Not quite a western—the characters never leave Kentucky—this
film made a splash in 1955. A Technicolor CinemaScope production, it was
Burt Lancaster’s first movie as both director and star. The film introduced TV actor Walter Matthau, as a
whip-wielding heavy, and the cast included John McIntire and John Carradine in
supporting roles
Montana writer A.B.
Guthrie, Jr., adapted the script from a novel, The Gabriel Horn by Felix Holt. Bernard Herrmann wrote the score, and Irving Gordon’s “The
Kentuckian Song” was covered by several recording artists. It was a big hit for
The Hilltoppers.
Plot. Lancaster and his young son (Donald MacDonald) are traveling on foot through
the Kentucky woods with their dog, headed for Texas. They make it as far as the home of Lancaster's brother (John McIntire), where they meet a young woman (Dianne Foster), who
is an indentured servant to Matthau, an innkeeper.
Dianne Foster, Burt Lancaster, Donald MacDonald |
Lancaster pays off what Foster still owes to Matthau so she
can join them. But he has to go to work in his brother’s tobacco business to
raise the money for the fare on the riverboat that will take them west.
A schoolteacher (Diana Lynn) takes a shine to Lancaster, and with pressure from her and McIntire, it looks like Lancaster is going to stick around and
forget about Texas. During a brutal fight between Lancaster and the
trouble-making Matthau, Lynn realizes that Foster is also sweet on Lancaster. Realizing also that the boy has his heart set on Texas, Foster gamely steps aside.
Lancaster raises the money he needs at a roulette table, but
travel plans are interrupted by a couple of enemies, intent on settling an old
blood feud. In a suspenseful finish, there are gunfire and casualties before
Foster and Lancaster are able to put a stop to them. Man, boy, and pretty young
woman are then free to leave Kentucky.
Lancaster, directing |
Themes. The
storyline is tried and true Hollywood Americana. It offers a sunny,
family-friendly 1950s mythology about westward expansion and frontiersmen in
buckskin. No big surprise that Holt’s novel had appeared as a
Reader’s Digest condensed book in 1952.
The early 1950s also saw Walt Disney’s revival of
the folk hero Davy Crockett. That TV series made Fess Parker and Buddy Ebsen
famous, and coonskin caps were everywhere. In 1955, three versions of “The Ballad of Davy Crockett” were in Billboard’s Top-10 charts.
It was a time when the HUAC had cleared the communists out
of Hollywood, and an Army general was in the White House. The Cold War had
nervous folks building bomb shelters. Another movie about a simple,
pure-hearted, and self-reliant frontier hero surely helped many sleep better at night.
The story is not without its dark side. Matthau with his
whip plays a mean-spirited man, though he’s not nearly so menacing as the two
thugs who show up to kill Lancaster. As a portrayal of outright evil, they are
thoroughly creepy. They seem capable of the most heartless and mindless
cruelty. Real bogeymen.
Yet all ends happily. Even Matthau has to pay his dues. And
Lancaster’s boy learns to blow the cow’s horn they’ve been carrying since scene
one. After confronting his dad with giving up the dream of going to Texas, his resounding belt from the horn shows that he
has become a man in his own right. It's another national myth, which connects the leaving of
boyhood with departure westward.
The novel, published 1951 |
Wrapping up. This is
an enjoyable film with a lot of talent both in front of and behind the camera.
Shot mostly on location, the wooded vales of Kentucky are warmly captured by
Ernest Laszlo’s widescreen cinematography. For screenwriter A.B. Guthrie, Jr., the script was a notable follow-up to his adaptation for the film Shane (1953).
Lancaster directed only one other film, twenty years later, The
Midnight Man (1974). MacDonald, who very
ably plays his young son, worked onscreen briefly afterward, mostly on TV. Dianne Foster
followed The Kentuckian with a
busy TV career into the 1960s. Diana Lynn had previously appeared in numerous films and had frequent screen roles on TV in the 15
years following this one.
American painter Thomas Hart Benton painted a portrait of
the characters of the film, which can be found online at the LA County Museum of Art website. The slightly daffy but sweet “Song” from The Kentuckian can be heard at youtube. Bernard Herrmann’s majestic score
for the film is available at amazon on CD.
The film is currently available at amazon and netflix. For
more of Tuesday’s Overlooked Movies, click on over to Todd Mason’s blog.
Source: imdb.com,
wikipedia.com
Coming up: George Tower Buffum, Smith of Bear City (1906)
There's a long proud tradition of Easterns, too! And Guthrie's hand in gives it more cred...
ReplyDeleteNever heard of this one, I don't think. Though I went through a Mountain Man phase.
ReplyDeleteThis film has its airings each year on Sky, here. Round about December time. I have forgotten how many times I`ve seen it, and can just about say the script word for word!
ReplyDeleteLancaster is his usual ebullient self, like in so many of his films.
I always enjoy this one.
ReplyDelete