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Spencer's Mountain Posters
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List Price: $19.98Price: $9.98 You Save: $10.00 (50%)Prices subject to change.
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Audience Rating: Unrated
Binding: VHS Tape
EAN: 0085391163534
Format: NTSC
Label: Warner Home Video
Manufacturer: Warner Home Video
Publisher: Warner Home Video
Release Date: October 15, 1991
Running Time: 118 minutes
Sales Rank: 54743
Studio: Warner Home Video
Theatrical Release Date: May 16, 1963
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Editorial Review:
Amazon.com: Long before Henry Fonda played an irascible patriarch in On Golden Pond, he played an equally crusty family man in this warmly rustic, 1963 drama Spencer's Mountain, based on an Earl Hamner Jr. novel that later inspired the television series The Waltons. Fonda plays Clay Spencer, a fiercely independent, hard-drinking, foul-mouthed Wyoming laborer who believes in God but rejects (to his tiny community's consternation) organized religion. Scraping together enough money to build a new house for his wife (Maureen O'Hara) and nine children, Spencer runs into an obstacle to both his plans and family pride when his college-bound son (James MacArthur) romances the daughter of Spencer's boss. Director Delmer Daves whips up a kind of morose schmaltz out of the earnest material, but it's Fonda's grit and heartland integrity that carry the day and establish some self-effacing wit. Some nice features here, including interviews with Fonda and a short documentary, "Spencer's Mountain: Grand Teton Premiere." --Tom Keogh
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
OK.
There's nothing wrong with the Waltons. Sure they tended to get a little sappy. You could say the same for "Spencer's Mountain," but you'd be wrong.
Watching Henry Fonda and Maureen Ohara, you get the impression this is the family you wish you could have grown up in.
When grandma tells Clay-Boy "Aim for the stars," if you have dry eyes, it's because you either haven't paid attention or you don't have a heart.
This is a truly great movie.
Rating: -
We like the actors in this movie, and anticipated enjoying a good, family movie. We kept hoping for substance, but only were subjected to inuendo and uncivilized conversation.Children tend to immitate what they see and hear. I don't think you'd be happy if your children immitated things in this movie. I'd like to tell you about the ending, but I couldn't put myself through the process of getting to it.
Rating: -
This is a good, solid "family values" movie which parents can watch with their children. It does have its sappy, unrealistic moments, but that is to be expected of a movie of this time period (1963). There is some good acting; probably Henry Fonda's most happy-go-lucky role ever. I doubt that I will watch it again, but it was worth seeing.
Rating: -
I read the original novel by Earl Hamner Jr. soon after it was published in 1961, but I somehow missed the 1963 movie until now. This is a fine film, heartwarming in an old way without being cliched. It's easy to understand how it inspired "The Waltons" television series, which drew on the novel's characters and its portrayal of American values.
The transfer of the movie's setting from Appalachia to the Grand Tetons surprised this reader of the novel. James MacArthur was too old to ... Read More
Rating: -
This film shows the importance of family, the closeness they hold over generations and the recognition of one son's desire to go further in his education than any of his forbears have been able to because of economic necessity to begin work young. It shows his family's determination to help him acheive his goal and find the financing to do so, even though they are very poor. It is a real feel good film.
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