Stars in My Crown backdrop
Stars in My Crown

Stars in My Crown

"Take Your Choice...Either I Speak...Or My Pistols Do!"

6.9 / 1019501h 30m

Synopsis

An orphaned man recalls his upbringing with his aunt and her husband, the parson, in a small Western town during the Reconstruction.

Genre: Drama, Western

Status: Released

Director: Jacques Tourneur

Website:

Main Cast

Joel McCrea

Joel McCrea

Josiah Doziah Gray

Ellen Drew

Ellen Drew

Harriet Gray

Dean Stockwell

Dean Stockwell

John Kenyon

Alan Hale

Alan Hale

Jed Isbell

Lewis Stone

Lewis Stone

Dr. Daniel Kalbert Harris, Sr.

James Mitchell

James Mitchell

Dr. Daniel Kalbert Harris, Jr.

Amanda Blake

Amanda Blake

Faith Radmore Samuels

Juano Hernández

Juano Hernández

Uncle Famous Prill

Charles Kemper

Charles Kemper

Prof. Sam Houston Jones

Connie Gilchrist

Connie Gilchrist

Sarah Isbell

Trailer

User Reviews

John Chard

Yellow backs in fancy dress. Stars in My Crown is directed by Jacques Tourneur and written by Joe David Brown and Margaret Fitts. It stars Joel McCrea, Ellen Drew, Dean Stockwell, Alan Hale, Lewis Stone, James Mitchell, Amanda Blake and Juano Hernandez. Music is by Adolph Deutsch and cinematography by Charles Schoenbaum. It's post the American Civil War and we are in the Southern town of Walsburg. Preacher Josiah Gray (McCrea) arrives in town and promptly settles down to become an important part of the community. Soon he will come face to face with two killer diseases, that of typhoid and racial hatred. First off it should be noted that some plot synopsis' and poster art are off base, McCrea's preacher is not a gun toting dude willing to use guns to further his causes, it's a brief scene flecked with humour. Also note that the Ku Klux Klan is not mentioned in this, the gang at the centre of the race hatred here are called The Night Riders (Nightriders perhaps?). A veer from what we know as the norm for a Tourneur movie, this only really suffers from being a little too precious and naturally dated in its depictions of small town church life and racial bigotry. But that said, it's such a warm involving picture that is performed and directed with skill, it's almost impossible not to feel good about things come the closure of the play. Story thrives on community strengths and weakness, delicately blending both to show optimism on offer in spite of human fallibilities. The battle between faith and medicine in nicely played, refusing to force feed one or the other, whilst the key scene as the racial hatred reached its vilest peak is potent and hits all the right notes. Cliches and stereotypes are within, perhaps unsurprisingly for the era of film making, while Hernandez's black character is written as far too passive to be utterly comfortable. It also would have been nice to have had more of Charles Kemper's ebullient medicine show host, but complaints are small here and Stars in My Crown is a worthy and comfort food kinda picture. 7/10