19 out of 19 people found the following comment useful :- even sweeter with the years..., 27 April 2004
Author:
rondine (susan.rondine@cox.net) from Mesa, AZ
When I was younger & first saw this movie, what caught my eye was the
stage-y production, the over-ripe acting- I was wrong.
It's funny, but being a late 30-something divorcee with my own self-esteem
issues, I now watch this movie & marvel at its depth.
This is a movie about so much more than a con man, an old maid and people
stuck and unable to change. It's really about loving yourself. We've all
heard the saying that you have to love yourself before someone else can love
you. And that is what this movie is about. Believing in yourself even when
that's the hardest thing. It's really the crux of the movie.
The casting is actually perfect. I cannot imagine anyone else as Starbuck.
Burt Lancaster's magnetism and on-screen "je ne ce qua" and Hepburn's
radiant simplicity are a match made in heaven. They compliment each other
very well.
The supporting cast is also well done. Holliman's exuberance is contagious
and the sweetly supporting father and no nonsense brother Noah are well done
but not over done.
I highly recommend this movie. Give it a chance & suspend your disbelief-
that's part of what going to the movies is about.
P.S. Several people mentioned the last scene with Lancaster riding into the
rain as being over done, cheesy or whatever. Yet it's just that kind of
imagery that does indeed stick with you after the movie. It may seem
overblown the first time, yet upon subsequent viewings, I love the effusive
and memorable affect it has on the viewer. :)
10 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :- Believing in Yourself, 27 August 2005
Author:
rsjs619 from Tennessee
The skeptical reviewers miss the point. In fact, they take the position
of Lizzie herself before she begins to believe in herself.
That some of this movie appears hokey, over-the-top and unbelievable is
perfect. It requires the same leap of faith for the movie viewer as the
characters must take in the story.
The script for this movie is brilliantly written and as timely today as
it ever was. The casting and acting are wonderful.
This movie makes a very valuable point: It's not a con when you help
someone believe in herself. You do something wonderful when you help
another find hope, faith and love.
10 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :- charm aplenty, 15 September 2003
Author:
didi-5 from United Kingdom
Another of Kate Hepburn's ageing spinsters, to set aside her travelling lady
in Italy in 'Summer Madness'. This time she's the unmarried sister in a
house of men, whose heart gets a kick start by a visiting 'rainmaker', in
the shape of Burt Lancaster.
Hepburn and Lancaster give charm and credence to what might have been an
extremely ridiculous scenario. The whole is pretty stagey but it has heart
which shines through. Good support from Lloyd Bridges, Wendell Corey and
others. Funnily enough the part of the youngest brother was set for Elvis
Presley's debut - wonder if he'd have been able to pull it
off?
11 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :- It's called acting., 8 July 2003
Author:
(cdavis-19) from Seattle, Washington
Much has been made of the fact that nearly all of the actors were too old
to
comfortably inhabit their roles, which I think is crap. I don't think
Hepburn's character felt anything other than genuine nor did it seem as if
she were playing a character younger than her years. For one, she was a
pretty well-preserved 49 - but that's almost beside the point. The point,
I
think being, is that no matter what your age or station, dreams will
infuse
you with beauty and purpose, so never abandon them. Sure, there were
show-boaty moments (the final scene of the Rainmaker riding off springs to
mind) - but this was made in 1956, after all, and gestures tended to be a
little more expansive. Context, people, context.
9 out of 10 people found the following comment useful :- big-hearted film, 4 January 2006
Author:
hildacrane from United States
This movie always leaves me smiling. Sure, it's not a masterpiece of
cinema, and one has to be willing to go with the staginess of it (it
was, after all, a play originally), but there's such an exuberance to
the performances and gentleness to the story that the movie wins you
over. In fact maybe there is something appropriate about the obvious
artifice of the sets, since the movie is about the roles that people
play and the dreams that they cherish. Certainly Lancaster's charming
con man is a master of the orotund and theatrical spiel. Another
haunting Alex North score that occasionally recalls some of the
poignant themes that he wrote for "A Streetcar Named Desire."
7 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- The drama of human emotion., 22 May 2000
Author:
Michael O'Keefe from Muskogee OK
N. Richard Nash adapted his play for the silver screen. Directed by Joseph
Anthony, this is a wonderful insight into the core of human emotion. A hard
glimpse at the look of low self esteem.
Katherine Hepburn plays Lizzie Curry, a young woman that lives with her
father and brothers in a dusty prairie town. She is led to believe she will
become an old maid. She of course has more brains than beauty and her
emotions tell her that she needs to become a "woman".
Enter Bill Starbuck, played aptly by Burt Lancaster; Starbuck is a con man
constantly on the move bilking his way through life. He convinces the Curry
family he can end the drought by making it rain. He ends up in the barn with
Miss Lizzie. Now she feels a new world has opened up to
her.
Deputy File is too shy to tell Lizzie of his interest in her; until he finds
Starbuck with her and wants to arrest him for his previous bad deeds. Lizzie
has to make a big decision between the side of law and order or a life
chasing dreams with a wanderer.
This movie deserves to be called a classic. The deep human element and the
diverse relationships within the characters makes for a very interesting
movie. Scenery and language may seem at times a bit hokey; but the realism
is there. Great movie.
Besides Hepburn and Lancaster, this cast was full of good acting. Wendell
Corey, Lloyd Bridges and Earl Holliman turned in fine jobs. Holliman's
innocence and fresh spirit was a real highlight. The always cute Yvonne Lime
also has a small part.
6 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :- Striking a Poignant Chord, 12 May 2000
Author:
harry-76 from Cleveland, Ohio
What's best, to live only in our dreams, only on the outside of them, or
somewhere in between? N. Richard Nash has written a deceptively simple
story about faith, reality, trust, and transformation in the script from his
play, "The Rainmaker." Ably directed by Joseph Anthony, richly scored by
Alex North, and lovingly played by Katherine Hepburn and Burt Lancaster,
this is a poignant and surprisingly moving drama. While the secondary love
interest between Earl Holliman and Yvonne Lime become a bit cloying and
hokey at times, the main theme is beautifully enacted by two enormously
gifted stars. "The Rainmaker" is an entertainment winner, while offering
much substantive food-for-thought.
8 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :- Great Movie!, 2 June 2004
Author:
inspt71-1 from Kentucky
What can I say, it was a great movie. Katharine Hepburn is
excellent as
Lizzy Curry and Burt Lancaster in one of his best performances ever. Hepburn
deserved her Oscar nomination but Lancaster should have been nominated as
well. You have to admit he was not playing his ordinary tough character. He
brought some laughs to the movie as Starbuck. The supporting cast including
Lloyd Bridges and Wendell Corey was great and Alex North's music is great as
it usually is. This is an underrated movie and is definately worth your time
watching. You should see this movie if you haven't already. It's pretty hard
to find
of Video and it is not yet available on DVD and it should and if you do get
this
movie, don't get it confused with John Grisham's version.
5 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :- great film, 2 February 2004
Author:
kyle_furr
I'm glad I finally watched this film, because I passed it several times.
Burt Lancaster and Katharine Hepburn are both great in this movie and so
is
Llyod Bridges. If your a fan of Burt Lancaster and Katharine Hepburn, you
should watched it.
4 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :- A Classic, 18 March 2001
Author:
artzau from Sacramento, CA
I'll say it like it is. This is a classic. Nash's play comes to live on
the silver screen with veteran actors Cameron Prud'homme, Wallace Ford,
Katie Hepburn and Earl Holliman. Wendell Corey, who few of us remember
beyond his breaking a Ming Vase in Mildred Pierce, is great as the stiff
deputy. Sweet little Yvonne Lime is on but for a few moments but the cast is
great and the story comes together just wonderfully. The commenter who was
bothered by Katie's New England English and the implausibility of the
storyline needed to let go of such a rigid standard. Nothing is ever
perfect. Lancaster is great as the fast-talking Starbuck and one can see
flashes of his former role as the Italian buffoon in The Rose Tattoo and
what will come in the later Elmer Gantry. This is a wonderful story and
sensitively done by a fine cast. Check it out. It is a
classic.
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The Rainmaker (1956)
19 out of 19 people found the following comment useful :-
even sweeter with the years..., 27 April 2004
Author: rondine (susan.rondine@cox.net) from Mesa, AZ
When I was younger & first saw this movie, what caught my eye was the stage-y production, the over-ripe acting- I was wrong. It's funny, but being a late 30-something divorcee with my own self-esteem issues, I now watch this movie & marvel at its depth.
This is a movie about so much more than a con man, an old maid and people stuck and unable to change. It's really about loving yourself. We've all heard the saying that you have to love yourself before someone else can love you. And that is what this movie is about. Believing in yourself even when that's the hardest thing. It's really the crux of the movie.
The casting is actually perfect. I cannot imagine anyone else as Starbuck. Burt Lancaster's magnetism and on-screen "je ne ce qua" and Hepburn's radiant simplicity are a match made in heaven. They compliment each other very well. The supporting cast is also well done. Holliman's exuberance is contagious and the sweetly supporting father and no nonsense brother Noah are well done but not over done.
I highly recommend this movie. Give it a chance & suspend your disbelief- that's part of what going to the movies is about.
P.S. Several people mentioned the last scene with Lancaster riding into the rain as being over done, cheesy or whatever. Yet it's just that kind of imagery that does indeed stick with you after the movie. It may seem overblown the first time, yet upon subsequent viewings, I love the effusive and memorable affect it has on the viewer. :)
10 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :-

Believing in Yourself, 27 August 2005
Author: rsjs619 from Tennessee
The skeptical reviewers miss the point. In fact, they take the position of Lizzie herself before she begins to believe in herself.
That some of this movie appears hokey, over-the-top and unbelievable is perfect. It requires the same leap of faith for the movie viewer as the characters must take in the story.
The script for this movie is brilliantly written and as timely today as it ever was. The casting and acting are wonderful.
This movie makes a very valuable point: It's not a con when you help someone believe in herself. You do something wonderful when you help another find hope, faith and love.
10 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :-
charm aplenty, 15 September 2003
Author: didi-5 from United Kingdom
Another of Kate Hepburn's ageing spinsters, to set aside her travelling lady in Italy in 'Summer Madness'. This time she's the unmarried sister in a house of men, whose heart gets a kick start by a visiting 'rainmaker', in the shape of Burt Lancaster.
Hepburn and Lancaster give charm and credence to what might have been an extremely ridiculous scenario. The whole is pretty stagey but it has heart which shines through. Good support from Lloyd Bridges, Wendell Corey and others. Funnily enough the part of the youngest brother was set for Elvis Presley's debut - wonder if he'd have been able to pull it off?
11 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :-
It's called acting., 8 July 2003
Author: (cdavis-19) from Seattle, Washington
Much has been made of the fact that nearly all of the actors were too old to comfortably inhabit their roles, which I think is crap. I don't think Hepburn's character felt anything other than genuine nor did it seem as if she were playing a character younger than her years. For one, she was a pretty well-preserved 49 - but that's almost beside the point. The point, I think being, is that no matter what your age or station, dreams will infuse you with beauty and purpose, so never abandon them. Sure, there were show-boaty moments (the final scene of the Rainmaker riding off springs to mind) - but this was made in 1956, after all, and gestures tended to be a little more expansive. Context, people, context.
9 out of 10 people found the following comment useful :-

big-hearted film, 4 January 2006
Author: hildacrane from United States
This movie always leaves me smiling. Sure, it's not a masterpiece of cinema, and one has to be willing to go with the staginess of it (it was, after all, a play originally), but there's such an exuberance to the performances and gentleness to the story that the movie wins you over. In fact maybe there is something appropriate about the obvious artifice of the sets, since the movie is about the roles that people play and the dreams that they cherish. Certainly Lancaster's charming con man is a master of the orotund and theatrical spiel. Another haunting Alex North score that occasionally recalls some of the poignant themes that he wrote for "A Streetcar Named Desire."
7 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-

The drama of human emotion., 22 May 2000
Author: Michael O'Keefe from Muskogee OK
N. Richard Nash adapted his play for the silver screen. Directed by Joseph Anthony, this is a wonderful insight into the core of human emotion. A hard glimpse at the look of low self esteem.
Katherine Hepburn plays Lizzie Curry, a young woman that lives with her father and brothers in a dusty prairie town. She is led to believe she will become an old maid. She of course has more brains than beauty and her emotions tell her that she needs to become a "woman".
Enter Bill Starbuck, played aptly by Burt Lancaster; Starbuck is a con man constantly on the move bilking his way through life. He convinces the Curry family he can end the drought by making it rain. He ends up in the barn with Miss Lizzie. Now she feels a new world has opened up to her.
Deputy File is too shy to tell Lizzie of his interest in her; until he finds Starbuck with her and wants to arrest him for his previous bad deeds. Lizzie has to make a big decision between the side of law and order or a life chasing dreams with a wanderer.
This movie deserves to be called a classic. The deep human element and the diverse relationships within the characters makes for a very interesting movie. Scenery and language may seem at times a bit hokey; but the realism is there. Great movie.
Besides Hepburn and Lancaster, this cast was full of good acting. Wendell Corey, Lloyd Bridges and Earl Holliman turned in fine jobs. Holliman's innocence and fresh spirit was a real highlight. The always cute Yvonne Lime also has a small part.
6 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :-

Striking a Poignant Chord, 12 May 2000
Author: harry-76 from Cleveland, Ohio
What's best, to live only in our dreams, only on the outside of them, or somewhere in between? N. Richard Nash has written a deceptively simple story about faith, reality, trust, and transformation in the script from his play, "The Rainmaker." Ably directed by Joseph Anthony, richly scored by Alex North, and lovingly played by Katherine Hepburn and Burt Lancaster, this is a poignant and surprisingly moving drama. While the secondary love interest between Earl Holliman and Yvonne Lime become a bit cloying and hokey at times, the main theme is beautifully enacted by two enormously gifted stars. "The Rainmaker" is an entertainment winner, while offering much substantive food-for-thought.
8 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :-
Great Movie!, 2 June 2004
Author: inspt71-1 from Kentucky
What can I say, it was a great movie. Katharine Hepburn is excellent as Lizzy Curry and Burt Lancaster in one of his best performances ever. Hepburn
deserved her Oscar nomination but Lancaster should have been nominated as
well. You have to admit he was not playing his ordinary tough character. He
brought some laughs to the movie as Starbuck. The supporting cast including
Lloyd Bridges and Wendell Corey was great and Alex North's music is great as
it usually is. This is an underrated movie and is definately worth your time
watching. You should see this movie if you haven't already. It's pretty hard to find of Video and it is not yet available on DVD and it should and if you do get this movie, don't get it confused with John Grisham's version.
5 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :-

great film, 2 February 2004
Author: kyle_furr
I'm glad I finally watched this film, because I passed it several times. Burt Lancaster and Katharine Hepburn are both great in this movie and so is Llyod Bridges. If your a fan of Burt Lancaster and Katharine Hepburn, you should watched it.
4 out of 5 people found the following comment useful :-
A Classic, 18 March 2001
Author: artzau from Sacramento, CA
I'll say it like it is. This is a classic. Nash's play comes to live on the silver screen with veteran actors Cameron Prud'homme, Wallace Ford, Katie Hepburn and Earl Holliman. Wendell Corey, who few of us remember beyond his breaking a Ming Vase in Mildred Pierce, is great as the stiff deputy. Sweet little Yvonne Lime is on but for a few moments but the cast is great and the story comes together just wonderfully. The commenter who was bothered by Katie's New England English and the implausibility of the storyline needed to let go of such a rigid standard. Nothing is ever perfect. Lancaster is great as the fast-talking Starbuck and one can see flashes of his former role as the Italian buffoon in The Rose Tattoo and what will come in the later Elmer Gantry. This is a wonderful story and sensitively done by a fine cast. Check it out. It is a classic.
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