In fact The Big Country is so big it takes two blogs to spotlight it! Join us now as Bijou Blog's Victoria Balloon discusses big backlot drama, then mosey on over to Movies Unlimited for more, but don’t get lost on the way — it’s a Big Internet!
William Wyler’s The Big Country (1958) is one of the epic films of the 1950s, and a thorough departure from the two-reel Westerns of his early career at Universal Studios. The film also differs thematically from those early oaters — Jim McKay’s (Gregory Peck) imperturbable temper is unfathomable to his fiancée Pat (Carroll Baker) and her father Major Terrill (Charles Bickford), but as the drama of two clans fighting each other for water rights unfolds, McKay must decide just how much violence a pacifist must use to keep the peace.

Despite The Big Country having an all-star cast and a two-time Oscar-winning director (Wyler filmed Ben-Hur the following year), reviews of the film ranged from hand-clapping to raspberries. Many praised the cinematography and the Jerome Moross score, but box office returns barely put the $3.1 million film back in the black, though it did rank 11th in Variety’s annual listing. The New York Times called it “the most bellicose hymn to peace ever seen.”

Everything about the film was big. Shot in “Technirama” with an aspect ratio of 2.55 to 1 on the negatives (the highest ratio ever used in film), it had a runtime of 168 minutes. Interior shots were done at the Goldwyn Studios, but exterior shots were done in the Mojave Desert and a 3,000 acre ranch east of Stockton. (Because apparently, California is more “Texas” than Texas.) The principle cast members were stars at the top of their game, the budget was there, the reputations were there… And so was the big behind-the-scenes drama.
The studio system that had created the Hollywood illusion of the 1930s fell apart in the 1950s through a combination of legal action against monopolies and actors, writers, and directors wanting more control over their work. Big name actors and directors formed production companies to become producers of their own films. After his successes in Roman Holliday (1953) and The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit (1956), Gregory Peck formed Anthony Productions (named after his son) in order to work on a project with his friend, director William Wyler. Peck and Wyler became close while making Roman Holiday, and the two men and their wives often dined out together, their families taking vacations in Sun Valley.



Wyler was an excellent director whose three Oscars are second only to John Ford’s four. More actors won Oscars under Wyler’s direction than any other director (14 out of 36 nominations), yet “90 take Willy” was terrible at giving actors input. Take after take, his only directions or comments were “Do it again.” Wyler seemed to believe that when actors got angry after multiple takes, they played their parts without artifice on a “truer” level.


Wyler was in charge of directing with the final say in artistic matters, while Peck secured the cast, script, publicity through United Artists, wardrobe and makeup, and technical personnel. But script issues, the remote location, direction problems with Baker, Simmons, and Bickford, and running over schedule took their toll on the two men’s friendship.


Over fifty years later The Big Country is still absolutely worth viewing. Modern audiences have a greater appreciation for the ambiguity and unresolved conflicts in the film that bothered initial reviewers. The behind the scene drama only underscores the monumental task of making such a movie and, despite some displays of temper, the skill and professionalism of those involved. Possibly the most amazing thing about the movie is that it turned out as well as it did.

Bijou writer Victoria Balloon muses further on the movie’s many merits beyond the mess over at Movie Fanfare, the Movies Unlimited blog.
Here you can watch an incisive interview with Gregory Peck, who discusses the troubles on the set of The Big Country between himself and William Wyler. Afterwards, be sure to check out what John McElwee has to say in "Shrunken Epics Reclaimed" over at Greenbriar Picture Shows.
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