
In the Oregon Territories of the mid 1800s, backwoodsman Adam Pontipee (Howard Keel) comes to town in search of supplies and a wife. He scours the town for a suitable bride, and settles on Milly (Jane Powell), the resourceful attendant at the local eatery. Milly is happy to be swept off her feet by the burly stranger and they get married immediately. But Milly is shocked to discover that Adam shares his mountain cabin with six younger brothers. Benjamin, Caleb, Daniel, Ephraim, Frank and Gideon (Russ Tamblyn) are hairy, dirty, loud and uncouth, and expect Milly to be their servant.
Milly recovers from the shock and sets about to turn the brothers into respectable men capable of attracting brides of their own. They are surprisingly receptive, and gradually learn what it means to be civilized. But Adam wants to hang on to more barbarous traditions of behaviour, setting the brothers on a collision course with the townsfolk when it comes time to find brides for all of the Pontipees.

Proving that outcomes can fully ignore expectations, Brigadoon bombed and Seven Brides was a smash hit, and over time has become one of the most beloved MGM musicals. The simple story summarized by the title, energetic dancing, phenomenal staging and several hit songs propelled the film into hearts and fond memories. Keel's deep voice, Powell's indomitable spirit, Donen's eye for capturing dynamic symmetry in motion, the gymnastic talents on display and the Michael Kidd choreography combine to create a celebration of mating at its most basic level.

Setting aside the suspect attitude, Seven Brides For Seven Brothers resonates thanks to numbers like Bless Your Beautiful Hide (Adam looking for a wife), Goin' Courtin' (Milly and the brothers as they learn how to woo a woman), and the melancholy Lonesome Polecat (the brothers yearning for female companionship, filmed in one haunting take amidst the snow). Good as these scenes are, they are all eclipsed by the classic Barn Dance sequence, an explosion of dancing with acrobatics and a competitive edge, the scene brimming with vivid costumes and unbridled energy while taking full advantage of CinemaScope's potential.
Seven Brides For Seven Brothers gets its gender politics wrong, but keeps on stomping the dance floor with a contagious and carefree spirit.
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