Rooster Cogburn (1975)

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  • ROOSTER COGBURN


    DIRECTED BY STUART MILLER
    PRODUCED BY HAL B. WALLIS/ PAUL NATHAN
    A HAL B. WALLIS PRODUCTION
    UNIVERSAL PICTURES


    Photo with the courtesy of lasbugas


    INFORMATION FROM IMDb


    Plot Summary
    A small village in the Indian Nation that is run by a Minister Goodnight
    and his daughter Eula is overrun by a band of drunken thugs.
    They kill and rape the people of the village.
    Miss Goodnight then teams up with the ruthless Marshal Rooster J. Cogburn
    who goes after them and bring them to justice.


    Full Cast
    John Wayne .... Marshal Reuben J. 'Rooster' Cogburn
    Katharine Hepburn .... Eula Goodnight
    Anthony Zerbe .... Breed
    Richard Jordan .... Hawk
    John McIntire .... Judge Parker
    Richard Romancito .... Wolf
    Paul Koslo .... Luke
    Jack Colvin .... Red
    Jon Lormer .... Rev. George Goodnight
    Lane Smith .... Leroy
    Warren Vanders .... Bagby
    Strother Martin .... Shanghai McCoy
    Jerry Gatlin .... Nose
    Richard Farnsworth .... Rooster's deputy (scenes deleted)
    Tommy Lee .... Chen Lee
    Mickey Gilbert .... Hambone (uncredited)
    Chuck Hayward .... Jerry (uncredited)
    Gary McLarty .... Emmett (uncredited)


    Writing Credits
    Martha Hyer written by (as Martin Julien)
    Charles Portis character


    Original Music
    Laurence Rosenthal


    Cinematography
    Harry Stradling Jr. (director of photography)


    Stunts
    Jerry Gatlin .... stunt coordinator
    Gary Combs .... stunts (uncredited)
    Quentin Dickey .... stunts (uncredited)
    Jerry Gatlin .... stunts (uncredited)
    Mickey Gilbert .... stunts (uncredited)
    Chuck Hayward .... stunts (uncredited)
    Kevin N. Johnston .... stunts (uncredited)
    Gary McLarty .... stunts (uncredited)
    Chuck Roberson .... stunt double: John Wayne (uncredited)
    Chuck Roberson .... stunts (uncredited)
    George Robotham .... stunts (uncredited)
    Jerry Summers .... stunts (uncredited)


    Trivia
    Jon Lormer, who plays Katharine Hepburn's father, was only one year older than her.


    There had been plans for another film featuring the character Rooster Cogburn, to be entitled "Someday", but it was canceled when this movie proved to be only a moderate hit at the box office. In addition Paramount Pictures felt that John Wayne had become too old to carry a successful movie, and that in any case audiences in the mid-1970s were not interested in westerns.


    During filming John Wayne was injured teaching his eight-year-old daughter to play golf, but fortunately his eye patch concealed the mark. He had been working on one lung for the past ten years and had great difficulty breathing due to the high altitude, often needing to breathe through an oxygen mask.


    This was Katharine Hepburn's only Western.


    Richard Jordan later admitted he decided to overplay his part because he thought the movie was going to flop, and if anybody paid to see it then it would only be for the two stars. He also said he felt that Katharine Hepburn was about to die at any minute - ironically, she outlived him by a decade.


    The official still photographer for this movie was Susie Tracy, daughter of Katharine Hepburn's longtime lover Spencer Tracy.


    During location filming, the crew wore printed t-shirts that read "We love Brother John" on the front and "...and Sister Kate, too!" on the back. John Wayne and Katharine Hepburn were, reportedly, very much amused by this.


    Although John Wayne and Katharine Hepburn refer to Strother Martin as "Old Man", he was in fact twelve years younger than them.


    Richard Fleischer was originally offered the director's job by the studio and accepted it. John Wayne, however, had director approval and was still irked at Fleischer for having turned down North to Alaska (1960) 15 years previously, and vetoed Fleischer as director. It was eventually given to Stuart Millar.


    The last movie produced by Hal B. Wallis.


    "Martin Julien" allegedly covers the writing talents of producer Hal B. Wallis, his wife Martha Hyer, and some friends.


    Director Stuart Miller insisted on so many takes that eventually John Wayne snapped, "God damn it Stuart, there's only so many times we can say these awful lines before they stop making any sense at all."


    Katharine Hepburn was bemused by co-star John Wayne's tendency to argue with everybody, especially the director, during filming. At the party to celebrate the last day of filming she told him, "I'm glad I didn't know you when you had two lungs, you must have been a real bastard. Losing a hip has mellowed me, but you!"


    John Wayne found making the film to be very difficult, particularly since he had just finished a grueling shoot on Brannigan (1975).


    There was some surprise when Katharine Hepburn accepted the role of Eula Goodnight, since more than twenty years earlier she had turned down Geraldine Page's role in Hondo (1953) because she would not work with John Wayne at the height of the blacklist.


    The film received terrible reviews on release. Many critics felt that it was too obviously derived from The African Queen (1951), and that both John Wayne and Katharine Hepburn were too old for their parts.


    Neville Brand was considered for a major role.


    Eula mentions a poet, Ella Sturgis Hooper. The real name is Ellen Sturgis Hooper (1812 - 1848). She was member of the Transcendental Club and regarded as one of the most gifted poets among the Transcendentalists of New England.


    This was screen legends John Wayne and Katharine Hepburn's only joint venture in a feature film. There had been plans to reunite the two stars in a sequel entitled "Someday", but this never happened since this film was a critical and financial failure.


    Goofs
    * Errors in geography: The movie is set in Arkansas (per the court scene immediately following the opening), but features mountains, a river canyon, and other natural features totally unlike anything in Arkansas. Not surprisingly, these features are found in Oregon, where the movie was shot.


    * Continuity: As Rooster, Eula, and Wolf ride quickly through the woods after first spotting Hawk's gang, Rooster wears a coat, then just a shirt in the long shot, and the coat again.


    * Continuity: When drunken Rooster starts to stand up after target practice, his rifle is in his hand. But when the scene cuts and he walks away, there is not a rifle in is hand.


    * Continuity: When Rooster Cogburn is fending off the pursuing bandits, he fires up at them on a rocky hillside from below on the river on a raft with a Gatling gun. In one scene as he fires away with the Gatling, the camera angle is from above both the bandits and Cogburn and shows multiple bullets hitting the rocks just around the bandits feet which are on a flat ledge jutting out on the hill and is an obviously impossible spot to hit due to the location of the Gatling gun and the angle of the ledge.


    * Audio/visual unsynchronized: Just before Rooster sends Wolf out to keep watch on the big flat rock, he talks about Chen Lee and General Sterling Price. When he says "General Sterling Price" in that scene, his lips don't match the words being said. You can also hear the audio change back and forth.


    * Continuity: When Rooster and Eula are handing the bottle of whiskey back and forth, the level of whiskey in the bottle changes between shots.


    * Anachronisms: The cases of nitroglycerin at issue in the movie are labeled "Hercules Nitroglycerin." However, the Hercules Powder Company, which did produce nitroglycerin, did not come into existence until 1912, a result of an antitrust action brought against E.I. du Pont. As the movie plainly takes place in the late 1800s, Hercules could not have produced the nitroglycerin at issue.


    * Revealing mistakes: In the first attack on Rooster and company 3 small bottles of nitro are thrown like hand grenades. The explosions are noticeably distant from where the bottles land.


    * Continuity: Breed (Anthony Zerbe) is clearly shown taking three bottles of nitroglycerin from a crate, and you can see he is holding three bottles as he rides down the hill. A wide shot shows the first two bottles being thrown, then a closer shot of the third bottle being thrown, but in that shot you can see he is holding another bottle of nitroglycerin in his non-throwing hand, which would make four bottles total.


    * Continuity: When they are on the raft at night, Eula and Rooster are talking. When the camera is on Rooster, we see the background moving as if he is facing downstream. Similarly, when Eula is in shot, she appears to moving downstream. As they are facing each other, it is impossible for them to be both facing downstream.


    * Errors made by characters (possibly deliberate errors by the filmmakers): After the initial gunfight, Rooster Cogburn is bringing all the dead men back to the town. The deputy sheriff is lying dead over the saddle on the first horse behind Rooster. If you watch you will see him lift his head independent of the horse's movement and then moments later he slumps down again to play dead.


    * Revealing mistakes: When Rooster gets the Pepperbox out to give to Wolf, he says "I got me a 22 Pepperbox." The bore in the end of the barrel is to big for a 22 cal, it is more like a 36 cal, which was the most common caliber used.


    * Continuity: In the confrontation between Miss Goodnight (Katherine Hepburn) and Judge Parker (John McIntire) in the closing moments of the film, he acts as though he has never heard Cogburn (John Wayne) called by his true name, Reuben. However, in the courtroom scene at the beginning of "True Grit," the same character (with James Westerfield in the role) is sitting at the bench as the bailiff (Dennis McMullen) clearly calls "Marshal Reuben J. Cogburn" to the stand.


    * Revealing mistakes: The stunt doubles for John Wayne, Katharine Hepburn and Richard Romancito are very obvious in the riverboat scenes.


    * Revealing mistakes: The raft is stopped by a rope stretched across the river. It is obvious that the rope didn't stop the raft and when Rooster cuts the rope it is not taut from the tension of holding the raft but just laying in the water and obviously not holding the raft at all.


    * Continuity: At the beginning of the movie Rooster's deputy gets shot along with 4 desperadoes - 3 at the table and 1 hiding in the corner. Rooster then rides back to town with the deputy's body and only 3 of the desperadoes. What happened to the 4th desperado's body?


    Memorable Quotes


    Filming Locations
    Deschutes National Forest - 1001 Southwest Emkay Drive, Bend, Oregon, USA
    Grants Pass, Oregon, USA
    Rogue River, Oregon, USA
    Six Points Texas, Backlot, Universal Studios - 100 Universal City Plaza, Universal City, California, USA


    Previous discussion:-
    Rooster Cogburn

    Best Wishes
    Keith
    London- England

    Edited 15 times, last by ethanedwards ().

  • Rooster Cogburn, originally promoted as Rooster Cogburn (... and the Lady),
    is a 1975 film sequel to the 1969 Western film True Grit.
    The film stars John Wayne, in his penultimate film, who reprises his role as
    U.S. Marshal Reuben J. "Rooster" Cogburn.
    Katharine Hepburn co-stars as spinster Eula Goodnight



    Well to me, this was True Grit , Part II,
    Not quite as good, but the leading lady, sure was, an improvement!
    It was a good script and very well acted, and it was obvious the two stars,
    mutually admired one another. This was their only outing together, and it's a pity,
    they were not paired before!
    It also seemed to me, that this was a western version, of
    The African Queen
    same leading lady, just the man was Duke!


    User Review

    Best Wishes
    Keith
    London- England

    Edited 4 times, last by ethanedwards ().

  • Quote

    Originally posted by ethanedwards@Jan 2 2006, 10:00 AM
    Hi ,
    Well to me, this was TRUE GRIT , Part II,
    Not quite as good, but the leading lady, sure was, an improvement!

    [snapback]24802[/snapback]




    If I remember right that was the whole idea behind this movie. To bank on the popularity of the Rooster character for another hit movie. Maybe it was not quite as good as True Grit but I think Kathrine Hepburn in the cast made it all worth while and I still liked the movie. Your right Keith, they should have made more movies together they were wonderful together. Right up there with Duke and Maureen.



    Baby Sis


    :cowboy::cowboy::cowboy:

    "Give me a man like Duke Wayne"...Marueen O'Hara

  • Baby Sister,


    What else can you say about Duke and Kate in the Film, but they were Great Together! :rolleyes: They were planing another film together that was to be called "Someday" but it was not to be. :(


    For a Great story about Duke and Kate and the making of "Rooster and the Lady" you can go to the Site Below and just keep Clicking NEXT.


    DUKE AND KATE


    Bill :cowboy:

  • This is up there among my most favorite John Wayne movies. I truly love seeing John Wayne and Kate Hepburn together! Keith, I couldn't agree with you more, the leading lady is a VAST improvement over True Grit.


    My kids always get a big kick out of the scene with the Gatling gun.


    Being that I look forward to retiring to southern Oregon, I especially enjoy the scenery from the Rogue River area of Oregon, not far from our property.


    Chester :newyear:

  • I really enjoyed this movie, it was great to see the duke with the patch on again and there was something about hepburn and leading men, it sort of reminded me of her performance with bogart some 25years earlier in The African Queen. There was just something to seeing duke with that gattling gun :agent: .


    -IHW

  • I liked the job Duke does with Rooster Cogburn in both movies, but what sets them apart is the leading ladies. That is the one I cannot stand in True Grit is the girl who played in it. I laugh alot with this movie, I guess that's one reason I enjoy John Wayne movies because they usually have a good story, action, and humor.

  • I have always enjoyed this pairing of Katherine Hepburn and John Wayne...and yes I would have enjoyed seeing them in dozens of films together. She is truly a remarkable actress in so many ways, as the Duke is as an actor. You can see the chemistry between them in so many scenes. And the scenery is beautiful too, makes one want to retire to southwestern Oregon with a Gatlin Gun.


    Roger.

  • Memorable Quotes


    Eula Goodnight : I do not fear a skunk. I simply do not care for its odor.
    Rooster Cogburn : It's payday, boys, come and get it!


    INFORMATION IMDb

    Best Wishes
    Keith
    London- England

  • Rooster has lots of promise but it was a watered down film because of the age of
    Duke & Katherine.


    Nice to see Strother Martin make a repeat performance admittedly as a different character from the one he played in True Grit .



    Mike

  • Hi,
    I have been researching all the threads, back to the start of the JWMB,
    looking for previous discussion, relating to the movies.
    I have found the following, comments, and have copied them here,
    so that they are now under one forum:-


    Rooster Cogburn..., And Katharine Hepburn






    Here's a quote from chester, regarding it's filming locations:-



    Below are a couple of more links:-


    Critic Time: True Grit and Rooster Cogburn


    Rooster Cogburn

    Best Wishes
    Keith
    London- England

  • As I've mentioned before, this is one of my favorite JW movies. As previous posts have indicated, it's an easy to find film on DVD -


    Deep Discount DVD has both the movie and also movie posters (which they offer for many movies).


    Amazon offers a variety, including VHS, DVD, and books.


    Most of these are probably available on ebay, but it's hard to beat these prices, especially when you figure in the shipping (free at DDD, and free on Amazon if you buy $25 or more of qualifying merchandise).


    Chester :newyear:

  • I really enjoyed this movie, it is one of my favourite Duke films, one of those big reasons is the pairing with Katherine Hepburn and it was good to see Rooster back again!

    The youngest member of the JWMB! And proud Cowgirl!
    [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]

  • I thought that this was a prettly flat movie and Dukes worst since 'The Undefeated'. Duke himself said that the story was stale and the script poor bit he though two spirtited performances from him and Hepburn could bring the movie up a notch or two.


    While Duke and Hepburn are excellent as well as the scenary everything else is wrong. Too much time is spent with the bad guys whom pose no threat whatsoever and the finale is quite poor.


    This is a rather boring movie from John Wayne and one that I try to avoid, thankfully he had one good movie left in him after this one a minor little western called 'The Shootist'.


    :agent:

    Regards
    Robbie


  • I think that Robbie's analysis is spot-on, to the point where I'll just echo his comments. The banter between Wayne and Hepburn is memorable and the wilderness scenery is majestic, but the direction is flat and stilted, the script is dull and simplistic, the camerawork is static, and the acting aside from Wayne and Hepburn is largely banal. Thankfully, Wayne would finish on a more engaging note with The Shootist (Don Siegel, 1976).

  • Have to agree with you on this one. Whilst Hepburn and Wayne portrayals are strong with John reprising one of his best characters in Rooster Cogburn the whole movie has the flavour of a TV movie with poor support from the other actors and weak storyline and direction.


    From reading a number of histories of the John Wayne films I think a sequel to True Grit was talked about from 1970 onwards. Its a shame that the opportunity wasnt available to make it happen when John was in better health, with a better script and a more experienced and talented director.


    However , on closing it does have redeeming features and I wouldnt consider it his worst western.



    Mike

  • Compared with True Grit, Rooster Cogburn fairs pretty badly in my opinion. Theres a lack of urgency in the screenplay, and a stronger director and script was needed in order to make this movie a respectable sequel to 'True Grit'.


    Does anyone know why better directors such as Rydell and Hathaway were not available?


    Robbie


    :agent:

    Regards
    Robbie

  • Quote

    Originally posted by DukePilgrim@Aug 14 2006, 03:55 AM
    . . . it does have redeeming features and I wouldnt consider it his worst western.

    [snapback]33565[/snapback]


    I consider the Oregon scenery among the redeeming features, and of course, as others have mentioned, the interaction between Katherine Hepburn and Duke. Too bad they couldn't have been in more movies together.


    Chester :newyear:

  • In this movie I'm very much like the dialog between Duke and Hepburn and beautiful nature of course. Watched it one more time recently and enjoyed. Can't agree that it is one of the worst pictures at all.
    Regards,
    Senta :rolleyes: