The Quiet Man
The Quiet Man (1952)

The Quiet Man

2/5
(34 votes)
7.7IMDb

Details

Cast

Goofs

When Mary Kate and Sean drive to town in the buggy, the horn is on the left hand side of the bulkhead.

When Mary Kate interrupts the father fly fishing after storming off, it has moved to the right side.

When Sean Thornton first introduces himself to the bar and they start to sing "Wild Colonial Boy", the accordion player acquires a hat between shots.

After church, when Sean dips his hand in the holy water and says "good morning" to Mary Kate, her hair is alternately tucked in/hanging out between shots.

When they are singing "Wild Colonial Boy" for the second time (after Will and Feeney leave), their mouths are moving slower than the song that they're supposed to be singing.

When Michaleen Flyn first asks if Mary Kate is willing to marry, the glass and the bottle switch position between shots.

During the fight, the last time Sean gets the bucket of water thrown on him, we hear him say, "Thanks," but his lips never move.

Towards the end of the movie when all the town folk are along the road waving at the car passing by, the car twice passes by the "IRA" member.

He can be seen standing on the side of the road in his bright blue shirt.

At the horse race there is a sign that says "Inishfree race meet".

In Ireland they are called race meetings not meets.

John Wayne's wedding ring is clearly visible before he even meets Mary Kate Danniher.

It is most clearly seen while he is remembering his mother's words before introducing himself to Michaleen.

When Thornton and Danaher are at the Widow Tillane's bidding for the cottage, Danaher's highest bid is 710.

But in the bar, the accordion player says he heard that Danaher bid up to 810 and nobody corrected him.

It is possible that the bidding was longer when originally shot, and edited down, but they forgot to change the scene in the bar.

During the matchmaking scene indoors, rain is visible through the window behind Mary Kate.

When the shot switches to Michaleen Oge Flynn, no rain is falling outside the window behind him.

When Mary Kate finishes playing the spinet in Sean's house, she is seated with the music book opened.

When she gets up from the bench the music book is closed.

When Sean finds Mary Kate cleaning his cottage, you can see in the background that the bedroom door has been splintered with a large hole where the bolt would be.

The door isn't splintered until later in the story, though, after Sean and Kate are married and he kicks the intact bedroom door down.

During the station scenes, the locomotive and carriages have the 'Flying Snail' logo of the Coras Iompair Eireann railway company.

This logo wasn't introduced until 1944.

In the race meeting scene, two pipers are shown playing.

The pipes they are playing are Scottish pipes characterized by having one bass and two tenor drones in addition to the chanter, traditional Irish pipes only have one bass and one tenor drone plus the chanter.

Michaeleen introduces Sean to Mary Kate as from Pittsburgh, Massachusetts, USA.

However, "Steel", "pig-iron furnaces", and "slag heaps" are more generally associated with Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.

(Notethis is an obvious comedic device, showing that Michaeleen is not familiar with US geography.

) When Sean hops back in the horse cart and says, "Hey! Is that real? She couldn't be!", the sound is also out of sync.

After Sean and Red's first confrontation in the pub, the publican is pulling a round of drinks for everyone, it can be seen that he is taking full pints from a line and pretending to fill them.

In Ireland it is customary to have a row of drinks, such as Guniness, ready to be topped up as it is best served once it has settled.

When Mary Kate interrupts the father fly fishing after storming off, the father says that he has been fishing for a particular wily salmon for ten years.

Salmon almost always expire after returning to fresh water to spawn (at an age of four years or so) and a keen fisherman would know this.

When Sean steps off the train in Castletown he lays his sleeping bag down first and a suitcase down to the left of it.

When Michaleen walks up to retrieve them the sleeping bag should be on his left and the suitcase on his right; instead they are reversed when he picks them up.

Awards

Venice Film Festival 1952


Golden Lion

Box Office

DateAreaGross
31 December 1952 USA USD 10,550,000

Keywords

Reviews

I recently visited many of the shooting locations of my favourite movie, The Quiet Man, in the west of Ireland and published a travel feature with photos (I'm a travel journalist). My Quiet Man blog can be read at tomsweeneytravels.

This is one of my Favorite John Wayne Films of all time. Co Staring the Beautiful Maureen O'Hara.

This is one of those movies that it is some sort of sacrilege to say anything bad about. It won a bunch of awards,etc etc...

John Wayne embarks on a quest for sex in "The Quiet Man", a 1952 film by director John Ford. Wayne plays Sean Thornton, an American boxer who journeys to Ireland, the land of his birth.

" . .

One of best films ever made and can be watched over and over it is so entertaining.

Sean Thornton, an American prizefighter, Irish-born, who accidentally killed an opponent, went back home to free his mind, and buy his family property in Ireland. On his trip to home, he met a girl, Mary Kate Danaher, and they both fall in love.

John Ford is an interesting director nowadays, because while his influence is undeniable, many of his movies haven't aged as ideally as work from some of the other filmmakers of his time. When younger film fans talk about directors from decades upon decades ago, they're more likely to bring up Billy Wilder, or Akira Kurosawa, or Fritz Lang, or even Ingmar Bergman.

Best director? Best cinematography?

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