WATCH YOUR FAVORITE
MOVIES & TV SERIES ONLINE
TRY FREE TRIAL
Home > Adventure >

The Sun Comes Up

Watch The Sun Comes Up For Free

The Sun Comes Up

Set in the rural south of the United States, a bereaved war widow learns to put aside her bitterness and grief as she grows to love a young orphan boy and his dog.

... more
Release : 1949
Rating : 6.4
Studio : Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 
Crew : Art Direction,  Art Direction, 
Cast : Jeanette MacDonald Lloyd Nolan Claude Jarman Jr. Lewis Stone Percy Kilbride
Genre : Adventure Drama Action Family

Cast List

Related Movies

Our Hospitality
Our Hospitality

Our Hospitality   1923

Release Date: 
1923

Rating: 7.8

genres: 
Comedy  /  Romance
Stars: 
Buster Keaton  /  Joe Roberts  /  Natalie Talmadge
Down and Out in Beverly Hills
Down and Out in Beverly Hills

Down and Out in Beverly Hills   1986

Release Date: 
1986

Rating: 6.2

genres: 
Comedy
Stars: 
Nick Nolte  /  Bette Midler  /  Richard Dreyfuss
The Fox and the Hound 2
The Fox and the Hound 2

The Fox and the Hound 2   2006

Release Date: 
2006

Rating: 5.1

genres: 
Adventure  /  Animation  /  Comedy
Stars: 
Reba McEntire  /  Patrick Swayze  /  Jonah Bobo
Precious Pupp
Precious Pupp

Precious Pupp   1965

Release Date: 
1965

Rating: 6.3

genres: 
Documentary  /  Family
Son of the Mask
Son of the Mask

Son of the Mask   2005

Release Date: 
2005

Rating: 2.3

genres: 
Adventure  /  Fantasy  /  Comedy
Stars: 
Jamie Kennedy  /  Alan Cumming  /  Traylor Howard
Lilo & Stitch
Lilo & Stitch

Lilo & Stitch   2002

Release Date: 
2002

Rating: 7.3

genres: 
Animation  /  Family
Stars: 
Daveigh Chase  /  Chris Sanders  /  Tia Carrere
Must Love Dogs
Must Love Dogs

Must Love Dogs   2005

Release Date: 
2005

Rating: 5.9

genres: 
Comedy  /  Romance
Stars: 
Diane Lane  /  John Cusack  /  Elizabeth Perkins
101 Dalmatians
101 Dalmatians

101 Dalmatians   1996

Release Date: 
1996

Rating: 5.7

genres: 
Comedy  /  Family
Stars: 
Glenn Close  /  Jeff Daniels  /  Joely Richardson
The Haunting
The Haunting

The Haunting   1963

Release Date: 
1963

Rating: 7.4

genres: 
Horror
Stars: 
Julie Harris  /  Claire Bloom  /  Richard Johnson
Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events
Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events

Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events   2004

Release Date: 
2004

Rating: 6.8

genres: 
Adventure  /  Comedy  /  Family
Stars: 
Emily Browning  /  Liam Aiken  /  Jim Carrey
Puppy Time!
Puppy Time!

Puppy Time!   2019

Release Date: 
2019

Rating: 7.3

genres: 
Documentary
The Sandlot
The Sandlot

The Sandlot   1993

Release Date: 
1993

Rating: 7.8

genres: 
Comedy  /  Family
Stars: 
Tom Guiry  /  Mike Vitar  /  Patrick Renna

Reviews

ThiefHott
2018/08/30

Too much of everything

More
AniInterview
2018/08/30

Sorry, this movie sucks

More
Glucedee
2018/08/30

It's hard to see any effort in the film. There's no comedy to speak of, no real drama and, worst of all.

More
Mehdi Hoffman
2018/08/30

There's a more than satisfactory amount of boom-boom in the movie's trim running time.

More
lugonian
2018/06/11

THE SUN COMES UP (Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 1948), directed by Richard Thorpe, is a sentimental drama notable for being both movie featuring the famous collie by the name of Lassie, introduced five years earlier in LASSIE COME HOME (MGM, 1943), and the final movie appearance of opera singer/actress, Jeanette MacDonald. MacDonald has come a long way in movies by this point, making her film debut in THE LOVE PARADE (Paramount, 1929), starring Maurice Chevalier, with whom she teamed in three more musical-comedies. Aside from non-musical works for other studios such as Fox, she found both home and success at MGM starting in 1934, where the studio developed her talents more towards opera, with a new screen partner being Nelson Eddy. By the 1940s, her style of movies began to wane, marking the close for MGM by 1942. In 1948, she returned to the screen, and MGM, this time playing singing-mother roles starting with THREE DARING DAUGHTERS. Whether MacDonald intended on ending her movie career or not with THE SUN COMES UP is uncertain. At least she managed to hold her own against her scene stealing co-stars, especially from the dog named Lassie. Plot summary: Helen Lorfield Winter (Jeanette MacDonald) is a widowed mother with a teenage son, Hank (Dwayne Hickman) with a collie, Lassie, who adores him. Since the death of her husband, Helen has devoted her time towards her family and home life. A former opera singer by profession, and through the assistance of her manager, Arthur Norton (Lewis Stone), Helen gets her new beginning returning to concert singing for the first time in three years. Her concert proves successful, but her happiness is shattered by the sudden death of her son after getting struck by a passing truck while trying to prevent Lassie from getting hit while on the street. Weeks pass. Helen gives up her career. Unable to be around people, especially children, Helen packs up her belongings to go someplace far away to forget. Though she blames Lassie for her son's death, she takes Lassie with her anyway on a car trip leading her to Bushy Gap, a hillbilly residence located somewhere in the mountains. Helen's new beginning restarts as she rents a furnished home belonging to the out-of-town, Thomas I. Chandler. She soon finds herself disliked by town folks through her attitude towards their children. Through the kindly but blunt assistance of storekeeper, William B. Willigoode (Percy Kilbride), who tells her the truth about herself, Helen's attitude soon changes, especially after meeting with a teenage boy named Jerry (Claude Jarman Jr.). After saving Lassie from a rattlesnake, Helen hires Jerry as her handyboy. Though fond of Jerry, she knows very little about him. It takes her landlord, Thomas Chandler (Lloyd Nolan), having returned from his trip, to let her figure things out for herself. Others in the cast include: Hope Landin (Mrs. Pope); Nicholas Joy (Victor Alvord); Mickey McGuire (Cleaver) and Teddy Infuhr (Junebug). Not the typical MacDonald movie from the past, THE SUN COMES UP, actually resembles that of an episode from a "Lassie" television series a decade later. Though second billed, Lloyd Nolan comes in 63 minutes into the start of the movie, while Claude Jarman Jr., best known for his performance in THE YEARLING (MGM, 1946), takes up much of the proceedings playing a likable harmonica teenager who bonds well with Lassie. Being more drama than musical, the presence of comical types as Percy Kilbride, Margaret Hamilton and Ida Moore, highlight greatly to its lighter moment. Even MacDonald does a brief comedy turn for one scene involving snuff. Because of MacDonald's reputation as a singer, song numbers are inserted into the story, including: "Un Bel De Vedremo" from Giacomo Puccini's MADAME BUTTERFLY; "Songs My Mother Taught Me" by Antonin Dvorak; Rene Rabey's "Tes Jolies Yeux" "Cousin Ebenezer" (with MacDonald and group of orphan boys); and "If You Were Mine" by Artur Rubenstein. THE SUN COMES UP may not be a MacDonald favorite for anyone in favor of her singing opposite Nelson Eddy in eight musicals from 1935 to 1942, or working opposite Clark Gable and Spencer Tracy in SAN FRANCISCO (MGM, 1936), but it is satisfactory screen entertainment of MGM's 93 minutes of Technicolor family style mode. Formerly available on video cassette and later on DVD, THE SUN COMES UP, can often be found on the Turner Classic Movies cable channel. (**1/2)

More
bbmtwist
2014/07/13

Yes, I know.I'd never seen it - it was MacDonald's last film - what better way for MGM to say you are a has- been than to make her a "mother" in a Lassie movie. Drek! I prepared to "endure it" for Jeannette's sake.I was utterly captivated. What a lovely movie - classed up there with Friendly Persuasion in terms of truly loving, and truly honest human emotion. I keep trying to convince myself to pass this along, but I cry too much, it's too real, too human, too GOOD for that. For the lovers of what President Wilson tried to do for the US and what Obama in his footsteps is still unable to do for us, this is what the ideal of the US is as it lives on in ideals, honesty, and right thinking and feeling. Jeannette has four classical aria/song moments - a French song, a repetition of Puccini's Un Bel Di (Broadway Serenade), Songs My Mother Taught Me, and Romance. Not much to go on, but it doesn't matter. She is fine dramatically, as a war widow , whose son dies and is left alone, but is brought to life by her encounter with an orphan {exceptional performance by young actor, Claude Jarman, Jr.] Her son exits at 10 minutes into the film, young Jarman arrives at 20 minutes.Lewis Stone is seen briefly as an adviser. Percy Kilbridge is brilliant in a Charles Butterworth role as the local sage. Margaret Hamilton is unforgettable as a fashion-conscious spinster. Poor Lloyd Nolan doesn't arrive until an hour and 3 minutes in, but we know he will anchor the film, as he always did {most successfully in Peyton Place).Oh, do see it - that dog will melt you as will the story and the deft acting, direction and over-all good intentions of it.

More
collegeofuselessknowlege
2009/09/13

Except for the fact that I feel that MacDonald quit films because being paired with a dog was pretty much the last straw, I think that.so far, everything that's needed to be said has been said--although I'm sure that someone else will come up with something new observation.Viewers and fans always do with each viewing of the film. You get more and more perspectives as time goes by.But for me, I couldn't help but notice two things that strangely make a future connection to a future TV show which would become as much as a legend as Lassie.One is Barbara Billingsly (Beaver's mom) playing a nurse.The other is a kid named Mickey McGuire (Didn't Mickey Rooney use that name for a while when he was acting in the silents? Got it after playing the lead character in a series of "Toonerville Trolley" films based on the Fontaine Fox comic strip). He plays a boy named Cleaver! Somewhat odd and prophetic that the name and the actress should be in the same movie, don't you think?

More
bkoganbing
2006/03/17

Though she didn't intend The Sun Comes Up to be her final film, it turned out that way for Jeanette MacDonald. In this movie she plays, what else, a concert singer who is a war widow. After a few years of devoting herself to raising her only son, Dwayne Hickman, MacDonald is encouraged by her manager Lewis Stone to go back to the concert stage. She goes back and becomes a great success in her comeback. But after the concert she sees her son run down by a truck as he was trying to save their collie Lassie from the same fate. That just about destroys her and who could blame her for wanting to get away from it all. She rents an unused house deep in the Appalachians in North Carolina that's owned by Lloyd Nolan. She and Lassie go to live there and get involved with a group of kids from the county orphanage. Especially one young man, Claude Jarman, Jr., who reminds her of her late son.Jeanette gets some good opera and concert material to sing, items that were staples in her real concerts. The highlights for me are Un Bel Di from Madame Butterfly and Romance. And she gets her most cooperative co-star ever in Lassie. The beloved collie pulls off quite a rescue in the climax, but didn't steal any scenes from Jeanette MacDonald.She never planned that The Sun Comes Up would be her last film. She had a lot of ambitions to return to the screen. During the Fifties she did The King and I in summer stock and hoped to be cast in the film adaption as Anna Leonowens. I think the part would have suited her perfectly and she wouldn't have to have been dubbed as Deborah Kerr was.And one part she really wanted was as the Mother Abbess in The Sound of Music. She loved the song Climb Every Mountain. But by the time the film version of Sound of Music was being cast, Jeanette's health was failing.Still The Sun Comes Up is a fine family film and a fitting end for a screen legend.

More
Watch Instant, Get Started Now Watch Instant, Get Started Now