The Mountain Road


1h 42m 1960
The Mountain Road

Brief Synopsis

An American officer helps villagers against the Japanese during WWII.

Photos & Videos

The Mountain Road - Movie Poster

Film Details

Genre
Drama
Adaptation
War
Release Date
Jun 1960
Premiere Information
Los Angeles opening: 25 May 1960; New York opening: 29 Jun 1960
Production Company
William Goetz Productions, Inc.
Distribution Company
Columbia Pictures Corp.
Country
United States
Location
Apache Trail--Fish Creek Hill Bridge, Arizona, United States; Apache Trail--Fish Creek Bridge, Arizona, United States; Burbank--Columbia Ranch, California, United States; Horse Mesa Dam , Arizona, United States; Nogales, Arizona, United States; Superstition Mountain, Arizona, United States; Superstition Mountains, Arizona, United States; South Korea; Arizona, United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel The Mountain Road by Theodore White (New York, 1958).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 42m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White

Synopsis

In China, in 1944, as American troops are forced to retreat from the encroaching Japanese army, Maj. Baldwin, a member of the U.S. demolition team, is ordered to blow up an air base to prevent it from falling into enemy hands. Baldwin, an engineer in civilian life, finds the assignment ironic in that he was the person who designed the base. As the troops prepare to pull out, Baldwin's superior, Gen. Loomis, summons him to his office and informs Baldwin that he has been assigned to lead an eight-man demolition team to blow up the roads and bridges in the path of the advancing Japanese army. When Loomis offers to countermand the orders in light of Baldwin's inexperience in commanding troops, Baldwin states that he asked for the assignment because he wanted to experience command. Loomis then warns that command is the exercise of unlimited power. After Baldwin explains the mission to Sgt. Michaelson and Prince, two of the men selected for his team, they grumble that they had been told they could return to headquarters at Kwei Yang after blowing up the airstrip. Baldwin is unsympathetic to their complaints, however. Accompanied by Prince, Michaelson, Lewis, Miller and Collins, the team's translator who feels empathy with the Chinese, Baldwin heads out to seek permission to blow up a bridge from Col. Li, the Chinese commander of the region. Li then informs them that the Japanese are advancing toward a giant munitions dump in the region and suggests that it, too, should be destroyed. Li assigns Col. Kwan to accompany Baldwin, and as they are readying to leave, Madame Sue-Mei Hung, the American-educated widow of a Chinese officer, joins them for the journey to Kwei Yang. They proceed to the bridge, and after dispersing the peasants, blow it up as Baldwin wonders if the peasants will understand their motives. That night, when they stop to rest, Baldwin tries to convince Sue-Mei to take the bus to Kwei Yang, but she explains that public transportation is too primitive and corrupt for safe conveyance, causing Baldwin to remark on the brutality of the Chinese culture. The next morning, a truck stuck along the mountainous road blocks their progress, and when the driver brandishes a gun, demanding that the Americans push his vehicle, Baldwin climbs into the cab and steers it over the edge of a cliff. Later, Kwan informs Baldwin that Li has fled into the hills with his men, leaving his outpost vulnerable. Disgusted by what he sees as Li's cowardice, Baldwin realizes that he must now destroy the road to prevent the Japanese from reaching the outpost. When Sue-Mei worries that the peasants along the road might be injured, Baldwin suggests bribing them with food and tobacco to get them to leave, and Sue-Mei reacts with disgust at his reducing a person's dignity to a common bribe. After blowing up the road, they continue onto a village where they tend to Lewis, who has fallen ill with pneumonia. The next morning, a Chinese deserter tells Kwan that the Japanese are on their way. As they are about to pull out of the village, Collins suggests offering the hungry villagers their extra rations, but when he tries to distribute them, he is trampled to death by the ravenous mob. After loading Collins' body onto one of their trucks, Baldwin wonders what he should tell the soldier's parents about their son's death. When Sue-Mei laments that no one can help China, a country without order, Baldwin reacts with anger, saying he must believe that his mission is worthwhile. The next morning, Baldwin earns the enmity of his men when he announces that he has decided to blow up the munitions dump. At the dump, after wrangling the Chinese general's permission to detonate his post, Baldwin assigns Miller to drive the ailing Lewis and Collins' body to Kwei Yang, while the others wire the dump with explosives. When the facility detonates, the massive explosion sends Sue-Mei and Baldwin scurrying under a truck for cover, and he tenderly holds her. Continuing along the road, they spot Collins' body and Baldwin realizes that Chinese bandits must have jumped Miller and stolen his truck. Enraged, Baldwin insists on exacting revenge. Upon finding the discarded bodies of Miller and Lewis, Sue-Mei argues that revenge will change nothing, but Baldwin refuses to be deterred. Locating the truck parked in front of a village inn, they enter the building to confront the bandits. When a shootout ensues, the Americans take cover in the hills. After a bullet strikes the truck, setting it on fire, Baldwin decides to send a drum filled with gasoline careening down the hill into the truck. Sue-Mei desperately tries to stop him, but he doggedly releases the barrel, sending it crashing into the truck, igniting a giant explosion that engulfs the village in flames. Upon reaching the next outpost, Baldwin radios the American liaison at headquarters to report that the dump has been destroyed. The liaison congratulates him for eliminating the dump, a major American objective. When Baldwin asks Sue-Mei to finish the journey with him, she declares that her journey ended at the village. Baldwin tries to explain that he became obsessed by the power of his command and now regrets abusing it, but Sue-Mei rejects his rationale. Baldwin then turns to thank his men for a job well done.

Photo Collections

The Mountain Road - Movie Poster
Here is an American movie poster for Columbia's The Mountain Road (1960), starring James Stewart. This poster is a 3-Sheet, which measures 41" x 81"

Film Details

Genre
Drama
Adaptation
War
Release Date
Jun 1960
Premiere Information
Los Angeles opening: 25 May 1960; New York opening: 29 Jun 1960
Production Company
William Goetz Productions, Inc.
Distribution Company
Columbia Pictures Corp.
Country
United States
Location
Apache Trail--Fish Creek Hill Bridge, Arizona, United States; Apache Trail--Fish Creek Bridge, Arizona, United States; Burbank--Columbia Ranch, California, United States; Horse Mesa Dam , Arizona, United States; Nogales, Arizona, United States; Superstition Mountain, Arizona, United States; Superstition Mountains, Arizona, United States; South Korea; Arizona, United States
Screenplay Information
Based on the novel The Mountain Road by Theodore White (New York, 1958).

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 42m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White

Articles

The Mountain Road


Described in a review at the time of its release as a "mild little war sermon," The Mountain Road (1960) follows a U.S. Army major and his unit as they attempt to destroy bridges and roads along the eponymous Chinese route used by the Japanese in the last days of World War II. Although it contains the requisite action for a war movie, the film also tackles a more sensitive subject––cultural misunderstanding and racial prejudice between the American soldiers and their Chinese allies. The story takes a particularly nasty turn in a sequence depicting the vengeful destruction of a Chinese village, making this "mild little sermon" in hindsight something of a dark foreshadowing of the kind of events that would erupt during the Vietnam War a few years later. In a mostly unsympathetic role not typical for him, James Stewart, as the flinty, cynical major, eventually learns a little about compassion and the pitfalls of power from a spunky Chinese war widow, played by Lisa Lu.

The Mountain Road is based on a book of the same name by Theodore White (1915-1986), noted American journalist, historian and novelist. Best known for his The Making of the President accounts of the 1960, 1964, 1968 and 1972 elections, White had a long and respected career, beginning with his extended stint in China, from 1938 on, first as a freelance reporter and shortly after as correspondent for Time magazine. Chafing at the restrictions put on his reporting by the Chinese government and the rewriting of his stories by editors at the magazine, White left the post and returned to the States, but maintained his interest in the country. In 1946, he and colleague Annalee Jacoby wrote a best-selling nonfiction book about the country during wartime, Thunder Out of China, describing the corruption of the Nationalist government and warning of the growing threat of Communism. His novel The Mountain Road was published ten years later. White had interviewed Frank A. Gleason, the head of the demolition crew on which the story is based, for Time. Gleason was hired as technical consultant on the film, according to a 1959 LA Mirror-News article, although he is not listed in the film's credits.

Lisa Lu has the distinction of being one of the few Chinese actresses to break through in Hollywood. Born in Beijing, she had her first successes on American television, appearing frequently on the small screen from the late 50s into the 70s. The Mountain Road was her feature film debut. Studio publicity materials of the day revealed that Lu recruited faculty members from the Chinese Mandarin Department of the Army Language School to appear in the film. While continuing in American films, she also went to Hong Kong where she had a number of important roles, two of them resulting in international film festival awards as Best Actress. She has also had major roles in such films as Bernardo Bertolucci's The Last Emperor (1987) and as the storytelling mother in The Joy Luck Club (1993). Now in her 81st year, Lu continues to act; her most recent role was in Ang Lee's Lust, Caution (2007).

The Mountain Road was directed by Daniel Mann, former actor, musician and theatrical colleague of Elia Kazan. His feature film directing debut was Come Back, Little Sheba (1952), the first of several stage-to-film adaptations he would make. His greatest success came within his first eight years in Hollywood, when he directed seven different actors in Academy Award-nominated performances: Shirley Booth and Terry Moore (Sheba), Anna Magnani and Marisa Pavan (The Rose Tattoo, 1955), Susan Hayward (I'll Cry Tomorrow, 1955), Paul Muni (The Last Angry Man, 1959), and Elizabeth Taylor (Butterfield 8, 1960). Booth, Magnani, and Taylor won Best Actress awards for those roles. The last years of Mann's career (he died in 1991) were spent working in television.

The rugged terrain around Tucson, Arizona, substituted for the mountains of China in The Mountain Road and the film was shot by award-winning cinematographer Burnett Guffey, who won Oscars® for his work on From Here to Eternity (1953) and Bonnie and Clyde (1967).

Director: Daniel Mann
Producer: William Goetz
Screenplay: Alfred Hayes, based on the book by Theodore H. White
Cinematography: Burnett Guffey
Editing: Edward Curtiss
Production Design: Cary Odell
Original Music: Jerome Moross
Cast: James Stewart (Major Baldwin), Lisa Lu (Madame Sue-Mei Hung), Glenn Corbett (Collins), Harry Morgan (Sgt. Michaelson), Frank Silvera (Col. Kwan).
BW-102m.

by Rob Nixon
The Mountain Road

The Mountain Road

Described in a review at the time of its release as a "mild little war sermon," The Mountain Road (1960) follows a U.S. Army major and his unit as they attempt to destroy bridges and roads along the eponymous Chinese route used by the Japanese in the last days of World War II. Although it contains the requisite action for a war movie, the film also tackles a more sensitive subject––cultural misunderstanding and racial prejudice between the American soldiers and their Chinese allies. The story takes a particularly nasty turn in a sequence depicting the vengeful destruction of a Chinese village, making this "mild little sermon" in hindsight something of a dark foreshadowing of the kind of events that would erupt during the Vietnam War a few years later. In a mostly unsympathetic role not typical for him, James Stewart, as the flinty, cynical major, eventually learns a little about compassion and the pitfalls of power from a spunky Chinese war widow, played by Lisa Lu. The Mountain Road is based on a book of the same name by Theodore White (1915-1986), noted American journalist, historian and novelist. Best known for his The Making of the President accounts of the 1960, 1964, 1968 and 1972 elections, White had a long and respected career, beginning with his extended stint in China, from 1938 on, first as a freelance reporter and shortly after as correspondent for Time magazine. Chafing at the restrictions put on his reporting by the Chinese government and the rewriting of his stories by editors at the magazine, White left the post and returned to the States, but maintained his interest in the country. In 1946, he and colleague Annalee Jacoby wrote a best-selling nonfiction book about the country during wartime, Thunder Out of China, describing the corruption of the Nationalist government and warning of the growing threat of Communism. His novel The Mountain Road was published ten years later. White had interviewed Frank A. Gleason, the head of the demolition crew on which the story is based, for Time. Gleason was hired as technical consultant on the film, according to a 1959 LA Mirror-News article, although he is not listed in the film's credits. Lisa Lu has the distinction of being one of the few Chinese actresses to break through in Hollywood. Born in Beijing, she had her first successes on American television, appearing frequently on the small screen from the late 50s into the 70s. The Mountain Road was her feature film debut. Studio publicity materials of the day revealed that Lu recruited faculty members from the Chinese Mandarin Department of the Army Language School to appear in the film. While continuing in American films, she also went to Hong Kong where she had a number of important roles, two of them resulting in international film festival awards as Best Actress. She has also had major roles in such films as Bernardo Bertolucci's The Last Emperor (1987) and as the storytelling mother in The Joy Luck Club (1993). Now in her 81st year, Lu continues to act; her most recent role was in Ang Lee's Lust, Caution (2007). The Mountain Road was directed by Daniel Mann, former actor, musician and theatrical colleague of Elia Kazan. His feature film directing debut was Come Back, Little Sheba (1952), the first of several stage-to-film adaptations he would make. His greatest success came within his first eight years in Hollywood, when he directed seven different actors in Academy Award-nominated performances: Shirley Booth and Terry Moore (Sheba), Anna Magnani and Marisa Pavan (The Rose Tattoo, 1955), Susan Hayward (I'll Cry Tomorrow, 1955), Paul Muni (The Last Angry Man, 1959), and Elizabeth Taylor (Butterfield 8, 1960). Booth, Magnani, and Taylor won Best Actress awards for those roles. The last years of Mann's career (he died in 1991) were spent working in television. The rugged terrain around Tucson, Arizona, substituted for the mountains of China in The Mountain Road and the film was shot by award-winning cinematographer Burnett Guffey, who won Oscars® for his work on From Here to Eternity (1953) and Bonnie and Clyde (1967). Director: Daniel Mann Producer: William Goetz Screenplay: Alfred Hayes, based on the book by Theodore H. White Cinematography: Burnett Guffey Editing: Edward Curtiss Production Design: Cary Odell Original Music: Jerome Moross Cast: James Stewart (Major Baldwin), Lisa Lu (Madame Sue-Mei Hung), Glenn Corbett (Collins), Harry Morgan (Sgt. Michaelson), Frank Silvera (Col. Kwan). BW-102m. by Rob Nixon

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

The opening and closing cast credits differ slightly in order. According to an April 1958 Los Angeles Examiner news item, producer William Goetz wanted Marlon Brando to star in the film. A December 1958 "Rambling Reporter" column in Hollywood Reporter stated that James Wong Howe was to be the film's director of photography, and a January 1959 "Rambling Reporter" column noted that Dora Ding was to play the female lead. Although a May 1959 Hollywood Reporter news item places Don Rickles in the cast, Rickles does not appear in the film. An October 1958 "Rambling Reporter" column adds that Robert Mitchum was being considered for a role in the film, which at that time was to be shot in South Korea.
       Studio publicity in the film's production file at the AMPAS Library noted that location filming was done in the following Arizona locations: the set for the Chinese village was erected on the Horse Mesa Dam Road, 40 miles east of Phoenix; another set was erected in the vicinity of Superstition Mountain; the Fish Creek Hill Bridge on the Apache Trail was revamped to resemble the Chinese wooden bridge that is blown up in the action; and the temple set, ammunition and supply station and airfield were erected in Nogales. A July 1959 New York Times article adds that the extreme heat at the locations caused frequent cases of heat prostration among the cast and crew. According to a September 1959 Los Angeles Examiner news item, the battle scenes were filmed at the Columbia Ranch in Burbank, California.
       Studio publicity materials add that Lisa Lu, who played "Madame Sue-Mei Hung" in the picture, recruited P. C. Lee, Leo Chen, Richard Wang and C. N. Hu, faculty members from the Army Language School, Chinese Mandarin Department, to appear in the film. According to a June 1959 LA Mirror-News news item, Frank A. Gleason, who served as a technical consultant on the film, was actually the head of the demolition crew on which Theodore White's novel was based. The July 1959 New York Times article added that White, who served as the Chinese Bureau Chief for Time magazine during World War II, originally interviewed Gleason for the magazine.

Miscellaneous Notes

Released in United States Summer June 1960

Released in United States Summer June 1960