Kentucky (film) explained

Kentucky
Producer:Gene Markey
Darryl F. Zanuck
Director:David Butler
Starring:Loretta Young
Richard Greene
Walter Brennan
Cinematography:Ernest Palmer
Ray Rennahan
Editing:Irene Morra
Studio:20th Century Fox
Distributor:20th Century Fox
Color Process:Technicolor
Runtime:96 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

Kentucky is a 1938 American drama sports film with Loretta Young, Richard Greene, and Walter Brennan. It was directed by David Butler.[1] It is a Romeo and Juliet story of lovers Jack and Sally, set amidst Kentucky horseracing, in which a family feud goes back to the Civil War and is kept alive by Sally's Uncle Peter.

Plot

During the Civil War, Thad Goodwin Sr. (Charles Waldron) of Elmtree Farm, a local horse breeder, resists Capt. John Dillon (Douglass Dumbrille) and a company of Union soldiers confiscating his prize horses. He is killed by Dillon, and his youngest son, Peter (Bobs Watson), cries when the soldiers ride away with the horses.

75 years later, in 1938, Peter (Walter Brennan), now a crotchety old man, still resides on Elmtree Farm and raises horses with his niece Sally (Loretta Young). Dillon's grandson Jack (Richard Greene) and Sally meet, her not knowing that he is a Dillon. Sally's father, Thad Goodwin Jr., dies when his speculation on cotton drops. The Goodwins are forced to auction off nearly all their horses, and Jack offers his services to Sally as a trainer of their last prize horse, "Bessie's Boy", who is later injured.

Sally loses the farm, and Mr. Dillon makes good on his original bet with Thad Jr. and offers her any two-year-old on his farm. At her uncle's insistence, she reluctantly selects "Blue Grass" instead of the favorite, "Postman", and Jack trains him for the Derby. She learns of Jack's real identity and fires him as a trainer. During the race, Blue Grass runs neck and neck with Postman, but Blue Grass wins thanks to Jack's advice. Sally embraces Jack, but Peter collapses before the decoration ceremony and dies. At his funeral, Dillon eulogizes him and the American life of the past as "The Grand Old Man of the American Turf".

Cast

Notes

Walter Brennan won his second Oscar (Best Supporting Actor) in his role as Peter Goodwin.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Motion Picture Heads And Movie Stars At Louisville . Daily Racing Form at University of Kentucky Archives . May 8, 1939 . February 15, 2019.