The Virginian is a 1929 Western film directed by Victor Fleming
and starring Gary Cooper, Walter Huston, and Richard Arlen.
Based on the 1902 novel The Virginian by Owen Wister, the film is about a good-natured cowboy
who romances the new schoolmarm and has a crisis of conscience
when he learns his best friend is involved in cattle rustling.
The film is well known for Cooper's line, "If you wanna call me that—smile,"
in response to a cuss by the antagonist.
Look out for Duke 'Pals'
Jack Pennick as a Slim - Box H Hand (uncredited)
and
Randolph Scott as a Rider (uncredited)
QuoteFuture western movie icon Randolph Scott, from Virginia,
was hired as a dialect coach to teach Gary Cooper a Virginia accent,
and also has a small non-speaking part in the film.
User Review
QuoteDisplay Moreearly archetypal western
8 June 1999 | by kaplan79 (colorado springs, CO)
"The Virginian" is one of the first well-known western "talkies."
Released in 1929 and starring Gary Cooper who later became one of the great heroes of the western genre,
this movie contains all of the archetypal elements of classic western films.
There is a lone hero who answers to his own moral code defined by his environment(the frontier).
A "schoolmarm" from out East comes to civilize the West through education,
and her values come into conflict with the hero she falls in love with.
And there is a villain who abides by no moral code, who must be defeated by the hero
to uphold his honor and his values.
The classic representations of good and evil through black and white are used extensively
and effectively in this film. Cooper always wears white, the villain(Huston) always wears black.
However, the most morally ambiguous character, Cooper's friend Steve,
always wears a mixture of the colors, and as he continues down a dark path,
his colors become darker and less ambivalent.
This is a pretty good movie, particularly the hanging scene, the shootout at the end,
and basically any interaction between Cooper and Huston. What makes the movie
even more entertaining and fascinating to watch is its context.
This movie is considered to be one of the very first westerns to represent
the classic elements of the western genre, and its influence on later westerns is quite clear.
For film students and fans of the western genre alike,
this is a fun film to watch and thoroughly enjoyable.
(Note: very interesting comparisons can be made to later westerns,
particularly "Shane" and another Cooper film, "High Noon")