All the Way Home (1963) Poster

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8/10
The Follets of Knoxville
bkoganbing29 July 2014
When it came time to casting for All The Way Home, Tad Mosel's Broadway success based on James Agee's novel A Death In The Family, Robert Preston was considered and got the lead. Ironic because a year before Preston had to fight to get the lead in the film version of The Music Man which was his career role. He wasn't considered box office enough. But the huge success The Music Man was convinced Hollywood's elite he was indeed box office again. Preston and Jean Simmons got the leads in place of Arthur Hill and Colleen Dewhurst despite the fact that Dewhurst had won a Ton Award on Broadway. The play ran 333 performances on Broadway in the 1960-1961 season.

Agee's autobiographical work is set in Knoxville, Tennessee and concerns the reactions of the family nuclear and extended to the death of the father and breadwinner. The first half gives you a picture of the various family members and the second half deals with the sudden death of Preston playing the father. Ironically his father survives Preston in the play and in my family my grandmother survived mine and my mother survived my sister. So my family dynamic is similar to that of the Follets of Knoxville. Hence I could identify personally in a way with what was going on. Fate makes an additional point here by having Preston visit his father on a health related issue.

Shot in Agee's own Knoxville they got a good sense of what it was like in 1915 when the story is set. I get the feeling Knoxville hadn't changed that much in the interim years. One wonders what the area looks like now. The authenticity is stamped into the film.

Preston and Simmons are great in their roles. The highlight of the film is Simmons dealing with their young son played by Michael Kearney. This is one of the great performances given by a child actor because Kearney comes off as a real kid not some Hollywood kid. Simmons herself was brilliant throughout, but especially here.

All The Way Home missed a Tony, but got the Pulitzer Prize for drama for Tad Mosel as it had for James Agee in his original novel. The film is great and moving drama and highly recommended for family audiences dealing with what the Follet family deals with in the film.
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7/10
A tender tale, well told.
em-632-78100024 February 2012
Warning: Spoilers
I remember how touched I was when I first saw this film the year it came out, by the fine performances of everyone in the cast, and the lovely relationship that existed between the husband and wife. Pat Hingle was in unusually fine form in a supporting role, but it was really Robert Preston's film, whose performance as the husband that truly shined. The scene in the back yard, where the couple are sitting on the grass and quietly talking underneath the stars is memorable, as was Preston's attempt to show his fitness by lifting a man off his feet in order to get work. Highly recommended family entertainment on a topic that touches everyone at some point in life. An excellent film.
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6/10
good
martin-fennell19 May 2021
Fine acting compensates for a rather slow moving tale.
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9/10
5 boxes of hankies required
overseer-327 January 2006
Why didn't someone tell me to bring 5 boxes of hankies for this one? I just watched (or rather re-watched after some 30 years) All The Way Home, (1963), based on the James Agee play "A Death In the Family". This story has seen other versions, but this one is by far the most outstanding.

Robert Preston was in his element as a loving husband and father of a young son, played endearingly by Michael Kearney. Jean Simmons gives yet another incredible performance as the wife, and Aline MacMahon shines as Aunt Hannah. She was an old woman in 1963, but still, how that woman could act. She was great in the 1930's, she was great in the 1960's. She's just great! It was also neat to see John Cullum the musical star in an early role in a non-musical. He was memorable as the brother who comes to tell the bad news, and not being able to face the wife, bursts into tears and hugs Aunt Hannah instead, and this is how the wife learns that her husband has died. An effective moment, not maudlin at all, but very natural. Do we always learn about the death of a relative in an ideal way? Not at all. I learned about the death of my mother after coming home from the grocery store, my arms filled with packages. It was like someone had kicked me in the stomach and the groceries suddenly felt like dead weight.

This film's actions take place in America during the World War One era, a time period shamelessly neglected by today's filmmakers. I guess they don't like its outright sentimentality, they'd rather foist gore and sex on us instead.

The film's credits are fantastic for the silent film fan, because the credits roll and are interspersed with shots of the young son and the father in the theater laughing at a Charlie Chaplin movie (sorry, Charlie fans, I didn't recognize which one it was but it had Charlie trying to get through a door in which a fat man's rear end was stuck). The "audience" is laughing like mad. It was eerily reminiscent of the last scene in the silent classic The Crowd (1928), only this film begins with such a scene. You hear a tinny piano in the background and it puts you immediately in the correct frame of mind to watch such a picture.

You are lulled into thinking you will be watching a simple tale of an early 20th century American family, but slowly you find yourself getting deeper and deeper into pathos and drama, a story filled with universal truths which are often hard for us to bear. A really wonderful film. It needs to be out on video or DVD.
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Few have seen it .. and most of us should.
timroperco28 August 2008
Like some of the other commentators, I saw this movie when I was young -- perhaps 11 or 12. I was babysitting the boys next door in 1964, and I think it was on the old NBC Saturday Night at the Movies back in the 1960s. A few years later, I read James Agee's "A Death in the Family" and recognized it as the original source. But years, then decades, went by before I saw the film again.

I remember being entranced by the opening scenes, where I see a father taking his young son into a saloon ... doing the Charlie Chaplin dance ... then going home together. Years later (for me) I had buddies who rented rooms on Forest Street in Knoxville while they attended UT. They knew nothing of the book, nor how families there once lay down on cotton comforters on the grasse of the backside lawns to gaze at the stars. Heck, back in the late 1970s, I could even find in Knoxville the railroad yard and roundhouse mentioned in the book. Probably not now.

It's a wistful movie. Some photography and audio was a little too artful ... a departure from the main scenes. But, like everyone else, I cherished the scenes where Rufus spends time with his Aunt -- especially when he dons that outrageous cap.

You can learn things from movies. For me, an enduring lesson was gained when Robert Preston uses his hands to warm the sheets before his wife gets into bed. I did this for years on cold winter nights when I was a married man for 25 years ... and discovered, after divorce, how such a small act is still appreciated by others.

I also feel fortunate to have met Robert Preston in -- of all places -- the Richmond VA airport somewhere around 1980. Not your normal venue. But we were both trapped by planes diverted by a monster storm. We shared several drinks, he told hilarious stories -- but I stopped him (clearly) when I mentioned that All the Way Home was my favorite movie in which he was featured. "What? Not Music Man?" He feigned to be indignant ... but, perhaps because so few people even knew about this movie, or ever mentioned it to him, he realized I was sincere. He spoke of how much he enjoyed the story, made a few untoward comments about the director and Jean Simmons ... but he clearly liked the role he'd played. He was a very warm and charming and gracious man.

All the Way Home is a terrific movie ... so rare these days to see a film focused on family, love, and the ways youngsters see the world.
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7/10
Simplicity at its smoothest and best in the family drama genre. Ever had a death in the family? Here's your story, then.
SAMTHEBESTEST27 June 2023
All the Way Home (1963) : Brief Review -

Simplicity at its smoothest and best in the family drama genre. Ever had a death in the family? Here's your story, then. All the Way Home is an adaptation of the Pulitzer Prize-winning play, which was adopted from "A Death In the Family." Though I haven't read the novel, what I gathered from the basic plot made me make up my mind about the fact that the play did more justice to the story. It takes you into the small family of a man, his wife, and their 6-year-old son. That kid is what I was or what you were in your childhood. I used to ask a lot of questions of my mother and father. Some of them were weird for my age, so my parents used to divert the talk or tell me some fantasy stories. One of the biggest fantasies I heard in childhood was about a pregnant woman having a child in her stomach because everybody told me different reasons and types of the same. Someone said a new guest will come from heaven, or if somebody has died, they used to say it's coming back! All the Way Home took me back to those moments. I was just like Rufus (almost all of you were like that, I believe). I used to ask questions about every new thing I saw. I remember attending the funeral of my aunt when I was 7, and I had no idea how to behave there. Everyone around me was crying, and I was confused about how to stay calm and not cry. After growing mature, I realised that they were crying because someone close to them has died, has left them forever, and they will never be able to see him again. This film is a testament to all the situations any child and any mother have to go through. The world does not stop after somebody's death, and you have to carry on with their memories. All The Way Home will take you home to realise all these things without any complex or strained theories, but with full simplicity. Jean Simmons, you beauty! And Michael Kearney, you have my heart. Thank you Alex Segal for a film that I would like to show my children in the future.

RATING - 7/10*

By - #samthebestest.
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10/10
Sadly forgotten Classic
arisdisc18 January 2004
It's an absolute travesty that this wonderful movie is not available in any form to those who might wish to see it. Warm, sensitive...this is almost as good as it gets. Seek this one out!
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10/10
One Must Go On!
julianhwescott19 February 2001
When I first watched this film, I really wasn't sure whether I liked it or not but after careful thinking and being honest with myself I have to admit that I like it. I have never seen such a tender portrayal than the one played by Robert Preston. He is in rare form. I was also very moved by Jean Simmons's character and the interaction she had with the other characters, especially the ones dealing with God, life and death. Aline MacMahon was a real inspiration in this film as Aunt Hannah--I had never before seen her in a movie to my knowledge and yet I really had and still do have the feeling that no one could have played Hannah as well as Miss MacMahon did. This film is about life, its ups and downs, tragedies and triumphs, reality and the choice of giving up or going on. This one's a real treat and blessing!
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5/10
Very stage-y dialogue
HotToastyRag27 June 2021
All the Way Home is a stylized drama that feels like you're watching a play. Jean Simmons does the best she can, but the dialogue hasn't been adapted to suit film audiences, so there's very little she can do. "You're not alone, do you hear?" she says to her son in a tearful monologue. No one actually says, "Do you hear?" when they're shouting at someone who's looking right at them. So, keep in mind the dialogue will feel very wooden and stage-y if you decide to rent this.

The story is set at the turn of the century, when cars were new and women wore their hair in Gibsons. In other words, Jean looks very pretty and her biggest problem during the first half of the movie is her refusal to tell her son she's expecting another child. She thinks it's vulgar and inappropriate, but her husband Robert Preston thinks it's important to the family unit. Robert is the quintessential husband and father, the head of the household no one can live without. You might wonder why Robert Preston was cast in this role, since he never conveys very much warmth in his performances. However, he played a very similar role in a very similar movie ten years earlier When I Grow Up, so that's probably why. Either that, or Hollywood audiences were used to seeing him in that time period because of The Music Man. The Dark at the Top of the Stairs was also set at the turn of the century.

This isn't really an enjoyable movie. If you look up the synopsis online, you'll find out what happens; but if you're not expecting it, it'll come as a shock. If you like Jean Simmons, you might enjoy seeing her in a dramatic role, since Hollywood didn't often know what to do with her.
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10/10
I was eleven years old when I saw the premier of this movie.
jagee-221 April 2005
40 years have gone by since I saw "All The Way Home", the movie. When the World premier debut of this film occurred in Knoxville, TN at the Tennesse Theatre, I was fortunate to be included with my parents to meet Robert Preston at Knoxville's McGee Tyson Airport and travel with him to downtown Knoxville's Tennessee Theatre. Robert Preston played the part of Jay Follet, who in real life was Jim Agee, my father's uncle. I saw the Tad Mosel adaptation of Agee's "A Death in the Family", play "All the WAY Home" at the University of Tennessee' Clarence Brown Theatre last night and that made me long for a chance to see the Robert Preston version again.

I want to thank all those who have added these wonderful comments in the IMDb.

sincerely, john a
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10/10
Beautiful and poignant
bolangirl13 October 2003
Set in the turn of the century, this is a wonderful period piece. Micheal Kearney as Rufus, the couples little boy is sweet and realistic. His father, Jay Follet played by Robert Preston is a top- notch, Oscar caliber performance. His interaction and love for his family is the most realistic that I have ever seen in a movie. Jean Simmons is great, too, her character is heartbreaking and moving. If you get a chance to see this, do it. I don't want to give away the story, but the tragedy she has to deal with will make you think about your loved ones and what it would be like if they were taken away suddenly. A real tear-jerker but a beautiful film.
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10/10
one of the most moving films I've ever seen
lizerooh31 July 2004
I can't remember how I was fortunate enough to even see this movie. It might have been on Bravo. It is based on the Pulitzer prize winning novel "A Death In the Family" by James Agee. He also wrote the screenplay for this excellent movie. It is a small story about a southern family who love one another and what happens when there is a death in that family. Robert Preston is wonderful. His character has such depth and sincerity and the relationship between he and his small son is very moving. Jean Simmons is also very good as the pregnant wife in this small family. I hope this movie is available on DVD or VHS soon. I can't wait to purchase it. Highly recommended.
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10/10
Knoxville: Summer of 1915
niborskaya30 July 2007
A wonderful, poignant story, beautifully acted against an Americana background. Quiet and deep. Sad and inevitable. The story is told, almost exclusively, through the eyes of a young (6-ish) boy, and the little man who played "Google-Eyes" brings a remarkable amount of depth and, could it possibly be insight?, into the character.

As an aside, the book upon which the play and subsequent movie was based, A Death in the Family by James Agee, was a Pulitzer prize winner. The American composer Samuel Barber used Agee's prologue to A Death in the Family for the text of his "Knoxville: Summer of 1915" - a concert piece for soprano and orchestra. Also a beautiful, almost languid experience.

This movie is almost a perfect distillation of the book, or at least, the perfect adaptation. There's a lot left out of the movie, a lot of background and some characters, but the movie still manages to capture the deepness of the story.

Beautiful cinematography, wonderful script, quiet interpretations, and a beautiful score.

I did find it available for purchase, just the movie, no extras, on iTunes. I think it's been edited, though, as I clearly recall seeing scenes on TV that weren't in the picture.

Catch this movie if you possibly can. And yes, bring some tissues.
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10/10
I would love to be able to buy this movie on DVD
wildtubes27 November 2009
I haven't seen this movie since I was about fifteen years old - and was studying the novel in my high school English class.

It is one of those movies which has stayed with me for nearly 40 years - and made an enormous impression upon me. I cannot understand why it has been forgotten. The emotional content and exploration of the ties that bind a family are tremendous - and like many original films, haven't been improved upon by remakes (I do remember seeing one of the made for television versions - it was good, but not in the same class as the movie).

Actually, I suppose I do: submerged in the avalanche of action filled, special effects junk which pours out of Hollywood, there is not much room left for real quality.

It is a shame, rather.
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9/10
Would Love to see this again!
riverbendbill25 August 2007
I caught this movie on TV many years ago and was so touched by it I wish it was available on DVD but sadly it seems to be one of those movies that disappears into the ether. Strangely enough the people who make the decisions as to what to program on broadcast and cable and those who market DVDs etc. are in lockstep with one another, offering the big hits and so called "classics" as well as truckloads of trash from the last quarter century. This film is an adaptation of James Agee's "A Death in the Family" and is beautifully filmed and acted and it's one of those films that seems somehow better on the home screen because of it's intimacy. If you think as highly of Robert Preston as I do you must see his performance in this movie.
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10/10
Available for download
jeannnnnette11 February 2008
I found this movie available for download on http://www.cinemanow.com. The quality is not the best, but it is watchable and reasonably priced.

As a resident of the neighborhood about which James Agee wrote and where he lived, I find this movie particularly of interest. The producers of this film made a great choice for its authenticity when they chose to film it in the actual Fort Sanders neighborhood where the story took place.

The young boy in the film expresses genuine emotion, unusual for a boy of his age.

To see clips of the movie's premiere at the Tennessee Theater in Knoxville in 1963, check out the local NBC affiliate's archives at http://www.wbir.com.
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10/10
Great Dramatic Presentation. Wonder Performance by Film Great Jean Simmons.
rlane10006 July 2017
Based on superior American writer James Rufus Agee's (1909-1955) A Death in the Family, this is probably the very best version of the biographical true story. Completed posthumously, the story was awarded a prestigious Pulitzer Prize in 1958. This movie is well crafted with a superior performance by the very talented Jean Simmons. Cinematographically this production will always and forever stand as most accurate as the set location is real life Knoxville, TN in which Agee's childhood took place in the early 1900's. Many of the names and places referenced in the production are the actual names. If you by chance attended the 1982 World's Fair, the scene where the steam train passes is the actual World's Fair site. Enjoy.
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10/10
Every child has a guardian angel and a hero. For this boy, it's the same man.
mark.waltz8 January 2019
Warning: Spoilers
It is so appropriate that this film opens with father Robert Preston and young son Michael Kearney in the movie theater watching Charlie Chaplin. Like Chaplin and the little Jackie Coogan in "The Kid", this is the type of bonding relationship that nothing can destroy. Happy-Go-Lucky Preston wants his son to see every aspect of life that he can and goes out of his way to show him both the good and the bad, without bitterness and without judgment. This even includes teaching him not to use certain words, explained gently to Kearney who accidentally uses the n-word in a key scene at the beginning of the film. There is also the education of the love of the family, when Preston takes Kearrney to meet his ancient great-grandmother. This is the first moment where real tears start to flow in this film version of James Agee's novel (made into a play written by Tad Mosel), culminating in a touching version of "Go tell Aunt Rhody" sung by Preston and his beautiful wife, Jean Simmons.

As angelic as he is as a husband and a father, Preston plays a character who does not believe in God. With each line that Preston expresses in his disbelief or cynicism, you may not necessarily agree with him, but it is difficult to dismiss his philosophies irregardless of your own. Somehow, his actions are not just words on a page that Preston is acting out. You feel his character is searching for something greater that will confirm what he doesn't believe, even though he reveals that one thing that he does believe in is people. It is a refreshing realistic Christian attitude ironically spoken by a non-Christian. The genuine love between Preston and Simmons becomes so beautiful to look at that the inevitable tragedy which guides this film into a different direction will tear at your heart like a terrified child.

Well regarded as a fine actress and a great beauty, for some reason Jean Simmons hasn't received the legendary status that she deserves. But in retrospect, she has such a vast array of performances and characterizations that she certainly deserves reconsideration of that status. Here, her character is not just a typical sweet wife and mother. She's comically amused by her husband and son's antics, even though she tends to scold them when necessary, and debates Preston's agnostic feelings with him. Her character is a woman who has dealt with many strings and must hold it all together even at the worst of times, and Simmons expresses this perfectly in her performance. Kearney is a natural born charmer, working well with Preston who after being so touching with Ronnie Howard the previous year in "The Music Man", strikes magic with a child once again. His breakdown at the end is one that anybody who has witnessed a child deal with sudden death can relate to, and perhaps will hit a bit too close to home.

As for Aileen MacMahon as the devoted aunt, I could write a love letter to her in every film I've ever seen her in. From her film debut in 1931's "Five Star Final" as Edward G Robinson's loyal secretary (and conscience) to her laugh out loud performance as one of the "Gold Diggers of 1933" to her award-worthy performance as the post World War II army officer involved in "The Search", she is a classic actress of the stage and screen whose work stands the test of time and is the epitome of what today we were referred to as an earth mother. More than 30 years may have gone by since her film debut with this performance, but here, she is a living angel in every way, shape and form. The very same year, she was one of the few people strong enough to stand up to the temperamental Judy Garland in "I Could Go on Singing", even stealing scenes away from that musical legend. Stage veteran John Cullum, as Preston's brother, is also brilliant and hauntingly real, especially when he has to reveal the tragic news and can't find the words to express what he has to say.

It is very rare when a film is so perfect where you are left so deeply touched that you could watch it almost immediately again just to not lose that feeling. This covers so many important issues in life, including love, death, fear, grief, compassion, empathy, anger and survival, all complex issues which are timeless since the beginning of humanity. The spirituality that this film expresses is so powerful that it might be too real for some people to handle, and thus should be watched with caution accordingly. What could have seemed stagy on film because of its theatrical roots becomes cinematic yet personal and that is what turns this film into a complete triumph and a work of art that must be rediscovered. .
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