Charlie, the Lonesome Cougar
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Winston Hibler
Ron Brown
Bryan Russell
Linda Wallace
Jim Wilson
Clifford Peterson
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
While harvesting in the Pacific Northwest pine country, lumberman Jess Bradley finds an orphaned cougar kitten and adopts it as a pet. Nicknamed Goodtime Charlie, the little animal quickly makes friends with the lumbermill workers and is more or less permitted to run free. But during a huge lumber drive downriver Charlie upsets a kitchen wanigan and thus irritates the cook and the crew foreman. As a result, Jess is forced to keep his pet locked in a cage. The confinement proves too much for Charlie, and one night he escapes after hearing the call of a female cougar. Unaccustomed to fending and hunting for himself, Charlie heads for the nearest farm, but he is driven away by a blast of buckshot. He spends a long and lonely winter in the forest until he finally makes his way back to Jess's camp. Upon being discovered, the terrified animal panics and races through the mill until he is cornered in an elevator shaft. Just as the manager is about to shoot Charlie, Jess arrives to rescue his former pet. Realizing that Charlie is no longer compatible with civilization, Jess takes him to a wildlife refuge. There Charlie finds a female cougar with whom to share his new home.
Director
Winston Hibler
Cast
Ron Brown
Bryan Russell
Linda Wallace
Jim Wilson
Clifford Peterson
Lewis Sample
Edward C. Moller
Rex Allen
Charlie
Crew
William W. Bacon Iii
Ford Beebe
Lloyd Beebe
Lloyd Beebe
Robert O. Cook
Marinho Correia
Walt Disney
Walt Disney
Charles L. Draper
Charles L. Draper
Winston Hibler
Winston Hibler
Rusty Jones
Franklyn Marks
Franklyn Marks
Gregg Mclaughlin
Robert F. Metzler
Potlatch Forests Inc.
Dell Ray
Wayne Robinson
Jack Speirs
Jack Speirs
Jack Speirs
Erwin L. Verity
Weyerhauser Co.
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Film Details
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Articles
Charlie, the Lonesome Cougar
Directed by Winston Hibler, a longtime Disney veteran who had worked on both animated and live-action films for the company, and with a screenplay by Jack Speirs (based on a story by both Hibler and Speirs), Charlie, the Lonesome Cougar tells the story of Charlie, a cougar rescued and raised as a cub by a lumberjack (Ron Brown), but later reverts to his natural, wild ways, which causes trouble with the other lumberjacks in logging camp. When Charlie becomes too big to manage, and becomes enemies with a terrier named Chainsaw, the result is a melee that wrecks a kitchen and costs the company a lot of money.
In the cast were Gladys Cooper, Brian Russell, Linda Wallace, and Jim Wilson, with narration by Rex Allen, in his last Disney film, having narrated The Legend of Lobo (1962) and The Incredible Journey (1963).
The film was shot on location at Broughton Log Flume, Columbia River Gorge, Washington (which was also used for an episode of TV's Lassie that same year). Although Walt Disney personally greenlit the film, he died before it went into production, and Charlie, the Lonesome Cougar became the first Disney film made after Walt Disney's death from cancer on December 15, 1966.
Charlie, the Lonesome Cougar was released into theaters by Disney's Buena Vista Distribution Company October 18, 1967 as part of a double-bill with the "A" picture The Jungle Book (1967), which was a blockbuster, earning $13 million on its release. While the uncredited reviewer for The New York Times praised the feature, Charlie, the Lonesome Cougar "should have run for half an hour and stretches out for 47 minutes. Furthermore, Born Free (1966) got there first. Wise parents will take the kids in first for Jungle Book, and see at least some of the featurette, if squirming should commence, and it did with us."
By Lorraine LoBianco
SOURCES: "Disney's Jungle Book Arrives Just in Time" The New York Times 23 Dec 67 The Internet Movie Database http://movies.disney.com/charlie-the-lonesome-cougar http://www.thedisneyfilms.com/2013/10/charlie-lonesome-cougar-1967.html
Charlie, the Lonesome Cougar
Quotes
Trivia
Originally released as part of a double feature bill with Disney's Jungle Book, The (1967).
Notes
Filmed in Washington and Idaho.