'''The Hallelujah Trail''' is a
1965 Western spoof directed by
John Sturges and starring
Burt Lancaster,
Lee Remick,
Brian Keith,
Donald Pleasence, and
Martin Landau, amongst others.
Plot Synopsis
The film is presented in a pseudo-documentary style, with a serious, tongue-in-cheek narrator (
John Dehner) providing historical background and context, and periodically interrupting the story to point out animated charts illustrating strategic positions of various groups.
In the year
1867, signs that the approaching winter will be a hard one produce agitation in the burgeoning mining town of
Denver,
Colorado, as the hard-drinking citizenry fear a shortage of
whiskey. Taking advice from Oracle Jones (
Donald Pleasence), a local guide and
seer (but only when under the influence of alcohol), the populace arrange for a mass shipment, twenty wagons full of whiskey, from the Wallingham Freighting Company. The
wagon train heads out, under the direction of company owner Frank Wallingham (
Brian Keith), regarded as a "a taxpayer and a good
Republican."
This cargo then becomes the target for several diverse groups, each with their own leaders and plans. Young Capt. Paul Slater (
Jim Hutton) of the
United States Cavalry is assigned by Fort Russell commander Col. Thaddeus Gearhart (
Burt Lancaster) to escort the Wallingham Wagon Train, and merely wishes to carry out his orders. A group of
Irish teamsters, hired as wagon drivers, wishes to strike unless whiskey rations are distributed. Crusading
temperance leader Cora Templeton Massingale (
Lee Remick) and her followers, informed of the alcoholic cargo, wish to intercept the train and destroy its contents; the group is escorted by a second cavalry division under the command of a reluctant Col. Gearhart. Gearhart's daughter (
Pamela Tiffin) is engaged to Slater and entranced by Mrs. Massingale's message. Despite their extremely different personalities and inability to see eye to eye, the weatherbeaten Gearhart and beautiful Cora Massingale fall in love with each other (beneath her composure and grace, even her occasional ribbing against him, Cora is infatuated with Gearhart from the moment he rides into the fort and spends much of the film trying to subtley win his affection). Other interested parties include
Sioux Indians, led by "real boozer" Chief Five Barrels (
Robert J. Wilke) and Walks-Stooped-Over (
Martin Landau), and a Denver citizens militia, led by Clayton Howell (
Dub Taylor) and guided by Oracle, concerned about obtaining their precious supply of drinkables. Inevitably, the various groups converge, and the ensuing property struggle is played out through a series of comic set pieces and several diplomatic overtures by an increasingly weary Gearhart.
The film was one of several large-scale, long-form "epic" comedies produced in the 1960s, much like ''
The Great Race'' or ''
It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World'', combined with the epic grandeur of the Western genre. The movie is technically outstanding, having been filmed in
Ultra Panavision 70 and presented in 70 mm
Cinerama in premiere engagements.
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