as possible. The story ebbs and and flows in a predicable fashion but there's nowhere near enough action to engage, and what there is tends to fall flat as we head to a really quite lacklustre denouement that has as much to do with a stray horse as it has with any of the acting talent. Perhaps colour wasn't it's best friend here, either, as it might have looked better in monochrome - at least that might have engender some slight sense of menace, but as it is this is a disappointing B-effort with very little buzz.