THE AMERICAN WEST (mostly): Fact and Fiction (mostly fiction)





"NOBODY GETS TO BE A COWBOY FOREVER." -- Chet Rollins (Jack Palance) in MONTE WALSH (NG, 1970)

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Showing posts with label Ken Curtis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ken Curtis. Show all posts

Saturday, June 29, 2013

TOP 21 FAVORITE WESTERNS -- THE SEARCHERS


# 1


THE SEARCHERS (WB/C.V. Whitney, 1956)





DIRECTOR: John Ford;  EXECUTIVE PRODUCER: Merian C. Cooper; ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Patrick Ford; WRITER: Frank S. Nugent from story by Alan Le May; CINEMATOGRAPHER: Winton Hoch;  STUNTS: Chuck Hayward, Chuck Roberson, Slim Hightower, Fred Kennedy, Cliff Lyons, Frank McGrath, Dale van Sickel, Henry Wills, Terry Wilson, John Hudkins

CAST:  John Wayne, Jeffrey Hunter, Vera Miles, Ward Bond, John Qualen, Olive Carey, Henry Brandon, Ken Curtis, Harry Carey, Jr., Antonio Moreno, Hank Worden, Beulah Archuletta, Walter Coy, William Steele, Dorothy Jordan, Pippa Scott, Patrick Wayne, Lana Wood, Danny Borzage, Ruth Clifford, Chuck Hayward, Cliff Lyons, Mae Marsh, Frank McGrath, Jack Pennick, Chuck Roberson, Terry Wilson


What a surprise!  THE SEARCHERS is number one!  Well, not really a surprise, of course.  Entertainment Weekly has not only named it the greatest Western of all time but also the thirteenth greatest movie ever made.  In 2007, the American Film Institute ranked it as the twelfth greatest film ever produced and a year later bestowed the honor of naming it the greatest Western film.  Film critic Roger Greenspan of the New York Times even went so far as to name it the greatest American film.  So, who am I to argue?

However, it hasn't always been held in such high esteem.  Despite some commercial success and some good reviews, it did not win a single Academy Award.  It did not even receive one nomination.  

It was John Wayne's greatest performance (also his personal favorite), but he wasn't nominated.  Neither was John Ford, who in his career won four Oscars for Best Director, but wasn't even nominated for this one.  One would have thought that at the very least Winton Hoch would have been nominated for his stunning shots of the majestic Monument Valley vistas.  However, he struck out as well.


REVEREND SAMUEL CLAYTON (Ward Bond):  "Well, the prodigal brother.  When did you get back?  Ain't seen you since the surrender.  Come to think of it, I didn't see you at the surrender."

ETHAN EDWARDS (John Wayne):  "I don't believe in surrendering.  Nope, I've still got my saber, Reverend.  Didn't beat it into no plowshare, neither." 



Martha (Dorothy Jordan) watches as her brother-in-law Ethan (John Wayne) appears after a long absence


THE PLOT.
Ethan Edwards (Wayne) is a nomad who has not been seen nor heard from since the American Civil War ended three years earlier.  Apparently, he had spent those years as a combatant in Mexico's civil war.  

Soon after he rather mysteriously appears at his brother's Texas home (which looks a lot more like Monument Valley than western Texas), the Comanches attack and kill most of his family and kidnap his two nieces, Lucy (Scott) and Debbie (Wood).  Lucy's body is soon discovered, but it is assumed that Debbie has become a captive.

Ethan is an avowed Indian-hater and though it is not readily apparent he does have his reasons.  In the scene in which young Debbie is hiding in the cemetery there is a momentary glimpse of a tombstone that easily escapes the attention of all but the most attentive viewers.  It is inscribed: "Here lies Mary Jane Edwards killed by Comanches May 12, 1852.  A good wife and mother in her 41st year."  Mary Jane Edwards was Ethan's mother.

By the same token, Ethan's main adversary, the Comanche chief Scar (Brandon), has his reasons for hating whites.  They were responsible for the deaths of his two sons.  Therefore, these are two embittered, troubled, and unforgiving men whose hatred and bitterness are not entirely unreasonable or irrational, but in fact have some basis in reality.'


 

The Reverend Samuel Clayton (Ward Bond) clearly suspects that more than a platonic affection exists between Ethan and Martha.  In fact, I think that he has more than a suspicion.


There is also the implication that Ethan was in love with his sister-in-law, Martha, and that she probably felt the same about him.  Wayne in an interview indicated that Ford viewed that as being the case and that Lucy and Debbie may have been Ethan's daughters.  In Alan Le May's novel, however, there is no doubt that Ethan (Amos in the novel) loved Martha, but neither she nor her husband was ever aware of that love  and Lucy and Debbie were definitely not his daughters.


REVEREND SAMUEL CLAYTON (Ward Bond):  "You wanna quit, Ethan?"

ETHAN EDWARDS (John Wayne):  "That'll be the day."



Ethan sets off with his adopted nephew Martin Pawley (Hunter) on a five-year odyssey to find Debbie.  Ethan wishes to kill her because she has been defiled by the Indians, while Martin, who is himself part Indian, wishes to prevent him from doing so.


Hunter and Wayne as uneasy allies

MARTIN PAWLEY (Jeffrey Hunter):  "I hope you die!"

ETHAN EDWARDS (John Wayne):  "That'll be the day."



THE ACTORS.
If there is still anyone who thinks that John Wayne could not act or if they are only familiar with his performances in some of the routine, mediocre Westerns at the end of his career, they owe it to themselves (and Wayne) to watch THE SEARCHERS.  He submerges himself into the role to such a degree that he becomes Ethan Edwards, the most complex character he was ever asked to portray.  In fact, so good is he that it is easy to forget that he is acting.  And after all, isn't that a hallmark of great acting?

According to Fess Parker, he was Ford's first choice to play Martin.  However, the actor was at the crest of the Davy Crockett wave and Disney refused to give him permission to appear in the film.  However, after viewing Jeffrey Hunter in the role, I have a hard time seeing Parker as Martin.  Hunter was very good and, unfortunately, Parker had become typecast. It is also true that he was not as talented an actor as Hunter.

Hunter appeared in two other Ford films.  In 1958, he supported Spencer Tracy in THE LAST HURRAH (Columbia) and two years later starred in SERGEANT RUTLEDGE (WB/Ford).  He was only 42 when he died in 1969.


REVEREND SAMUEL CLAYTON (Ward Bond): "I say we do it my way.  That's an order!"

ETHAN EDWARDS (John Wayne):  "Yessir.  But if you're wrong don't ever give me another!"


Ward Bond is the Reverend Samuel Johnson Clayton, Texas Rangers captain
  
The role of the Reverend Samuel Johnson Clayton, a captain in the Texas Rangers, is one of Ward Bond's finest performances.  The only two that I can think of that came close were his Sergeant Major O'Rourke in FORT APACHE  (RKO/Argosy, 1948) and Elder Wiggs in WAGON MASTER (RKO/Argosy, 1950).  It is no coincidence that John Ford directed all three films.



As usual in a Ford Western, the Indians, Apache or Comanche, are portrayed by Navajos.  The one exception is Chief Scar, who is portrayed by Henry Brandon, a native of Germany.


THE WRITERS.

William T. Pilkington writes in Twentieth-Century Western Writers: "Alan Le May was a writer of formula Westerns who created one excellent book -- The Searchers [Le May's twelfth novel, published in 1954] -- that artistically and literarily soars far beyond anything else he ever published....

"Following The Searchers, Le May brought out The Unforgiven [published in 1957] which was also made into a well-known motion picture [directed by John Huston and starring Burt Lancaster, Audrey Hepburn, and Audie Murphy].  Again set in the Texas Panhandle during the Indian wars of the 19th century, The Unforgiven explores essentially the same ideas as those developed in The Searchers.  Unfortunately, the later novel is much less impressive than its predecessor.  Le May appears to be an example of a not-unusual kind of writer who toils unobtrusively at his craft for years, and is finally rewarded at the close of a long career with one superb book.  That is enough; we, as readers, should be grateful."


Le May's story was inspired by the real-life capture of nine-year-old Cynthia Ann Parker in 1836.  She lived for twenty-four years with the Comanche and gave birth to three children.

Unlike Debbie Edwards in Le May's novel and Ford's film, Cynthia Parker was rescued against her will by Texas Rangers and longed to rejoin "her people" and her son Quanah, who grew up to become the last Comanche war chief.  Amos (Ethan) Edwards was loosely based on Cynthia's uncle, James W. Parker, a Texas Ranger who engaged in a forty-year blood feud with the Comanches and spent eight years obsessively searching for his niece.


MOSE HARPER (Hank Worden) [just before an Indian attack]: "That which we are about to receive, we thank thee, O Lord."


Some reviewers were critical of what they perceived as Hank Worden's unrealistic portrayal of Mose Harper, a half-mad
Ol' Mose
Indian-fighting Texan who longed for "a roof over my head and a rocking chair by the fire."    However, he was also based on a historical figure known as "Mad Mose," a Texas Indian fighter who was said to have had affection for rocking chairs.


Frank Nugent was a former film critic who wrote hundreds of film reviews for the New York Times.  He could be harshly critical in his assessments but he was an ardent admirer of John Ford's work and was especially effusive in his praise for STAGECOACH (UA, 1939) and THE GRAPES OF WRATH (Fox, 1940).

After moving to Hollywood, he began a new career as a screenwriter.  Of the twenty-one scripts that he wrote, eleven were for Ford, including THE QUIET MAN (Republic/Argosy, 1952), for which he received his only Academy Award nomination.       


A FAMILY AFFAIR.
Even to a greater extent than on other Ford films, THE SEARCHERS is a web of family connections.  

Wingate Smith, Ford's long-time assistant director, was also his brother-in-law.  Ford's son, Patrick, was the film's associate producer.  Ken Curtis, who played Texas Ranger Charlie McCorry, Martin's rival for the hand of Laurie Jorgenson (Vera Miles), was Ford's son-in-law.  John Wayne's son, Patrick, has a small part as a greenhorn cavalry lieutenant.  Harry Carey, Jr. and his mother, Olive, have suppporting roles while sisters Lana and Natalie Wood play Debbie Edwards at different ages.  Finally, Dorothy Jordan, who portrays Martha Edwards, was the wife of producer Merian Cooper.


******
REVIEWS:

"THE SEARCHERS is undeniably, and wonderfully, a masterpiece....It unquestionably is one of the few Westerns that deserve to be regarded as important works of art.  In many ways it is the quintessential John Ford movie....The best of John Ford and the best of John Wayne." -- Brian Garfield in Western Films: A Complete Guide

"John Ford's THE SEARCHERS contains scenes of magnificence, and one of John Wayne's best performances. Ethan Edwards is one of the most compelling characters Ford and Wayne ever created....we can see Ford, Wayne, and the Western itself, awkwardly learning that a man who hates Indians can no longer be an uncorrupted hero." -- Roger Ebert in the Chicago Sun-Times

 "John Wayne is uncommonly commanding as the Texan whose passion for revenge is magnificently uncontaminated by caution or sentiment.  Jeffrey Hunter is wonderfully callow and courageous as the lad who goes with him, and Ward Bond makes a dandy fighting parson in an old plug hat and a long linen coat." -- Bosley Crowther in the New York Times

"Color, scenery, photography all splendid, with moving, insightful Frank Nugent script to match.  And who could ever forget that final shot?  Remade [unofficially] and imitated many other times since...." -- Leonard Maltin

"....is as far from an ordinary mid-century Western as King Lear is from a soap opera....with Wayne at the center in arguably the most profound portrait of macho monstrosity ever delivered by an American movie star." -- Michael Atkinson in The Village Voice

"Ford's masterpiece." -- Phil Hardy in The Western

"Masterpiece isn't a word to be used lightly but few would quarrel about applying it here. -- Walter C. Clapham in Western Movies

"No director made better Westerns than John Ford, and many would argue that THE SEARCHERS is the best he ever made....Wayne never topped his work as Edwards, a subtle and skilled portrayal that reveals both the dark and heroic sides of the archetypal Western loner." -- Steven H. Scheuer

"THE SEARCHERS...is a melancholic yet enthralling film that is stupefyingly in its beauty....John Wayne...has given what surely must be one of his best screen characterizations, if not the greatest.  The moment that he resists shooting his niece because of her wishing to live with an Indian warrior is one of the greatest moments in Western cinema." -- Les Adams and Buck Rainey in Shoot-Em-Ups


Now for a little fly in the ointment provided by Stephen Metcalf in his July 2006 review in Slate in which he at one point refers to THE SEARCHERS as "this silly film": 

"[It] is a geek's paradise: It is preposterous in its plotting, spasmodic in its pacing, unfunny in its hijinks, bipolar in its politics, alternately sodden and convulsive in its acting, not to mention boring."


Debbie and Ethan

However, he does make one small concession regarding the film, writing that the climatic scenes featuring John Wayne and Natalie Wood are "among the most thrilling moments" to ever be filmed.

Well, at least there's that. 


The famous final scene in which Wayne pays homage to the late Harry Carey, Sr. by grasping his right elbow with his left hand, a gesture closely associated with Carey.  Carey's widow and son had prominent roles in the film. 













Tuesday, January 8, 2013

TOP 21 FAVORITE WESTERNS -- RIO GRANDE

# 11

RIO GRANDE (Argosy/Republic, 1950)





DIRECTOR: John Ford; PRODUCERS: John Ford and Merian C. Cooper; WRITERS: James Kevin McGuiness from story by James Warner Bellah; CINEMATOGRAPHER: Bert Glennon

CAST: John Wayne, Maureen O'Hara, Ben Johnson, Claude Jarman, Jr., Harry Carey, Jr., Chill Wills, J. Carrol Naish, Victor McLaglen, Grant Withers, Peter Ortiz, Steve Pendleton, Jack Pennick, Ken Curtis, Patrick Wayne (screen debut), Cliff Lyons, Alberto Morin, Stan Jones, Fred Kennedy, Chuck Roberson, Eve March, Karolyn Grimes, The Sons of the Pioneers



John Wayne is Lt. Col. Kirby Yorke

The story is told that John Ford wanted to make THE QUIET MAN which would be set in Ireland and would be distributed by Republic Pictures.  

However, Herbert Yates, the head of Republic, a studio famous for producing action-filled Westerns, had no faith in Ford's Irish project, seeing it as a big money loser.  Finally, Yates relented, but only after Ford first consented to making a money-making Western.  That Western was RIO GRANDE.

If this story is true, then Ford did not originally set out to complete his so-called "cavalry trilogy" comprising RIO GRANDE, FORT APACHE (RKO, 1948), and SHE WORE A YELLOW RIBBON (RKO, 1949).  

And if this story is true, movie fans owe a debt of gratitude to Yates for insisting that the Western be made.  

And if this story is true, both Yates and Ford were doubly blessed, because two years later THE QUIET MAN would be a huge hit.  Furthermore, the two Ford films would provide Republic with its two most prestigious films.


John Wayne, Maureen O'Hara, and Victor McLaglen 

Like the other two cavalry films in the trilogy, RIO GRANDE's screenplay is based on a story by James Warner Bellah. The location shooting takes place in both Monument Valley and the area around Moab, Utah, also one of Ford's favorite locations.

Lt. Col. Kirby Yorke (Wayne), like all fort commanders on the western frontier, has his hands full. He commands a cavalry outpost located near the Mexican border and he doesn’t have enough troops to pacify raiding Apaches (portrayed as usual in Ford’s films by Navajos). 

His situation was not unlike other post commanders on the American frontier during the post-Civil War era. From Montana to Arizona and all points in-between, the cavalry was stretched to the breaking point. But Col. Yorke’s situation is somewhat different in that the Apaches are able to escape into a sanctuary located on the other side of the Rio Grande and Yorke is not allowed to pursue them there.

As forbidding as all this may be, Yorke’s life is about to become even more complicated – his personal life, that is. 

 Among a group of green recruits reporting to the post is his son, Jefferson (Jarman), who has recently flunked out of West Point. Father and son haven’t seen each other since the son was a small boy.

Complicating matters is that Yorke will bend over backwards not to show any special preference for his son and probably will not even accord him equal treatment. Be that as it may, the son doesn’t expect nor desire preferential treatment. His goal is to prove that despite his academic record he can be a good soldier.

"...put out of your mind any romantic ideas that it's a way of glory.  It's a lifetime of suffering and hardship, an uncompromising devotion to your oath and your duty." -- Lt. Col. Kirby Yorke 
 
If matters aren’t complicated enough already, who should arrive at the fort but the Colonel’s estranged southern wife, Kathleen (O’Hara), who is on a mission to buy her son’s discharge from the army. Of course he refuses to sign a release or try to influence his son’s decision.

Later we discover that the reason that Yorke has not seen his son in such a long while and why he and his wife are estranged is that fifteen years earlier, during the Civil War, General Sheridan had ordered Yorke to destroy the southern plantation owned by Kathleen’s family.  In the aftermath, she left Yorke and refused to allow him to see his son.

That sets the stage for what follows.  Eventually, Yorke is given orders to cross the Rio Grande and pursue the Apaches, setting up a climactic battle.  

Wayne would later say that he saw the film as a parable for the Korean War that was being fought at that time, that the Apaches escaping across the Mexican border was akin to the Chinese sanctuary north of the Yalu.  I have never seen anything that indicated that either Ford or anyone else associated with the film agreed with his analysis.


the Colorado doubling for the Rio Grande

In RIO GRANDE Ford replays his favorite antagonisms: home against army, privilege against duty, private good against public order, and mercy against the law.  

The film may have been an afterthought and not as elaborately staged as its cavalry predecessors, but it is nevertheless a classic film and although I have great respect for the other two, I like this one even more.

The film is notable for, among other things, being the first of several pairings of Wayne and O'Hara.  The two would co-star in a total of five films, including three that would be directed by Ford (RIO GRANDE, THE QUIET MAN, and THE WINGS OF EAGLES (MGM, 1957).  

In the other two films in which they appeared together MCCLINTOCK! (Batjac/UA, 1963) and BIG JAKE (Batjac/NG, 1971), they are back where they started, married but living apart.


John Wayne, Maureen O'Hara, and Claude Jarman, Jr. as father, mother, and son


O'Hara also starred in two films directed by Ford that did not feature Wayne.  The first was HOW GREEN WAS MY VALLEY (Fox, 1941).  The highly acclaimed film co-starred O'Hara with Walter Pidgeon and child star Roddy McDowall.  It was nominated for ten Academy Awards, winning five, and beating out CITIZEN KANE (RKO,1941) for the Best Picture award.  O'Hara also co-starred with Tyrone Power in Ford's THE LONG GRAY LINE (Columbia, 1955).

Young Claude Jarman, Jr., only 16-years-old at the time, gives a strong performance as the son.  Harry Carey, Jr. wrote in his memoir, Company of Heroes, that Jarman displayed his natural athletic ability when he quickly learned how to do something that had taken Carey and Ben Johnson weeks to learn.  

Carey, who had been around horses all his life and was a good horseman admits that it took him weeks to be able do the roman-riding stunt and that even then the mounting part had to be done by a stuntman.  Jarman, on the other hand, was able to perform the stunt almost immediately and accomplished it even more easily than Johnson, who was a former stuntman.



This is the beginning of the roman-riding sequence performed by Ben Johnson, Harry Carey, Jr., and Claude Jarman.  That is Johnson in the white shirt who has already made the mount.   Carey admitted he had trouble making the running mount.  A stuntman made the mount in place of Carey and then the action paused so that Carey could replace the stuntman and complete the ride and the film was cut in such a way as to make it appear that Carey had also made the mount.  That is probably the stuntman beyond Johnson.

There is a colorized version of the film on YouTube, which is worth watching if for no other reason than seeing the three actors roman-riding stunt.  It occurs fairly early in the film.

Of course, I recommend that you watch the entire film. 

 
By the way, these three young actors are perfectly cast and they just about steal the film from Wayne and company.  They are one of the main reasons that this film ranks as one of my favorites.

Jarman, at age 12, had made his screen debut in a big way four years earlier when he co-starred with Gregory Peck and Jane Wyman in THE YEARLING (MGM, 1946).  For his work in the film he was awarded a special "juvenile oscar."  

Despite that great beginning, Jarman did not appear in many films.  RIO GRANDE was only his second and he would appear in only three more, the last in 1956, and his final acting role came in 1978 in the TV mini-series, CENTENNIAL.



young Claude Jarman, Jr. in The Yearling, his film debut


Chill Wills, who first appeared in films in 1935, received his first notable role in RIO GRANDE, and he gives a strong, rather restrained, performance as the command's surgeon.

Victor McLaglen is on board once again doing his Irish sergeant comedy act.  Fifteen years earlier he had won a Best Actor Academy Award in a harrowing straight dramatic role.  The film was THE INFORMER (RKO) and it was directed by -- who else? -- John Ford.  

Two years after RIO GRANDE he would be nominated for Best Supporting Actor in THE QUIET MAN, portraying a character reminiscent of the sergeants he portrayed in Ford's cavalry films.

Ken Curtis, at the time the lead singer for the Sons of the Pioneers, and future son-in-law of John Ford, gets to serenade the leading lady in the film.  He was a former big band singer who later became a B-Western singing cowboy.  He would become a member of the John Ford stock company and eventually become a TV star as Festus Haggen in the GUNSMOKE series.

   

Festus and Marshal Dillon

Ken Curtis, B-Western singing cowboy

******

REVIEWS

"As an actress whose strength equals John Wayne's, O'Hara convincingly portrays a wife who fails to understand her husband's unswerving commitment to military duty....The emphasis on familial relationships elevates this film above the boundaries of a simple cowboy picture and places it in the realm of the philosophical....[It has] beautiful scenery, some good action and plenty of human interest. -- Steven H. Scheuer

"RIO GRANDE is an almost balletic story of the relationships among a man and his two loves -- his wife and the cavalry." -- J.A. Place in The Western Films of John Ford

"...if RIO GRANDE is a minor work, it offers, especially in scenes devoted to minor characters...a wealth of Fordian moments." -- Phil Hardy in The Western

"The last of director Ford's Cavalry trilogy...and the most underrated; a vivid look at the gentlemanly spirit of the Cavalry during post Civil War days...and the difficult relationship between an estranged father...and his son...." -- Leonard Maltin