Timberjack (film)

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Timberjack
Jack A. Marta
Edited byRichard L. Van Enger
Music byVictor Young
Production
company
Republic Pictures
Distributed byRepublic Pictures
Release dates
  • February 4, 1955 (1955-02-04) (Missoula, Montana)
  • February 18, 1955 (1955-02-18) (United States)
Running time
94 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Timberjack is a 1955 American Trucolor lumberjack Western film directed by Joseph Kane and starring Sterling Hayden, Vera Ralston, David Brian, Adolphe Menjou, Hoagy Carmichael and Chill Wills.[1] With a very high number of musical sections (including one by Hoagy Carmichael) it approaches a musical in format.

Plot

The film is set in a wilderness area in the north of the United States in the late 19th century. Rival interests in a small town vie for control of the huge forest.

Tim Chipman is an honest lumberman who returns home to find his father murdered. Chipman gets his own back by setting the family timber company against ruthless competitor Croft Brunner. It seems that Brunner is also a rival for the heart of saloon keeper Lynne Tilton. He accidentally kills her father, by punching the old man too hard. Brunner moves the body out of town during the night and dumps it near a river where the men will be logging the next day. He points the blame on rival French loggers. Jingles points out that the father always wore a hat when out, but his hat is missing. Chapman goes to quiz the French loggers.

Lynn accidentally finds her father's hat in Brunner's office and realises that Brunner killed him. She pulls a revolver and shoots him in the left arm and escapes the area with Jingles. Jingles leaves her in the forest. Despite its immense size Brunner manages to quickly track her and they exchange gunfire. She runs down to the railway line where she flags down a tree with Chapman on board.

Chapman ends up in a long distance shoot-out with rifles against Brunner, killing him.

Cast

Production

Timberjack was filmed in Glacier National Park and Western Montana using Trucolor film technology.[2] Sterling Hayden and Elisha Cook Jr. would star in Stanley Kubrick's The Killing a year later. Adolphe Menjou later appeared in Kubrick's Paths of Glory 1957.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Movie Reviews". The New York Times. 23 December 2021.
  2. ^ Movie Review: At Loew's State" New York Times, March 10, 1955 https://www.nytimes.com/movie/review ?res=990DFFD6143EE53ABC4852DFB566838E649EDE

External links