Wild Harvest (1947) Poster

(1947)

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5/10
A well oiled cast and crew
bkoganbing11 June 2012
In the annals of Hollywood legends, Wild Harvest has a unique reputation. Not that it's a great film, but because of the circumstances under which it was filmed. At least the interiors that were done at Paramount studios under interesting circumstances.

Mentioned in both Beverly Linet's biography and in the The Citadel series on The Films Of Alan Ladd, there was a strike by one of the unions at the time. Rather than be guilty of crossing the picket line, director Tay Garnett had cast and crew bunking at the studio. As Garnett liked a happy set, he catered everyone with plenty of food and a nice free flowing supply of liquor.

There were several bar scenes in this film which is about the itinerant harvesting crews who use the giant combine machines to harvest wheat in the autumn. If the cast looks a little oiled and lubricated they were. A great time was had by all.

Lloyd Nolan narrates the film and it is his eyes through which we see the action. He spends most of the time coming between Alan Ladd and Robert Preston who are his best friends, but have totally different personalities. Ladd is a by the book dead serious guy who has raised the money for the machines and hired a crew. Preston is an ace mechanic and Ladd needs him to keep his combines running. But Preston likes a good time and nothing keeps him from that.

Enter Dorothy Lamour who probably was playing her worst character. She plays of Ladd and Preston and gets their hormones going. But Preston is whom she marries and Preston who has a bit of larceny in his soul starts skimming the wheat and selling some of what they harvest in some private sales. In the old west this would be the equivalent of cattle rustling and the wheat farmers feel about the same way toward 'high graders' which is the term for what Preston is doing.

Wild Harvest veers wildly toward serious drama and outright slapstick comedy. Maybe under more normal working conditions the film might have turned out better, who knows. The most interesting character in the film is Lamour who could have done more of these roles had she been cast. Still Ladd and Preston fans will see something interesting if not the best work for either of these guys.
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7/10
The original custom combining movie.
lightninboy24 April 2005
This is the original custom combining movie, made not long after the original Massey-Harris Harvest Brigade of World War II, back when men were men and work was work and movies were movies. Every custom combining movie should have a fire or a tornado, and this one has a fire. It's rather realistic. Alan Ladd is famous for Shane. Robert Preston is famous for The Music Man and has had a lot of roles. This movie proves that a good man doesn't need an extravagant, spoiled, lazy, conniving woman. The climax of Wild Harvest is releasing a combine off the back of a speeding truck. Massey-Harris collectors have a magazine called Wild Harvest.
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7/10
A good custom harvesting story
sun_dog6331 July 2006
Wild Harvest was the first movie made to portray the life of a transient harvester. However, I felt the inclusion of the "highgrading" issues and the fights between farmers and their harvesting crews, does go to extreme. The footage of the Massey-Harris 21A's is very nice. I also liked the opening footage of the varied combines/harvesting scenes, which also included the original Massey-Harris 21.

Hooray for the comment on the Wild Harvest newsletter! I'm the one who initially launched the newsletter, but am no longer connected with it.

This is one movie that needs to be re-released on both DVD and VHS! There are many farmers and custom harvesters among us who still want to either see this for the first time, or simply see it again after such a long time.
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seen this movie a long time ago would like to find it
trashcan19679 June 2004
Warning: Spoilers
This is an action packed movie the acting was first rate the story line mostly believable. Alan Ladd plays the competent but harried owner of a custom combine crew. Robert Preston is his buddy Jim ,a rift develops between the two when they meet Dorothy Lamour {Fay}. Jim and Fay pair off together and begin stealing from the farmers to support Fays expensive tastes. Joe(Alan Ladd)stands by Jim even when confronted with evidence that Jim is stealing. In an exciting conclusion Jim and Joe have to work together to escape the wrath of angry farmers, that sees them blocking the road with there combines from the back of their moving trucks! Any way its a good old movie id like to see it again.
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6/10
wild harvest movie filmed partly on ranch at Cantua Creek, Calif
pmcclearen2 June 2006
part of this movie was filmed on the vista del llano ranch at Cantua Creek , California .i lived there with my family, i was a small child at the time . my dad came home one day to get me and my brothers and sisters . he took us across a small ditch that ran through the camp to meet the famous Alan ladd . the film crew and stars were having lunch at the time Alan did not stand up but was courteous to a hand full of poor little farm kids and shook our hands and patted us on the head. we did have wheat on the ranch. my dad was a mechanic at the time and worked on harvesters . he was seen once in the movie driving a machine. i had the movie a couple of years ago , someone borrowed it and don't know if he still has it . not a great movie but watchable
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6/10
trivia
selkie419 September 2007
I believe, if you check,you will find that there were location shots done in Washington state also, somewhere around Moses Lake area. Lamour refused to do location shots so every time you see her from a distance or from the back it is her stand-in, Jo Chilcott (sp.). If I remember correctly my dad said that Ladd, Nolan and Preston were all there on location.

For years my dad carried a newspaper clipping about the location filming and Jo,because they were thinking about getting married at the time. I saw the clipping several times because Jo was a Washington native and they were proud that one of their own was involved in the film.
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7/10
Effective adventure yarn
searchanddestroy-130 October 2022
Good adventure drama from Paramount Pictures with the bulk of its stars: Alan Ladd, Robert Preston, Lloyd Nolan, and a movie that can be seen as a western where wheat replaces cattle, but without guns. In this kind of story, farmers and harvests, you can think of later movies such as THE RIVER, starring Mel Gibson and Sissy Spacek, Terence Malick and his DAYS OF HEAVEN, or Richard Pearce's COUNTRY, all made in the late seventies or early eighties. But this one, made by Tay Garnett, a director with much of John Ford's DNA, is not an intimate movie, or social oriented one either, as for instance COUNTRY was. No, it remains rough, a men's story mainly, it could have taken place in Texas, among the oil fields, in a manhood atmosphere. It's not GRAPES OF WRATH either, though the settings look like the same. It is above all a virile story of men in harvest business. To summarize Tay Garnett gives here his pure trade mark, such a this terrific fist fight scene; the kind of sequence in many Garnett's films. But this one is a pure masterpiece. In a John Ford's film, there would have been John Wayne, Victor mcLaglen and Ward Bond or Harry Carey Jr.
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10/10
Great movie - a rarely seen gem! Warning: Spoilers
This is a really entertaining movie and you don't need to know anything or be interested in wheat to enjoy it. Alan Ladd is wonderful (and gorgeous) as Joe Madigan who runs a harvesting gang with Robert Preston as his buddy Jim Davies, who is a great mechanic. Lloyd Nolan is funny as the diplomat who smooths things over when Joe and Jim fall out which is often particularly when it comes to "dames" in the form of Dorothy Lamour who has eyebrows that can tell a guy what she wants without a word! The gang has 30 days to pay off the combine harvesters they have bought and various things happen to make this difficult. First a wheat fire, then a rival gang of harvesters (which culminates in a hilarious bar room brawl between the two gangs), then Dorothy Lamour and finally a bunch of farmers angry that Jim has been nicking some of their grain to sell on the side. In one exciting sequence the armed farmers chase them to the state line and Alan Ladd has to jump from truck to truck to loosen the combine harvester at the back so it can fall off and form a road block. Last scene is the showdown between Joe and Jim over the dame. Brilliant and funny fight which is on its own worth watching the film for. Definitely one I would recommend!
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