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Calamity Jane

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Calamity Jane (1953)

November. 04,1953
|
7.2
|
NR
| Comedy Western Music Romance
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Sharpshooter Calamity Jane takes it upon herself to recruit a famous actress and bring her back to the local saloon, but jealousy soon gets in the way.

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ada
1953/11/04

the leading man is my tpye

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Linbeymusol
1953/11/05

Wonderful character development!

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CheerupSilver
1953/11/06

Very Cool!!!

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Micah Lloyd
1953/11/07

Excellent characters with emotional depth. My wife, daughter and granddaughter all enjoyed it...and me, too! Very good movie! You won't be disappointed.

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l_rawjalaurence
1953/11/08

First and foremost, CALAMITY JANE is a fun musical. The 29-year-old Doris Day thoroughly enjoys herself in the central role as a gun-totin' tomboy, the fastest draw in the city of Deadwood, South Dakota - apart from Wild Bill Hickok (Howard Keel). She demonstrates an apparently limitless capacity for telling tall stories, as well as a unique ability to ride a horse. She and Keel make a lovable double-act, especially in their song "I Can Do Without You" - which is of course completely ironic in tone. They clearly cannot do without one another, as proved at the end of the film when they celebrate their nuptials. Sammy Fain and Paul Francis Webster's score contains at least two classics, "The Deadwood Stage (Whip Crack-Away," which opens and closes the film, and "Secret Love," a typically schmaltzy Day song that topped the charts on its initial release. Yet perhaps the film's most interesting aspect today is the way in which it embodies early Fifties attitudes towards gender. Calamity Jane's decision to don male attire is perceived as something aberrant; she is tolerated by her fellow-citizens of Deadwood, but no one really takes her very seriously. It is only when she is 'educated' in feminine ways by visiting singer Katie Brown (Allyn McLerie) that she understands what her 'proper' role should be. She should accept that females (unlike males) are capricious in nature, apt to make spontaneous decisions without rhyme or reason. In a ball scene towards the end of the film, Calamity appears in a long gown, her blonde hair neatly tied at the back - the male guests stare at her in disbelief, as if they cannot believe they have a "true" woman within their midst. Calamity feels uncomfortable in the role, and returns briefly to her male attire; but when the citizens refuse to speak to her later on (punishing her for her decision to banish Katie from their town), she understands the "error" of her ways. At the film's end she wears a bridal gown and tosses her six-shooter away, in symbolic acknowledgment that she should no longer try to adopt masculine attitudes. Rather she should accept her designated role as wife and (probably) mother.

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Spondonman
1953/11/09

What a lovely film – I've seen it so often by now I paradoxically probably don't need to watch it anymore, it's all there in my head almost frame by frame. It's a simple musical Western, with bags of charm and wonderful songs, exuberant acting by all concerned and a cosy colour.Wild Calamity Day thinks she's in love with dashing Army Captain, Wild Bill Keel thinks he's in love with beautiful singer from Chicago, they're both wrong of course, the story and the songs eventually disclosing the truth even though the audience knows the plot before 10 minutes have elapsed. The music by Sammy Fain and the lyrics by Paul Francis Webster are almost unbelievably impeccable and witty, the delivery by the two main stars in their prime is perfect. In fact I can't fault anything in this film – I never let datedness or corn interfere with my enjoyment like lots of folk though. It's a comfort film maybe but even after all these years it sure is a tonic!

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benosler
1953/11/10

I've just watched "Calamity Jane" and it really is one of the most lovely films I've ever seen.I am by nature suspicious of "musicals". In fact I'd normally say I don't like 'em. But although the characters in this film do burst out into spontaneously synchronised and practised song somehow the songs they sing are short enough to be less than a mild irritation and pertinent enough to keep the story moving.I'm a straight guy but must admit to being a sucker for women with their feet firmly on the ground and that's why I find Doris Day's portrayal of the character so intriguing. Some might say that this is an "ugly duckling" film but in this case and for me the "before" look is much more interesting than the "after" one. She prances around in scruffy attire, walks like a man and often sits or poses with her legs wide open but however much she plays the tomboy and tries to hide her femininity under a bushel she fails. Why? Because she just is a very beautiful woman; heck you could cover her in mud (and this actually happens at one point in the film) and she wouldn't lose her femininity.I've seen lots of cabaret in Berlin - Victor, Victoria type stuff and this film is reminiscent of that although not quite so refined but all the same it's a woman dressed as a man and looking good for it! The film verges on homo-eroticism at times although it never features as a central theme. There is about 10 minute's worth of pure homo-eroticism however that takes place in a log cabin that would do Barbie proud but the main themes focus on a woman who doesn't know how to be one and learns as well as people who are oblivious to the fact that they are in love perhaps because they are such good friends; then Cupid strikes suddenly. As I say, I'm a straight guy but although a part of me appreciated the "ugly duckling" changing her spots another part of me ended up wishing that she'd stayed the way she was.The sets are wonderful as are the lush costumes.This is not a film to watch on a small monitor. If you have a projector then fire her up for this one. Lovely colour and sound just as one would expect from a musical of this era.

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badajoz-1
1953/11/11

A good hearted fifties original film musical with Doris Day and Howard Keel in splendid form. The film showcases how good a musical actress Doris Day was before, now derided, her turn as the eternal virgin in a series of sixties comedies. Singing, dancing and upfront acting without a hint of ironic post modernisms, Day convinces you of a rural tomboy called Calamity Jane - hunting, shooting, fighting and singing/dancing - who realises she has to become a proper woman to get a man!! Her energy is infectious and she almost puts Keel into the shade with such a bravura performance. The songs (not too many, they only filled a 10 inch LP!) are memorable, reaching from the boisterous 'Whip, crack away' to the lyrical 'Secret Love' and crashing into the pop charts of the day! The only quibble is that the musical numbers are staged like stage musicals with the performers almost waiting for the applause after finishing singing with a few seconds of looking at the screen doing nothing soaking up the adulation!

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