Uploaded by thepirateboy81 on Mar 26, 2011
A gambler and a prostitute become business partners in a remote Old West mining town, and their enterprise thrives until a large corporation arrives on the scene.
McCabe & Mrs. Miller is a 1971 American Western film starring Warren Beatty and Julie Christie, and directed by Robert Altman. The screenplay is by Altman and Brian McKay from the novel McCabe by Edmund Naughton. The cinematography is by Vilmos Zsigmond and the soundtrack includes three songs by Leonard Cohen issued on his 1967 album Songs of Leonard Cohen. As one of Altman's naturalist films, the director called it an "anti-western film" because the film ignores or subverts a number of Western conventions. Altman was introduced to the story by David Foster, one of the film's producers. Foster had been introduced to the story by the widow of novelist Richard Wright, an agent for Edmund Naughton, who was then living in Paris and working for the International Herald Tribune. The film was originally called The Presbyterian Church Wager, after a bet placed among the church's few attendees about whether McCabe would survive his refusal of the offer to sell his property. Altman reported that an official in the Presbyterian Church called Warner Brothers to complain about having their church mentioned in context of a film about brothels and gambling. The complaint prompted a name change to John Mac Cabe but it was further changed and released as McCabe & Mrs Miller. The film was shot in West Vancouver and in Squamish, almost entirely in sequential order — a rarity for films. The crew found a suitable location for the filming and, as filming progressed, built up the "set" as McCabe built up the town in the film. In the film, Mrs. Miller is brought into town on a J. I. Case 80 HP steam engine from 1912; the steam engine is genuine and functioning and the crew used it to power the lumber mill after its arrival. Carpenters for the film were locals and young men from the United States, fleeing conscription into the Vietnam War; they were dressed in period costume and used tools of the period so that they could go about their business in the background while the plot advanced in the foreground. The music for the film was largely by Leonard Cohen. Altman had liked Cohen's debut album immensely, buying additional copies of it after wearing each one out. Then he had forgotten about the LP. Years later he visited Paris, just after finishing shooting on McCabe & Mrs. Miller, and rediscovered the album; he had it transferred and started the music to maintain a rhythm for the film (in effect initially being used as a "temp" track). He didn't expect to be able to procure rights for the music since it was a Warner Brothers film and Cohen's album was released through Columbia Records. He called Cohen, expecting to trade off his recent success with M*A*S*H, but found that Cohen had no knowledge of the film. Instead, he had loved Altman's less popular follow-up film Brewster McCloud, and arranged for his record company to license the music cheaply, even writing into the contract that sales of that album after the release of McCabe would turn some of the royalties to Altman (an arrangement which at the time was quite unusual). Later, on watching McCabe to come up with a guitar riff for one scene, Cohen decided he didn't like the film, but honored his contract. A year later he called Altman to apologize, saying he had seen the film again and loved it. For the distinctive cinematography, Altman and Zsigmond chose to 'flash' (pre-fog) the actual film negative, as well as use a number of filters on the cameras, rather than manipulate the film in post-production; in this way the studio could not force him to change the film's look to something less distinctive.
Category:
Tags:
- McCabe & Mrs. Miller
- Robert Altman
- Leonard Cohen
- Edmund Naughton
- Brian McKay
- Vilmos Zsigmond
- Warren Beatty
- Julie Christie
- Rene Auberjonois
- Michael Murphy
- William Devane
- Shelley Duvall
- John Schuck
- Keith Carradine
- Maysie Hoy
- western
- gambler
- opium
- mining town
- whorehouse
- Pacific Northwest
- Winter Lady
- Stranger Song
- Sisters of Mercy
License:
Standard YouTube License
-
7 likes, 0 dislikes
-
Artist: Leonard Cohen
-
-
Buy "Winter Lady" on:
Android Market,
AmazonMP3, iTunes -
-
12:05
McCabe & Mrs. Miller (1971) Part 10by thepirateboy812,624 views
12:28
McCabe & Mrs. Miller (1971) Part 8by thepirateboy813,196 views
11:54
McCabe & Mrs. Miller (1971) Part 5by thepirateboy812,636 views
10:55
McCabe & Mrs. Miller (1971) Part 7by thepirateboy812,377 views
12:33
McCabe & Mrs. Miller (1971) Part 1by thepirateboy817,683 views
10 videos

McCabe and Mrs. Miller
10:04
MRLS WDDNG PART 9by ClandestineAffair1,750 views
3:37
Leonard Cohen - ''Sisters of Mercy'' (w. ''McCabe & Mrs Miller'' montage)by WindsweptMeadow848 views
3:35
McCabe and Mrs. Miller - End Sceneby recherrecher12,506 views
4:03
McCabe & Mrs. Miller 03 - McCabe (Warren Beatty) gets some business lessons.by BEATTY0012,354 views
3:13
McCabe & Mrs. Miller 05 - McCabe (Warren Beatty) ignores Mrs. Millers (Julie Christie) pleasby BEATTY0013,549 views
25:01
Batman Episode 119 - The Entrancing Dr. Cassandraby 11TL112,534 views
21:59
Batman Episode 77 - Penguin Sets a Trendby 11TL111,359 views
10:00
Im Lauf der Zeit (Kings of the Road) - Part 16by Kimmathykay671 views
10:30
High Ρląịns Dŗịftėŗ (1973) 4/10by highway664u38,969 views
3:41
The Ecstasy of Saint Theresa - Square Waveby killerrabbit87280 views
9:11
Im Lauf der Zeit (Kings of the Road) - Part 3by Kimmathykay1,566 views
3:27
McCabe & Mrs. Miller 04 - McCabe (Warren Beatty) gets an offer.by BEATTY0012,213 views
10:00
Alan Rickman in Benefactors (Full Movie) (2/12)by ricmaniaco1,747 views
9:29
Girl's Singing Voice Changes In 5-Minutesby accessconsciousness60,656 views
1:36
McCabe and Mrs. Miller - Freezin' My Soulby recherrecher742 views
- Loading more suggestions...
"Jesus Christ, the church is on fire!"
jonnythunder23 3 weeks ago
thanks pirate what an epic gun fight...still one of the best i've seen
chachidog10 3 months ago
thanks pirate
chachidog10 3 months ago
Thanks pirate.
hangingrock57 7 months ago
A great movie. Thanks for putting it on youtube.
bobbiebaba 10 months ago