The Mountain Road

The Mountain Road
Original film poster
Directed byDaniel Mann
Written byAlfred Hayes
Based onThe Mountain Road
1958 novel
by Theodore H. White
Produced byWilliam Goetz
StarringJames Stewart
Lisa Lu
Glenn Corbett
CinematographyBurnett Guffey
Edited byEdward Curtiss
Music byJerome Moross
Distributed byColumbia Pictures
Release date
  • June 1960 (1960-06)
Running time
102 min, filmed in 1.85: 1 widescreen
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$1.5 million (US and Canada rentals)[1]

The Mountain Road is a 1960 war film starring James Stewart and directed by Daniel Mann. Set in China and based on the 1958 novel of the same name by journalist-historian Theodore H. White,[2] the film follows the attempts of a U.S. Army major to destroy bridges and roads potentially useful to the Japanese during World War II and the Second Sino-Japanese War. White's time covering China for Time magazine during the war led to an interview with former OSS Major Frank Gleason Jr.,[3] who served as head of a demolition crew that inspired the story and film.[N 1] Gleason was later hired as an uncredited technical adviser for the film.[5]

The film is a rather somber treatment of World War II and the Second Sino-Japanese War. This includes themes that were taboo for Hollywood during the war years, such as tensions between allies and racism among American troops. The protagonist is a frustrated and morally conflicted U.S. officer unsure about the value of his mission. For these reasons, The Mountain Road is often labeled as anti-war, but it was made with the cooperation of the Pentagon, and it is much more respectful of the military as an institution than are the well-known anti-war films of the 1960s and 1970s.

As a World War II combat veteran, Stewart had vowed never to make a war film, concerned that they were rarely realistic.[N 2] The Mountain Road was the only war movie set during World War II in which he starred as a combatant. Stewart, however, had been featured in a wartime short, Winning Your Wings (1942), and in a civilian role in Malaya (1949). Harry Morgan, another cast member in The Mountain Road, later said that he believed that Stewart made an "exception for this film because it was definitely anti-war".[7]

  1. ^ "Letdowns of 1960 at U.S. Pay-Box". Variety. January 4, 1961. p. 5. Retrieved April 8, 2019.
  2. ^ "After 74 years, Army veteran recognized for wreaking WWII chaos with OSS". May 7, 2018.
  3. ^ "The Burma Front (Fronts in the Pacific)." Archived December 28, 2011, at the Wayback Machine Time, September 1943. Retrieved: June 10, 2012.
  4. ^ Pakkula 2010, p. 495.
  5. ^ Evans 2000, p. 137.
  6. ^ O’Brien, Geoffrey. "The Jimmy Stewart Story." The New York Review of Books, November 2, 2006. Retrieved: June 10, 2012.
  7. ^ Munn 2006, p. 248.


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