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 Victor McLaglen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Victor McLaglen. Show all posts

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
































Saturday, December 15, 2012

TOP 21 FAVORITE WESTERNS -- FORT APACHE


# 17
FORT APACHE (Argosy/RKO, 1948)









DIRECTORs: John Ford, Mervyn LeRoy, Joshua Logan; PRODUCERS: John Ford and Merian C. Cooper;  WRITER: Frank S. Nugent from a story by James Warner Bellah;  CINEMATOGRAPHY:  Archie Stout

CAST:  John Wayne, Henry Fonda, Shirley Temple, John Agar, Ward Bond, George O'Brien, Victor McLaglen, Pedro Armendariz, Anna Lee, Irene Rich, Guy Kibbee, Grant Withers, Miguel Inclan, Jack Pennick, Dick Foran, Francis Ford, Movita, Hank Worden, Frank Ferguson


This is the first of Ford's cavalry trilogy, though in historical chronology it occurs between the other two, and that is where most film historians and critics place it in terms of quality.



Henry Fonda and John Wayne



 "Gentlemen, I did not seek this command, but since it's been assigned to me, I intend to make this regiment the finest on the frontier.  I fully recognize that prolonged duty in a small outpost can lead to carelessness -- and inefficiency and laxity in dress and deportment.  I call it to your attention that only one of you has reported this morning properly dressed.  The uniform, gentleman, is not a subject for individual, whimsical expression.  We're not cowboys at this post -- or freighters with a load of alfalfa." --Lt. Col. Owen Thursday (Henry Fonda)


Two years earlier Ford had filmed his version of the Wyatt Earp legend in the incomparable (and historically inaccurate) MY DARLING CLEMENTINE (Fox, 1946); in FORT APACHE he films the Custer legend.  

However, instead of dealing with the specific historical personage, Ford thinly disguised Custer as a fictional character, Col. Owen Thursday (portrayed by Fonda, who at this point was Ford's favorite actor).  To further disguise the basis of the story it is transported to the Southwest with the foe being Cochise and the Apaches, rather than Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse, and the northern tribes.


Apache warriors portrayed by Navajo


Col. Thursday, like Custer, had been promoted to the brevet rank of general during the Civil War, but had now, again like Custer, been demoted to his pre-war rank of lt. colonel.  

He has been shipped West to take command of a desert outpost, Fort Apache.  The veteran soldiers at the fort discover that the colonel knows nothing about fighting Indians.  They soon realize he is only after fame, glory, and a restoration of his former rank.

In the end, Thursday makes the same mistakes as Custer and experiences the same results, including the acquisition of legendary status.

John Ford was quoted as saying "We have legends about people like Custer.  He's one of our great heroes.  He did a very stupid thing.  But a legend is more interesting than the actual facts."  

Perhaps that is why he changed the locale and the name of the character; he did not want to be a party to the destruction of the legend.

FORT APACHE was Henry Fonda's eighth starring role in a Ford film.  It all began with the delightful DRUMS ALONG THE MOHAWK (Fox, 1939), but was about to come to an end.

Their last collaboration was MISTER ROBERTS (WB, 1955).  In fact, Fonda did not appear in any films between FORT APACHE and MISTER ROBERTS, the reason being that he was appearing on Broadway in the stage production of the latter. 

When it came time to make a movie from the play, Ford was chosen to direct and Fonda was cast in the lead role. Major tension soon arose between the director and the star.  

Fonda, as a result of his years playing the role on the stage, apparently felt that he had made the role his own and resented Ford's attempts to stamp his own brand on the character and the story.  Things became so bad that Ford even took a swing at Fonda.  

After the exterior shooting was completed Ford had to drop out of the project in order to undergo surgery due to a gall bladder attack.  Mervyn LeRoy replaced Ford and filmed all of the studio interior shots except for two that were directed by the screenwriter, Joshua Logan.


John Ford and Henry Fonda, one of the greatest director-star teams in film history, never again worked together.

Frank Nugent was a former New York Times movie critic who was married to Ford's daughter.  FORT APACHE was his first movie screenplay.  

With Ford's blessing, he set out to humanize the Apaches and treat them with more respect than Bellah had accorded them in his original story.  

Nugent would also write the screenplays for Ford's SHE WORE A YELLOW RIBBON (RKO, 1949) and THE SEARCHERS (WB, 1956).  All told, he and Ford would work together on eleven pictures.
  

John Wayne is very good as the veteran Indian fighter who attempts to educate Col. Thursday to the ways of the West, but to no avail.  

Shirley Temple is Philadelphia Thursday, the colonel's daughter, who, against the wishes of her strict father, falls in love with the young lieutenant played by John Agar.


offscreen John Agar and Shirley Temple were husband and wife


This was the film debut for Agar, who had married Shirley Temple three years earlier.  She was only 17-years-old at the time.  After appearing in one more film together, she filed for divorce and retired from the screen.  Agar would portray another young lieutenant in the second film in the cavalry trilogy, SHE WORE A YELLOW RIBBON (RKO, 1949).

George O'Brien came out of retirement as a favor to Ford to appear in the film.  He had starred in Ford's two best known silent Westerns: THE IRON HORSE (Fox, 1924) and THREE BADMEN (Fox, 1926), as well as several other early Ford films.  During the 30's he starred in two superior B-Western series at Fox and RKO.

Dick Foran had been on of Hollywood's first singing cowboys (his first film was released two months after Gene Autry's first feature film), but was now relegated to supporting roles in larger-scale pictures.  However, he does get to show off his Irish tenor voice in the film with a solo performance of "Sweet Genevieve."


******
REVIEWS

" Fonda is effectively cast against type as a stubborn martinet who rubs his own men -- as well as neighboring Indians -- the wrong way." -- Leonard Maltin

"Mass action, humorous byplay in the Western cavalry outpost, deadly suspense, and romance are masterfully combined in this production." -- Variety

"Folks who are looking for action in the oldest tradition of the screen, observed through a genuine artist's camera, will find plenty here." -- Bosley Crowther in the New York Times

"...it is the simplest and most uncomplicated expression of the [cavalry] theme.  The ideal of the cavalry is never brought into question, only individuals within it...the firm belief expressed virtually that there is a oneness about the cavalry, a wholesomeness that makes the sacrifice of individuality worthwhile....Never again is Ford so sure about the sacrifice of the individual." -- J.A. Place in The Western Films of John Ford

"The film swings like a pendulum between the monotone of dull barracks life and the screaming high pitch of the Indian wars; but unfortunately for FORT APACHE, the action on screen doesn't get underway until too late to wake a lethargic audience." -- Cue

"A masterpiece." -- Phil Hardy in The Western

"For once Fonda fails to suggest the reserves of compassion and strength which had made him Ford's favorite actor.  John Wayne, indeed, growing in stature with every performance for Ford, takes the picture away from Fonda in the role of the experienced Indian fighter...." -- Andrew Sinclair in John Ford

"The plot twists are often unexpected and the characters never as simple as one expects....Rio Grande is lustier and SHE WORE A YELLOW RIBBON more mature but FORT APACHE is grand entertainment, justly regarded as a classic Western." -- Brian Garfield in Western Films

"...one of John Ford's better Westerns...Henry Fonda is surprisingly effective as the Custer figure...and John Wayne is in top form....But the sub plots -- low comedy from Victor McLaglen, romance between Shirley Temple...and John Agar...are below par...." -- Steven H. Scheuer


Director John Ford in Monument Valley, his favorite location

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

TOP 21 FAVORITE WESTERNS -- SHE WORE A YELLOW RIBBON


famous thunderstorm scene in SHE WORE A YELLOW RIBBON

 # 19

SHE WORE A YELLOW RIBBON (Argosy/RKO, 1949)




DIRECTOR: John Ford;  PRODUCERS: John Ford and Merian C. Cooper;  WRITERS: Frank S. Nugent and Laurence Stallings from a story by James Warner Bellah; CINEMATOGRAPHER: Winton C. Hoch

CAST: John Wayne, Joanne Dru, John Agar, Ben Johnson, Harry Carey, Jr., Victor McLaglen, Mildred Natwick, George O'Brien, Arthur Shields, Francis Ford, Harry Woods, Chief Big Tree, Tom Tyler, Frank McGrath, Jack Pennick, Fred Graham, Noble Johnson, Cliff Lyons, Mickey Simpson


SGT. QUINCANNON (Victor McLaglen):  "The army will never be the same when we retire."

CAPT. BRITTLES (John Wayne):  "The army is always the same.  The sun and the moon change, but the army knows no seasons."



Capt. Nathan Brittles


This is the second in Ford's cavalry trilogy and, in general, the most highly regarded.  It is the only one of the three to be filmed in color, and there is no doubt that visually it is the better film, and one of the most beautiful ever filmed.

It has the look and feel of the Western paintings of Frederic Remington and Charlie Russell, which is exactly what Ford hoped to accomplish, and he and cinematographer Hoch succeed to a superb degree.  Hoch won an Academy Award for cinematography for his efforts.

However, because of the panoramic photography and the Monument Valley locations it loses a lot on the TV screen and must be seen on a large screen to be fully appreciated.  

The plot is episodic and slow in spots and overly-sentimental in others, but, particularly if viewed on a large screen, one can not help but like it.  J.A. Place put it perfectly when she wrote that "it is a symphony for the ears and a canvas for the eyes more than a narrative for the mind."


"Never apologize.  It's a sign of weakness." -- Capt. Brittles 

Joanne Dru began her acting career by winning roles in several classic Westerns. 

Her second film was Howard Hawks' RED RIVER (UA, 1948), in which she co-starred with John Wayne and Montgomery Cliff.  

From there she moved on to SHE WORE A YELLOW RIBBON, only her third picture.  

The following year she would co-star in another Ford classic Western, WAGON MASTER (RKO, 1950).  

All in all, it was quite a good beginning for the young actress who was born Joanne Latitia Lacock, but changed her name to Joanne Marshall at the beginning of her acting career.  Howard Hawks then changed her name to Joanne Dru for her role in RED RIVER.  



Joanne Dru and John Agar


Ben Johnson is magnificent in several chase scenes aboard the famous movie horse, Steel, which alone is worth viewing the film.  

Wayne's outstanding performance of a cavalry officer near the end of his career, the Monument Valley locations, and Johnson's horsemanship make the film an enjoyable treat.



Ben Johnson on "Steel"


Frank McGrath, who appears in many scenes as the bugler, does not speak a single word of dialogue, but lets the bugle do his talking for him.  Starting out as a stuntman, he would talk and talk and talk as Charlie Wooster, the cook, in the long running TV Western Wagon Train.

Around her neck she wore a yellow ribbonShe wore it in the springtime and in the month of MayHey, heyAnd if you asked her why the heck she wore it
She wore it for her lover who was far, far away

Around her knee she wore a purple garterShe wore it in the springtime and in the month of MayHey, heyAnd if you asked her why the heck she wore itShe wore it for her lover who was far, far away

Behind the door her father kept a shotgunHe kept it in the springtime and in the month of MayHey, heyAnd if you ask him why the heck he kept itHe kept it for her lover who was far, far away

And on the wall she keeps a marriage licenseShe keeps it in the springtime and in the month of MayHey, heyAnd if you asked her why the heck she keeps itShe keeps it for her lover who is far, far away

Songwriters: L. Parker / M. Ottner



******
REVIEWS

"In a handful of motion pictures, John Wayne brought both power and sensitivity to his roles.  SHE WORE A YELLOW RIBBON is among these.  His performanc as the grizzled Captain Brittles is brilliant, and peerless; it is impossible to think of any actor bringing Brittles to life so well.  [It] is a marvelously entertaining masterwork; proof that art can be fun." -- Brian Garfield in Western Films.

"John Wayne gives a commanding, yet restrained performance....Academy Award-winning Winton Hoch augments this nostalgic atmosphere with colors that glow like a campfire....No one invented and reinvented the Western like Ford....[Ford's] usual excellent production, with sweep, scope, entertainment." -- Stephen H. Scheuer

"Director Ford's stock company in fine form.  Wayne [is] excellent.  Beautifully filmed in color, but a bit top-heavy with climaxes." -- Leonard Maltin 

"[Ford's] action is crisp and electric.  His pictures are bold and beautiful.  No one could make a troop of soldiers riding across the Western plains look more exciting and romantic than the great director does.  No one could get more emotion out of a thundering cavalry charge or an old soldier's farewell departure from the ranks of his comrades than he." -- Bosley Crowther in the New York Times