The Naked Hills
The Naked Hills
| 17 June 1956 (USA)
The Naked Hills Trailers

Tracy Powell, an Indiana farmer, gets the gold fever and heads for Stockton, California in 1849. There, he abandons his first partner, Bert Killian, and teams up with Sam Wilkins, a claim jumper employed by Willis Haver. Six years later, Powell returns to Indiana and his sweetheart, Julie. They marry and he tries farming again but, on the night their son is born, he takes off again searching for gold. This time he heads for the hills with an inveterate prospector, Jimmo McCann. A decade later, the two are still hunting for their big strike when McCann is killed in an accident. Powell returns home with news of a big strike but the deserted Julie will have nothing to do with him. His friend Killian will not believe him but Haver, now a banker gives him a small loan and then beats him out of his claim. Many years pass before he comes home, now sixty-years-old, and this time, his wife and son open their home to him. But he vows to go prospecting come next spring.

Reviews
Inadvands Boring, over-political, tech fuzed mess
Billie Morin This movie feels like it was made purely to piss off people who want good shows
Roy Hart If you're interested in the topic at hand, you should just watch it and judge yourself because the reviews have gone very biased by people that didn't even watch it and just hate (or love) the creator. I liked it, it was well written, narrated, and directed and it was about a topic that interests me.
Lachlan Coulson This is a gorgeous movie made by a gorgeous spirit.
Edgar Allan Pooh . . . the short-sighted Fat Cat Villain, a Scrooge-like miscreant whose tunnel vision is so narrow it can only take in a miser's hoard of gold with its evil companion ledger books. "Magoo" makes cameo appearances throughout THE NAKED HILLS, with nothing on his mind but stealing as much as he can, by all the sinful foul means necessary. There is no hint of a thought in Magoo's head about Religion, Education, Nutrition, or any other Social Good. Instead, Magoo squats over Stockton, CA, like a sinister spider, entangling such things as "The Law," "Justice," "The Courts," "Government," and "The Police" in his wicked web of deceit whenever it suits his unproductive monopolistic schemes. Magoo's only pleasure beyond sucking up all the useful community resources is sadistically crushing the dreams of the Little Guy, represented here by Missouri prospector "Tracy Powell." Though Magoo will tolerate folks such as Tracy's pal "Bert Killian" eking out a subsistence existence (as long as they grovel from time to time, and never question Laws written to insure that a greedy One Per Cent can grasp 99% of the People's assets), there is no room in the Magoo Universe for dreamers such as Tracy. The lesson THE NAKED HILLS implicitly teaches viewers is: "Be grateful to settle for a few crumbs like Bert, because Little Guys such as Tracy will NEVER be allowed to pile up even a molehill of gold next to Magoo's Mountain of Wealth.
Ed-Shullivan This is another starring role for David Wayne who plays a prospector named Tracy Powell who has a one track mind. Tracy Powell wants to find that huge gold strike that has eluded him for decades. In spite of the physical and mental hardhsips he faces, regardless of the other lives that he leaves behind while he works feverishly 365 days a year digging, scrubbing, mining, hiking in the naked hills of California alongside tens of thousands of other gold seekers, Tracy keeps digging and no one or nothing will stop him from someday striking it rich.There are always greedy men who will take the law and courts into their own hands to get rich quick and in this film Jim Backus who plays financier Willis Haver and his bruising crony Keenan Wynn who plays Sam Wilkins will take full advantage of Tracy Powell and his mining partners hard work.A strong and beautiful woman named Julie (Marcia Henderson) falls in love with gold miner Tracy Powell and all she wants out of their marriage is to have a stay at home man to rear her children with her as they work a small farm. Initially Tracy abides by his wife's wishes, but those naked hills keep calling out Tracy's name and so he sets forth again and again to no avail.Tracy's stubborness to keep mining into his old age may be his death but in the lyrics of the 1970 Cat Stevens hit song Father and Son the father proclaims "But take your time, think a lot...Why, think of everything you've got...For you will still be here tomorrow...But your dreams may not" and the son responds "How can I try to explain...Cause when I do he turns away again...It's always been the same, same old story"I will not spoil the films end but if you do know the lyrics of Cat Stevens 1970 hit song Father and Son this film has a similarity that provides an alternative ending to the song.I give the film a decent 6 out of 10 rating for the strong performance of David Wayne
bkoganbing Allied Artists the former Monogram Pictures of the Bowery Boys and the Bomba the Jungle Boy series occasionally did a film that had a certain amount of class despite the lack of budget. The Naked Hills is a western that starts in the California Gold Rush days about a man who has the gold fever real bad, maybe worse than Humphrey Bogart in The Treasure Of The Sierra Madre.The lack of really big box office names in The Naked Hills makes it all the more real. David Wayne stars in this film as a man seized with the gold fever who is demon possessed with the idea of making that big strike, so much so that he abandons his wife Marcia Henderson and infant son who grows up to be Chris Olsen and later Steve Terrell.There was a great line in The Oklahoma Kid where James Cagney opines that the strong take it away from the weak and the smart take it away from the strong. The strong here is Keenan Wynn, a claim jumper of no particular redeeming features and the smart is a crafty Jim Backus. You can almost see him as Thurston Howell the first. Could be that what we see here is how the Howell fortune was obtained and the bloodline kind of thinned over several generations until he and the Mrs. got caught up in that three hour tour.Next to Wayne, Backus is who you will remember best from this film and this might be his best dramatic performance. For those of you who remember Mr. Magoo, Judge Bradley Stevens, and Thurston Howell and some other goofy comic parts this is the most serious film role Backus ever essayed. Even better than his part as James Dean's father in Rebel Without A Cause.Narrating this story of Wayne's useless life is Denver Pyle who comes west with Wayne, makes a small stake and then starts a dry goods business. He is carrying a torch the Statue Of Liberty couldn't hold for Marcia Henderson. In many ways he's the most touching character in the film. And James Barton who originated the part of a hard rock miner starring in Paint Your Wagon on Broadway essentially takes that character over to The Naked Hills. Watch in the end how Wayne's character has morphed into Barton.Most moving scene in the film is Wayne trying to nurse his dying mule back to health. He's so cut himself off from the world that the only living thing he has any relationship with is that pack animal. It's some of the best acting David Wayne did in his whole career.Probably a large budget would not necessarily have helped The Naked Hills. But a solid cast and a wonderful story put this memorable film over. It will linger with you long after you've seen it.
JoeytheBrit The Naked Hills follows the four seasons of one man's life from youth to old age without bothering to worry too much about ageing the character who plays the lead role. David Wayne is our hero, and the only thing that occasionally saves him from blandness is the fact that he is so badly miscast. Hearing other characters call him 'son' and 'boy' when they are quite clearly the same age – or possibly even younger – than him just makes everyone look faintly ridiculous. The fact that Wayne isn't a particularly good or charismatic actor doesn't help either. Watching him struggle through the role you can't help thinking what a better job someone like Alan Ladd would have made of the role.Wayne plays a young man seduced by the lure of easy riches when gold is struck in the wild and woolly west. He heads there with his best friend, but they soon go their separate ways when, blinded by his desire for wealth, Wayne falls in with bad guy Keenan Wynn. Together they steal a claim from a couple of Mexicans and work it for themselves, only for Wynn to double-cross him when it comes to payday.Wayne finds himself a good woman and tries to settle down to a life of domesticity, but the call of the gold in them thar hills proves too much for him and it's not long before he's abandoning wife and young son for another attempt with his new best friend Jimmo (a great performance from James Barton). For a while it looks like he has struck lucky, but things soon take a turn for the worse… The film's main theme – the overriding and destructive desire for wealth portrayed as an addiction – is fairly timeless, I suppose, and it's doubtful that, human nature being what it is, we will ever learn much from cautionary tales such as this. To hammer home the destructive qualities of Wayne's obsession his greed for gold is paralleled with his appetite for booze. To be fair to Wayne he makes a pretty good drunk: he allows his eyes to cross ever so slightly and adopts a vaguely quizzical expression. And while the theme is a righteous one, it's diluted by the fact that the film skips over the early scenes so that we know nothing about Wayne's character before gold fever grips him.Considering the film is quite clearly made on the cheap, it's entertaining enough, but you won't remember much about it after a week or two.