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| Timothy Bottoms | Adam Trask |
| Jane Seymour | Cathy / Kate Ames |
| Bruce Boxleitner | Charles Trask |
| Soon-Tek Oh | Lee |
| Karen Allen | Abra |
| Hart Bochner | Aron Trask |
| Sam Bottoms | Cal Trask |
| Warren Oates | Cyrus Trask |
| Howard Duff | Jules Edwards |
| Anne Baxter | Faye |
| Richard Masur | Will Hamilton |
| Nicholas Pryor | James Grew |
| Lloyd Bridges | Samuel Hamilton |
| Nellie Bellflower | Mrs. Trask |
| M. Emmet Walsh | Sheriff Horace Quinn |
| Director | Harvey Hart
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| Producer | Barney Rosenzweig
Allen Secher |
| Writer | John Steinbeck
Richard Shapiro |
| Cinematography | Frank Stanley
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| Musician | Lee Holdridge
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Nobel Prize-winning author John Steinbeck considered East Of Eden his quintessential novel. At more than six hours, this sumptuous 1981 production brings Steinbeck's bestseller to the screen more fully and faithfully than any other adaptation. Sweeping from Connecticut to California and from the Civil War to World War I, it follows three generations of the tumultuous Trask family: patriarch Cyrus (Warren Oates); his feuding sons, Adam and Charles (Timothy Bottoms, Bruce Boxleitner); and quarrelsome grandsons, Aron and Cal (Hart Bochner, Sam Bottoms). Through these men's lives slithers Cathy (Jane Seymour) - a she-serpent who holds their love and enmity. |
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Features
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