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All the Brothers Were Valiant (1919), Ben Ames Williams (book), All the Brothers Were Valiant (1953) (film)

All the Brothers Were Valiant is a 1953 adventure drama film made by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM), based on the 1919 novel All the Brothers Were Valiant by Ben Ames Williams.




The 1953 MGM film is a remake of the 1923 silent film starring Lon Chaney and made by Metro Pictures (a forerunner of MGM), and now considered lost; so is the 1928 MGM version, Across to Singapore, which starred Ramon Novarro. This 1953 version was directed by Richard Thorpe and produced by Pandro S. Berman from a screenplay by Harry Brown. The music score was by Miklós Rózsa, the cinematography by George J. Folsey and the art direction by Randall Duell and Cedric Gibbons.


The film starred Robert Taylor, Stewart Granger and Ann Blyth, with Betta St. John, Keenan Wynn, James Whitmore, Kurt Kasznar, Lewis Stone (his final film, released posthumously), John Lupton, and Michael Pate.


Plot
Seafaring saga of two brothers and the woman they both love. Set against South Pacific islands, this love triangle pits the good brother against the bad as they squabble over a woman and a bag of pearls on the floor of a lagoon; the bad brother redeems himself, however, by helping fend off a mutiny.


Production
MGM bought the rights to the novel in 1936. Following the success of Captains Courageous, they announced they would make the film with Robert Taylor and Spencer Tracy. However, plans were postponed.


In November 1951 the film was reactivated as a vehicle for Taylor and Stewart Granger. Elizabeth Taylor was originally announced for the female lead.


Filming started on location in Jamaica in early 1953 with Granger and Bella St John. While the unit was on location, Elizabeth Taylor, who had just given birth, was replaced by Ann Blyth.


Granger later called the film a "crappy melodrama" and said the studio made him do this instead of the role he really wanted, the lead in Mogambo. He said he had been promised the latter but Dore Schary had reneged and given the role to Clark Gable. However Granger enjoyed working with Robert Taylor, saying he "was the easiest person to work with but he had been entirely emasculated by the MGM brass who insisted that he was only a pretty face. He was convinced he wasn't really a good actor and his calm acceptance of this stigma infuriated me. He was such a nice guy, Bob, but he had even more hang-ups than I had."


Lewis Stone died a few weeks after completing filming.


Reception
The film received an Academy Award nomination for Best Color Cinematography, (George J. Folsey).


Stewart Granger later called the film "bad" but admitted "I had an OK villain's part."


Box Office
According to MGM records it made $2,004,000 at the North American box office and $2,624,000 elsewhere. It recorded a profit of $958,000.


In France, it recorded admissions of 1,909,704.


Proposed Follow Up
In July 1953, MGM announced it had optioned another sailing adventure novel by Ben Ames Williams, Black Pawl, which they intended to film as a follow up, also starring Taylor and Granger. It was never made.
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