Virginia City (film)

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Virginia City
File:Virginia City poster.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Michael Curtiz
Produced by Robert Fellows
Screenplay by Robert Buckner
Starring <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Music by Max Steiner
Cinematography Sol Polito
Edited by George Amy
Production
company
Distributed by Warner Bros.
Release dates
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  • May 16, 1940 (1940-05-16) (USA)

1947 (France)
Running time
121 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $1 million[1]
Box office 2,372,567 admissions (France, 1947)[2]

Virginia City is a 1940 American Western film directed by Michael Curtiz and starring Errol Flynn, Miriam Hopkins, Randolph Scott, and a mustachioed Humphrey Bogart in the role of the real-life outlaw John Murrell. Based on a screenplay by Robert Buckner, the film is about a Union officer who escapes from a Confederate prison and is sent to Virginia City from where his former prison commander is planning to send five million dollars in gold to Virginia to save the Confederacy. The film premiered in its namesake, Virginia City, Nevada.

Plot

Union officer Kerry Bradford (Errol Flynn) stages a daring escape from a Confederate prison run by prison commander Vance Irby (Randolph Scott) after learning that the rebels plan to smuggle five million dollars in gold from Virginia City, Nevada (in Union territory), to Texas, from where it can be shipped to Richmond, Virginia to aid the Confederate war effort. Bradford reports to Union headquarters and is immediately sent to Virginia City to determine where the gold is being kept. On the stagecoach, he meets and falls in love with the elegant Julia Hayne (Miriam Hopkins), who unbeknownst to him is in fact a dance-hall girl—and a rebel spy! Also on the stagecoach is the legendary John Murrell (Humphrey Bogart), leader of a gang of "banditos" traveling as a gun salesman. Before he and his gang can rob the stage, Bradford gets the drop on them and they escape empty-handed.

When the stage reaches Virginia City, Julia gives Bradford the slip and heads off to warn Captain Vance Irby (Randolph Scott)—the former prison commander now managing the gold-smuggling operation—that Bradford is in town. Bradford follows Irby to the rebels' hideout behind a false wall in a blacksmiths' shop, but the gold is moved before he arrives. The Union garrison is called out to patrol the roads to prevent any wagons from leaving town.

While Irby is meeting with the sympathetic town doctor, Murrell shows up looking for someone to set his broken arm. Irby offers Murrell $10,000 to have his banditos attack the garrison, which will force the Union soldiers guarding the roads to come to its defense. While the soldiers are busy defending the garrison, Irby's rebels will smuggle the gold out in the false bottoms of their wagons. First Irby needs to take care of Bradford. He uses Julia to arrange a meeting between the two men, and then takes Bradford prisoner, intending to return him to prison. (Irby, of course, is too honorable to simply shoot Bradford on the spot.)

The rebels' wagon train reaches a Union outpost, where the wagons are stopped and searched. The skittish rebels start a firefight, and in the confusion Bradford escapes. Pursued closely by Irby and his men, he rides his horse down a steep incline and ends up somersaulting down the hill. The rebels, believing him dead, continue toward Texas. Bradford returns to the outpost and sends a telegraph to the garrison. Major Drewery (Douglass Dumbrille), the garrison commander, is scornful of Bradford as a soldier and does not take his advice, so the pursuit falls ever further behind the rebels, who are themselves fighting thirst, privation, and the unforgiving terrain. Bradford is able to persuade Drewery to allow him to take and a small detachment to follow his hunch.

Meanwhile, plotting to steal the entire shipment, the banditos return and attempt to take the gold. The Confederate wagons are trapped in a canyon and the gold appears to be lost when Bradford and the detachment arrive. Irby is wounded in the gunfight, but Bradford's superior military skills and the rebels' long guns eventually drive off the banditos. That night, knowing that in the morning both Murrell's banditos and Drewery's command will arrive, Bradford takes the gold from the wagons and buries it in the canyon.

Drewery and his men arrive in the morning in time to crush the banditos' renewed attack. Bradford denies the gold ever existed and is brought up on charges in a court-martial, where he defends his actions. He defends his action in that "as a soldier" he knew the gold might have been used to win the war for the South and prevented that, but "as a man" he knows it belongs to the South and he would prefer that it be used to rebuild the South's shattered economy and wounded pride after the war. The court finds him guilty of high treason and sentences him to death on April 9, 1865.

The day before Bradford's scheduled execution, Julia meets with Abraham Lincoln (Victor Kilian, seen only in silhouette) and pleads for Bradford's life. Lincoln reveals that at that very moment, Generals Lee and Grant are meeting at Appomattox Courthouse to end the war. As the war is over, and in a symbol of the reconciliation between North and South, Lincoln pardons Bradford in the spirit of his second inaugural address, "With malice toward none; with charity for all..."

Cast

Production

The movie was a follow up to Dodge City although it has entirely new characters and was not a sequel, predating it by eight years in historical time.[3] It was originally called Nevada and was to star basically the same director and cast as Dodge City: Flynn, Olivia de Havilland, Ann Sheridan, Donald Crisp, Guinn Williams and Alan Hale.[4] The title was eventually changed to Virginia City, which had been owned by RKO but they agreed to give it over to Warners.[5][6]

De Havilland dropped out and was replaced by Brenda Marshall.[7] However within a few weeks Miriam Hopkins replaced her.[8] Randolph Scott was hired to play Flynn's antagonist.[9]

Victor Jory was going to play the main villain but had a scheduling conflict due to his appearance in Light of Western Stars. He was replaced by Humphrey Bogart, requiring It All Came True to be pushed back.[10]

There was six weeks' filming based in Flagstaff, Arizona.[11]

Reception

The film was given a gala premiere in Reno and Virginia City.[12][13]

When the film was released in France in 1947, it became one of the most popular movies of the year.[2]

References

  1. Glancy, H. Mark. "Warner Bros film grosses, 1921-51." Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television. March 1995.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Box office figures for 1947 France at Box Office Story
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External links