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Maureen O'Hara is the tough one in this film


The conflict between Big Jake and his sons in this film is that they believe he abandonded them. He has been gone for fifteen years. They do not realize that their mother's strength and bull headedness is probably why he left and that she may have even kicked him out. Several clues in the dialogue suggest why he left. My opinion is that he was driven away by Maureen O'Hara because she was just as tough if not tougher than him and they simply could not live together. She, after all, turned the ranch into a multi-million dollar enterprise. Some insight into what makes her tick is revealed when Big Jake learns the ransom is a million dollars. He asks her "Do we" then he corrects himself, "Do you have a million dollars?" She responds that she has that and many times more. She was the tough business woman who turned the ranch into a profitable enterprise. Also, he tells the boys they don't understand who their mother really is. They and we don't really find out until the end of the movie. For example, in the beginning of the picture when he looks into the ransom box he asks her if this is the way she wants it. She says they are dealing with ruthless men and that they should give these men exactly what they asked for. We do not see inside the box at this point and just assume it is the million dollars. We find out later that it does not have any money in it at all. What she means by "exactly what they asked for" is that she wants him to kill them. She sent for Big Jake so he could hunt the kidnappers down and kill them. Not pay them the ransom. She doesn't even send the money just in case. She wants the boy back but vengeance on the kidnappers is her main concern. Her sons do not know this about her. She is the ruthless one and that is what her boys don't understand and the audience doesn't understand until the end. What do you think? The only bad part about this movie is that John Wayne and Maureen O'Hara do not have enough scenes together. They have some of the best chemistry in Hollywood history.

Great Movie.

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Yes a great movie, in McClintock too Maureen was tough funny and sassy, a great gal .

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You are right rag. Maureen is only in the movie about the first twenty minutes but she made the most of it and her performance was great and added much to the story line later.

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Hmmm, I thought just the opposite. I didnt think she did much acting at all. When everyone was getting shot up all around her she was lacking in any emotion at all. I thought, what the hell's the matter with her? No woman would ever act like that. Richard Boone was the only one who gave a real performance. Everyone else acted like they were just in it to get paid- the Duke included. Actually, the best performance was by the dog. Seriously.

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Most of Maureen scene got cut so it hard to judge...and I disagreed with most of the stuff you said, not I would not say it was their best movies by a long shot but it wasn't bad. and Maureen only did the movie as favor to John Wayne, she retired very shortly afterwards, but I thought she gave as good as she could even with the small scenes she got.

Maureen O'Hara, Ireland Best Actress. Got Maureen O'Hara and Julie Andrews autograph 2008!

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Hmmm, I thought just the opposite. I didnt think she did much acting at all. When everyone was getting shot up all around her she was lacking in any emotion at all. I thought, what the hell's the matter with her? No woman would ever act like that. Richard Boone was the only one who gave a real performance. Everyone else acted like they were just in it to get paid- the Duke included. Actually, the best performance was by the dog. Seriously.


Women who have raised a family of three sons alone while running an enormous ranch learn to hide their emotions. Perhaps your acquaintance of tough women has been small. We do what we have to do and hysterics accomplish nothing. Mrs McCandles doubtless had her little cry when no one was around to see or hear her.

Perhaps it's you who failed to read the acting rather than the actors who were in it to get paid. Judging BIG JAKE from a current frame of reference is faulty. 1971 was a different time for films. Young folks tend to believe everything has always been the way it is now, but society, behaviours and mores change over time. The ways people communicate also change. This includes what can be communicated via film and acting.



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I thought Maureen O'Hara did a wonderful job. The scene with her and John Wayne where he opens the box, and asks her if she is sure if this is the way she wants it, they say so much more with their eyes than they do words.

It's really underlined when John Wayne tells his sons once they realize there is no money in the box, "They ain't gonna get paid for that."

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I also think she didn't send the money because she didn't trust the outlaws to do honor their end of the deal anyway. Remember they had almost killed off one of their sons. The movie doesn't ever make it sure if he lived but it hinted that he probably survived.

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I think that there was a lot more dialogue film between Wayne and O'Hara but it ended up on the cutting room floor. I think that she refers to it in here biography.

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[deleted]

[deleted]

ragumbi: You hit the nail right on the head.

The kidnappers made their bed, and The Duke made them lay in it.

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She's one of the tough ones, but I hardly think she's THE tough one. I don't think she'd have lasted long against Richard Boone's gang or the other guys who were following them. And one punch from that big, ornery oilman in the saloon probably would've knocked her head clean off.

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She was tough but you are right. Richard Boone would have more than been her match but he was after the money in their scene together.

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She was great in her movies with John Wayne.

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