Davy Crockett, King of the Wild Frontier

Davy Crockett, King of the Wild Frontier
Directed by Norman Foster
Produced by Walt Disney
Written by Tom Blackburn
Starring Fess Parker
Buddy Ebsen
Music by Thomas W. Blackburn (lyrics)
George Bruns
Edward H. Plumb (orchestration)
Cinematography Charles P. Boyle
Editing by Chester W. Schaeffer
Studio Walt Disney Productions
Distributed by Buena Vista Distribution
Release date(s) May 25, 1955 (1955-05-25)
Running time 93 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Davy Crockett, King of the Wild Frontier is a 1955 live-action Walt Disney adventure film starring Fess Parker as Davy Crockett. This film is an edited compilation of the first three stories from the Disney television series Davy Crockett :[1]

Contents

Plot

Creek Indian Wars

Tennessee wilderness settlers, Davy Crockett and best friend George "Georgie" Russel volunteer to fight with General Andrew Jackson in the Creek War. After a victorious battle, Crockett and Russel return home over the protestations of their superiors. Returning the next season, the pair find that the pursuing American forces have reached a stalemate chasing the remnant Creek forces through the swamps.

Georgie Russel is ambushed while scouting for the Native American positions, but Crockett is able to track the Creeks back to camp. In exchange for Russel's life, Crockett challenges Red Stick, the Creek tribe's remaining chief, to a tomahawk duel. Crockett emerges victorious but spares the life of Red Stick on condition he will sign the American peace treaty.

Frontier Pioneer

Crockett and Russel leave home once again to scout virgin territory being opened for settlement. There the pair encounter a man named Big Foot who is running Charlie Two Shirts off their land and reselling it. After befriending a family of Creek refugees who have been forced from their homes, Crockett agrees to become magistrate for the area. Confronting Big Foot in hand to hand combat, Crockett eventually defeats his opponent and arrests him and his accomplices.

Not long after, Crockett receives a letter from his sister-in-law which relates that Polly, his wife, has died.

Off to Congress

Crockett agrees to run for the state legislature when he learns of the unrivaled candidacy of Amos Thorpe, an unscrupulous politician in league with men trying to lay claim to Cherokee lands. Then at the request of Andrew Jackson, he runs for Congress. Handily elected, Crockett becomes a popular member of the House of Representatives and of Andrew Jackson who has since become president of the United States.

Aware of Crockett's views of Native American rights, Jackson's underlings arrange for Crockett to take a speaking tour across the eastern part of the country during the introduction of a legislative bill to usurp Indian treaty lands. Hearing of the bill, Georgie Russel rides to Philadelphia to fetch Crockett. The pair arrive back in Washington, D.C. where Crockett makes an impassioned speech before the House of Representatives against the bill, aware that it will cost him his political career.

The Alamo

Crockett learns of the embattled Texans at the Alamo and decides to join them, with Georgie Russel reluctantly following. In route to San Antonio the pair are joined by a riverboat gambler named Thimblerig. Davy spots smoke signals from the Comanches when they enter Texas. Next, they see a bison stampede and watch a tribesman fall off his horse. Davy and Georgie nickname him "Busted Luck". After reaching the Alamo, the army successfully holds out against General Santa Anna until being finally overrun by Mexican troops. After they successfully manage to scale the walls, the Mexicans outnumber the Texians, killing "Busted Luck" and Thimblerig, as well as Jim Bowie, who is sick in bed. Georgie is shot twice and is killed. Davy, the last survivor, fights valiantly on, taking down several Mexicans, though it is obvious he will get killed eventually.

Response

Released as a result of the enormous success of the three television episodes, which were first shown on the Disney anthology television series, the film remains Walt Disney's most successful television film project. The Davy Crockett episodes of the early-to-mid 1950s sparked a national "Davy Crockett craze", with many coonskin caps being sold, as well as a successful recording of the episodes' theme song "The Ballad of Davy Crockett".

The success of the film prompted Disney to create a prequel entitled Davy Crockett and the River Pirates.

Actor Fess Parker became so identified with the role that in 1964 he starred in a successful television series about Daniel Boone, another American frontiersman.

Cast

Songs

References

  1. ^ Dave Smith. Disney A to Z. Disney Editions, 2006. 161.

See also

External links