Annie Get Your Gun

1957

Action / Musical / Western

3
IMDb Rating 8.0/10 10 115 115

Please enable your VPΝ when downloading torrents

If you torrent without a VPΝ, your ISP can see that you're torrenting and may throttle your connection and get fined by legal action!

Get Hide VPΝ

Plot summary

A live television adaptation of the popular musical about sharpshooter Annie Oakley joining Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show and falling in love with her co-star, Frank Butler.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
October 17, 2021 at 04:41 PM

Top cast

Susan Luckey as Winnie Tate
Mary Martin as Annie Oakley
Reta Shaw as Dolly Tate
Patricia Morrow as Jessie Oakley
720p.BLU
971.03 MB
1280*960
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 45 min
Seeds ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by chantdonchant 10 / 10

Watch excerpts on Youtube

I just watched some clips from this production on Youtube. It's corny, but it's wonderful. Mary Martin brings great clowning and athletic dancing to this role, as well as great B'way singing. Her singing has much more guts than it did on the audio recording of the national touring company. In the studio she tended to sweeten things up and sing with a warmer sound. This was filmed "live" in front of an audience and has all the energy and spontaneity of a theatrical performance.

The "I'm an Indian Too" scene is wonderful. It includes a fantastic and athletic dance as Annie arrives for her initiation into the tribe. I believe this song was cut from the new Broadway production as it's comic take on American Indians would be a hard sell today.

Reviewed by mark.waltz 10 / 10

Anything MGM can do, live TV can do better!

Poor Betty Hutton. She may have won a Golden Globe for the movie version of "Annie Get Your Gun", but her TV musical special "Satin & Spurs" was considered a grave fiasco that lead to a down curve in her career that made her a has-been by the end of the 1950's. Her "Panama Hattie" co-star Ethel Merman had owned this role on Broadway, and her "Happy Go Lucky" movie co-star Mary Martin got to do the original national tour. Ten years after that, Martin decided to take that and "South Pacific" out on tour again, and after successful productions of both in Los Angeles and San Francisco, was convinced to star in a live TV broadcast of "Annie Get Your Gun". It was an event. Magazine articles, a TV Guide cover, a cast album and the surviving kinescope show this to have been highly anticipated, while it took decades for the movie version of "Annie Get Your Gun" to get a TV broadcast or a home video release.

Only two years before this, Mary Martin had made TV history appearing with Merman in a lengthy duet celebrating both of their careers, and they would repeat that again in the 1970's for a sold out night night Broadway concert where as dueling Annie's and Dolly Levi's, they proved why their contrasting images made them co-queens of the musical theater. Certainly, you'd never see Martin as the determined stage mother in "Gypsy", and you'd never see Merman as the nanny ex-nun in "The Sound of Music". Merman, not mincing words, once said, "Mary's O.K. if you like talent", and when her Mama Rose lost the Tony to Mary's Maria Rainier, she notoriously asked the press, "How do you buck a nun?" But something tells me that Merman was one of millions watching that night that Mary went on in her original role of Annie Oakley, and while Merman would play Annie on TV in the 1960's, that version has completely fallen off the face of the earth, while Mary's remains.

Kinescope isn't the most watchable of ways to see classic TV, but when it's all you've got, you deal with it. Mary is certainly less brassy than Merman and Hutton, but that doesn't stop her from stealing the scenery. To this day, I still think her version of "You Can't Get a Man With a Gun" is by far the best, milking the laughs in the most clever of ways. She's got the handsome John Raitt as Frank Butler, ironically the same year that he filmed his one and only movie appearance in "The Pajama Game" opposite Doris Day, who herself would do a recording of "Annie Get Your Gun" (with Robert Goulet). Raitt is handsome and masculine, but not so macho that you long to see Martin take him down a peg or two. He's certainly the best looking of the Frank Butler's I've ever seen, and when he tones down his masculinity for some romance, it's va-va-voom between him and Mary. Raitt's "Pajama Game" co-star Reta Shaw is quite a unique take on Dolly Tate, quite ample but funny, with William O'Neal a commanding Buffalo Bill Cody. I'm sure the stage production of the Martin/Raitt tour looked far more glamorous than the minimalized sets, but we're not talking about the live musicals we've gotten off of network TV in the past five years. We're talking about the early days of TV. I've seen many of the stage musicals they did during this era, and this production is by far the best of them all.

Reviewed by davidgoldyn 9 / 10

Mary shoots a bull's eye!

I didn't expect much. Uusally when I see Mary Martin, she plays a version of Mary Martin. In this case, she acted the hell out of Annie Oakley. She was charming, funny, believable and totally committed to this role. She was incredibly believable as a hillbilly. I think this is a role she was born to play. I think she was better than any other Annie-even (dare I say it as an Ethel lover) Ethel Merman. If you can, see this performance- see it! . It shows why Mary was the beloved stage star she was. I also think the judicious trimming of Annie Gets Your Gun works in its favor. Always a treat to see Rita Shaw in a musical and she doesn't disappoint as Dolly. John Raitt is good too. A delight. Wish they'd re release it on DVD

Read more IMDb reviews

1 Comment

Be the first to leave a comment