Young Matt Matthews
John Wayne
Young Matt Matthews

“He Tamed Their Wild Hearts With His Courage and Won Them With His Love”
Young Matt Matthews, an Ozark Mountains moonshiner, hates the father he has never seen, who apparently deserted Matt's mother and left her to die. His obsession contributes to the hatred rampant in the mountains. However, the arrival of a stranger, Daniel Howitt, begins to positively affect the mountain people, who learn to shed their hatred under his gentle influence.
Young Matt Matthews
John Wayne
Young Matt Matthews
Sammy Lane
Betty Field
Sammy Lane
Daniel Howitt
Harry Carey
Daniel Howitt
Aunt Mollie Matthews
Beulah Bondi
Aunt Mollie Matthews
Old Matt Matthews
James Barton
Old Matt Matthews
Andy Beeler
Samuel S. Hinds
Andy Beeler
Granny Becky
Marjorie Main
Granny Becky
Wash Gibbs
Ward Bond
Wash Gibbs
Pete Matthews
Marc Lawrence
Pete Matthews
Coot Royal
John Qualen
Coot Royal
Mr. Palestrom
Fuzzy Knight
Mr. Palestrom
Jim Lane
Tom Fadden
Jim Lane
Riddled with bitterness and resentment, “Matt” (John Wayne) lives in a small farming community that seems tormented, generally, by events from it’s past. Then the arrival of the kindly stranger “Daniel” (Harry Carey) causes some consternation as he makes clear he wants to buy some land. Luckily, one of the few sane folk around, “Sammy” (Betty Field) takes a liking to him after he proves quite adept at removing bullets, and so she tries to help him acquire a meadow, but it seems this transaction is only going to pour oil on the fire. From fairly early on, it is clear to us just what caused the festering sore troubling “Matt” but perhaps with the intervention of time, and “Sammy”, a sworn blood oath might be unsworn instead of acted upon? Though Wayne takes top billing, the film really belongs to Carey, Field and to Beulah Bondi as the even more troubled “Aunt Mollie” who exemplifies the toxicity caused by grief and anger when augmented with a fair dose of poverty, a young son with learning difficulties and a granny (Marjorie Main) who is as blind as a mole. It’s really this last character who ultimately shines light for all to see - literally and metaphorically, and as an evaluation of the noxious potency of ill-informed bad blood, this resonates quite well. There’s some gorgeous scenery (of California rather than the Ozarks) and this is an altogether more considered outing for Wayne that’s worth a watch.
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