Date Released : 4 November 1953
Genre : Comedy, Musical, Western
Stars : Doris Day, Howard Keel, Allyn Ann McLerie, Philip Carey
Movie Quality : BRrip
Format : MKV
Size : 700 MB
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Deadwood, Dakota Territory, is largely the abode of men, where Indian scout Calamity Jane is as hard-riding, boastful, and handy with a gun as any; quite an overpowering personality. But the army lieutenant she favors doesn't really appreciate her finer qualities. One of Jane's boasts brings her to Chicago to recruit an actress for the Golden Garter stage. Arrived, the lady in question appears (at first) to be a more feminine rival for the favors of Jane's male friends...including her friendly enemy Wild Bill Hickock.
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Review :
Doris Day's shining hour
 In the early fifties, Hollywood had to find a way to  draw audiences who were staying home and watching  television, and "Calamity Jane" was one of the best  musical efforts to get them into the theaters.  This  movie's redeeming quality is its high spirits.  They  never let up.  The Deadwood community that James  O'Hanlon rustles up is a motley bunch of soldiers,  scouts, prospectors and farmers, and they all have a  good time giving one another a hard time--none more  so than the title character played by Doris Day.   Her performance probably owes something to Betty  Hutton's Annie Oakley, and it looks an awful lot  like what Billie Hayes and Irene Ryan had been doing  years afterwards, but Day dons a buckskin suit and  tears right into the role like it was a tailor's  fit.  
I don't think I have to go into the rumor about the  real Calamity Jane to point out how daring Day's  work is.  Hollywood might have sanitized history (or  maybe not), but Day is as close to being Martha Jane  Canary as anyone is likely to be in a time when drag  acts were something no one ever talked about.  And  she is lucky to have some of the best movie music of  that year (or maybe any year when you consider what  now passes for good).  Sammy Fain and John Francis  Webster took the Oscar for best song, yet the ones  that weren't in the running are every bit as good.
How can you pass up a musical that delivers the  deeply satisfying baritone of Howard Keel?  When he  bursts out with joy in "Higher than a Hawk," the  light from the screen surges, and you feel like  you're resting on a sunlit cloud right next to his.   His smile matches Day's for brightness, and as they  ride through the Black Hills singing harmony, even  the birds seemed to have stopped to listen.  It's a  beautiful pairing that I don't think ever happened  again.
"Calamity Jane" may not be everyone's cup of tea.   If you're looking for history, this is not the place  to go.  But stop by, and Day and Keel and Dick  Wesson and Allyn Ann McLerie and Paul Harvey and  company will more than tickle your fancy.  They'll  keep you humming for days.
Directed by David Butler who has given us over the  years a string of felicitous moments to remember  from Will Rogers in "A Connecticut Yankee," to Jane Withers in "Bright Eyes," to the Ritz Brothers in "Kentucky Moonshine," to Bob Hope in "Road to Morocco," to S.Z. Sakall in "Lullaby of Broadway" and on and on and on.    
 
 
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