For a reason I cannot fathom, Giant still has a reputation as a fine film, and it will no doubt go on boring audiences forever and a day.
Giant (1956)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:35
Fresh:34
Rotten:1
Average Rating:7.7/10
Runtime: 5 hrs 12 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis: Edna Ferber's best-selling family saga was the source of Stevens' sprawling epic, which stars Rock Hudson, Elizabeth Taylor, and James Dean, in his last film appearance. When Texas cattleman Bick... Edna Ferber's best-selling family saga was the source of Stevens' sprawling epic, which stars Rock Hudson, Elizabeth Taylor, and James Dean, in his last film appearance. When Texas cattleman Bick Benedict (Hudson) goes to Virginia in the early 1920s to buy a prize stallion, he falls in love with Leslie Lynnton (Taylor), an aristocratic, independent-minded beauty, and they quickly marry. He takes her back to Reata, his 600,000-acre ranch, where sister Luz (Mercedes McCambridge), the family matriarch, does her best to make Leslie feel unwelcome. Leslie is appalled by the second-class status accorded to women and racist attitudes toward the local Mexicans, neither of which seem to bother her husband. Out of compassion, she befriends surly ranch hand Jett Rink (James Dean), who comes to worship her from afar, envying Bick for both his wealth and his wife. He strikes oil on land bequeathed to him by the deceased Luz and his wealth and power grow apace. As the years pass, the bewildered Bick often finds his children thwarting his wishes and criticizing his beliefs, pushing the millionaire to question his values for the first time in his life. The film's outstanding cast, which also features Dennis Hopper, Sal Mineo, Carroll Baker, Earl Holliman, and Chill Wills, inject vitality into a project that occasionally suffers from longueurs. [More]
Starring: Rock Hudson, James Dean, Carroll Baker, Elizabeth Taylor
Starring: Rock Hudson, James Dean, Carroll Baker, Elizabeth Taylor, Mercedes McCambridge, Chill Wills, Sal Mineo, Jane Withers, Dennis Hopper, Rod Taylor, Judith Evelyn, Earl Holliman, Alexander Scourby, Paul Fix
Director: George Stevens
Director: George Stevens
Screenwriter: Fred Guiol, Ivan Moffat
Producer: George Stevens, Henry Ginsberg
Composer: Dimitri Tiomkin
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Reviews for Giant
Trite as such observation may be, there is no better way to report the physical and financial qualities of Giant than to state that it overwhelmingly fulfills the promise of its title.
Oil drilling and cattle ranching never seemed so glamorous, and the performances by Dean, Taylor, Hudson, et al, remind us of the days when 'movie star' wasn't a dirty phrase.
Its deeper themes and superb performances from Taylor, Hudson and Dean make it a classic Hollywood epic.
Giant, for all its complexity, is a strong contender for the year's top-film award.
Dean (in one of 3 roles on film) makes quite an impression, and Taylor reminds us why we ever liked her to begin with.
Much of it is awful, but it's almost impossible not to be taken in by the narrative sprawl.
A real movie is big, grand, magnificent and regales you with all the power that movies can wield upon a viewer's imagination and spirit. George Stevens' 1956 production, Giant, is a real movie.
Modern critics consider Giant to be a bloated, sprawling, and pretentious saga, but by the era's standards, it exposed idelogical cracks in the American dream, such as the myth of melting pot and women's anxiety over their allotted place in society.
Offers a lively portrait of a marriage that weathers all storms and evolves over time into something more than it was at the outset.
Stevens' sprawling epic of Texan life, taken from Edna Ferber's novel, strives so hard for Serious Statements that it ends up as a long yawn.
Although Giant may not be a classic in the purest sense of the word, it's a fine example of a virtually-extinct genre.
George Stevens captured the vast space of Texas by using height, not width. It's fascinating to watch. It tells a long story, a story of times changing for better or worse.
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