This Howard Hawks western bears a strong resemblance to his
previous western, Rio Bravo (1959). The
elements are much the same, as if Hawks wanted to have another go at them. John
Wayne appears again, this time as a hired gun. Particular about who hires him, he
turns down a dirty job in the opening scenes offered by a land-greedy rancher
(Ed Asner). Wayne ends up working instead with a sheriff (Robert Mitchum) to
help a family keep their ranch out of Asner’s hands.
Plot. The family in
question are the Macdonalds, with several grown sons and a feisty daughter
(Michelle Carey). One of the boys takes a shot at Wayne and ends up dead. When
Wayne brings his body to the ranch, Carey doesn’t believe his account of
the incident and ambushes him. With a bullet now lodged near his spine, he is
stricken at times by paralyzing pain that affects his shooting arm.
John Wayne |
Drifting among the saguaros of the Southwest, he reluctantly
picks up a trail buddy (James Caan), who has just killed his fourth man. Slow
with a gun but quick with a knife, it seems he’s been avenging the death of an
old friend, one man at a time. He adopts Wayne as a mentor.
When Wayne meets another gunman of his own professional
caliber (Christopher George), he learns that the man has been hired by Asner to
do the job he turned down. Wayne learns from George that while the sheriff,
Mitchum, has a reputation as good with a gun, he is no longer a threat. He has been sidelined by two months of heavy drinking.
Wayne and Caan show up to give Mitchum a hand, and they wait
for George and his gang. But Mitchum is in bad shape. He has hit bottom but doesn’t yet know it.
The depth of his condition finally comes home to him when he is laughed at by
the men in the saloon while buying another bottle of whiskey.
Robert Mitchum |
As soon as the gang arrives there is trouble, and
Wayne and Caan get to work getting rid of them, knocking off several in the first round. Mitchum
gradually gets sober but, in an exchange of gunfire, gets shot in the leg. When
Asner is taken prisoner, Wayne and the others are holed up in the jail and
under siege.
All is resolved finally with a shootout at the saloon. Asner
bites the dust along with George and other members of the gang we’ve come to
know. Wayne takes some buckshot in his leg, and as Caan leaves to follow up on a rough
meeting with Carey in the straw of a stable, Wayne and Mitchum hobble down main
street, each of them on a crutch.
Tone. This is a
loosely meandering film that sets up a good guys vs. bad guys conflict in the
opening scenes and saves the final confrontation until almost two hours later.
During that time there are several characters to get to know and some lengthy
conversations.
James Caan, John Wayne |
The tone of the film fluctuates between melancholy and
lightly humorous, with a stretch or two of outright farce. When Macdonald says
he doesn’t blame Wayne for his son’s death, Wayne turns to go, saying sadly to
himself that it is not much consolation.
Meanwhile, there are several running jokes, one of them
involving the riverboat gambler’s hat that Caan wears. As Mitchum slowly sobers
up, he can’t remember who Caan is and keeps asking, “Who is he?” In another
comic scene, Mitchum takes a much-needed bath, while everyone who visits brings
him a bar of soap.
Mitchum’s alcoholism is also played for a while for laughs.
When Wayne finds him passed out in a jail cell and dumps a bucket of water on
him, Mitchum comes out with fists flying. Later, almost creeping away from the
saloon with another bottle, he cradles it to his belly with both arms. In only
a few minutes of screen time, we’ve gone from the Three Stooges to Lost
Weekend.
Charlene Holt |
Women. Hawks is said
to have liked strong female characters in his films, and that honor in this one
goes to Charlene Holt. She’s currently Mitchum’s girl when we meet her at the
beginning of the movie, but she’s an old friend of Wayne.
The script by Leigh Brackett (a woman writer, by the way)
does not give Holt much of a part in the plot. But Hawks makes up for this
somewhat by holding the camera on her for reaction shots while the men do the
talking. You see by her expression that whatever they’re deciding to do doesn’t
include her. In a goodbye scene with Wayne, we watch her in the growing evening
shadows as he rides off, her face registering the sadness of seeing him go—yet
again.
As the final confrontation with George’s gang approaches,
she tells Wayne she’s not going to bother telling him he’s crazy, because he
won’t listen anyway. We are spared the usual scene in westerns, as a woman
appeals to the hero to cut the heroics. But this time, it’s more obvious that
what matters to the women in westerns is typically left out of the equation.
Arthur Hunnicutt, Caan, Holt, and Mitchum |
From the opening scene, when she finds Wayne and Mitchum
together, you wonder which of them she will choose. Indications point to Wayne, but the final scene gives us only the two men, on their crutches, side by side. The girl
we’d like to see one of them matched up with is nowhere around. And as for
Caan and Carey, we learn nothing more of that couple.
It’s a man’s world in another way, too. There’s a curious
twist in the respect that Wayne and George show for each other as professional
gunmen. Unlike the typical villain—think of Jack Palance in Shane—George is
congenial and thoughtful. When Wayne shoots him in the final shootout, George
says, “You didn’t give me a chance.” Wayne replies with a smile, “You’re too
good to give a chance to.”
Painting for opening credits by Olaf Wieghorst |
Wrapping up. For its
time, El Dorado was already an old-fashioned western. While the
country was in the midst of a growing division over Vietnam between hawks and
doves, the movie assumes the western’s traditionally conservative political
stance. No doubt due to Wayne’s star power and long popularity, the film did
well at the box office.
Music in the film was by Nelson Riddle, and the opening
credits are played to a song, “El Dorado,” the lyrics first composed in a poem
of the same name by Edgar Allen Poe. James Caan recites it with deliberate lack
of feeling during the film, which makes an odd choice given that his character
had learned it from someone he loved who is now dead.
With the credits, we see a montage of handsome western
paintings by artist Olaf Wieghorst, who also has a small part in the film as a
gunsmith. Filmed in widescreen and color, the movie is sparing in its use of
primary colors. The opening scene of Mitchum walking down the main street of
town seems to be in every dusty shade of brown and gray. Wayne’s colorful
shirts and Holt’s dresses are a bright contrast.
Howard Hawks with Lauren Bacall, 1943 |
The dust, the location footage, and Mitchum’s desperate
appearance as a drunk are the film’s nods to realism. Otherwise, we get our fair share of anachronisms. The saloon has an indoor
“washroom,” where a washbasin and scruffy towel would more likely be found out
back in the alley. The illumination of nighttime lighting is bright for
what would have been lamps and candles. The men wear modern potato chip brim hats, and Carey wears a pair of britches tight enough to get wolf whistles.
Writer Leigh Brackett also has writing
credits for The Big Sleep (1946), Rio Bravo (1959), and Rio Lobo (1970).
The story was based on a novel The
Stars in Their Courses (1960) by Harry
Brown. The film was shot in Old Tucson, the western movie set near Tucson,
Arizona, and many outdoor scenes feature Arizona’s saguaros. All the same, a
framed map of Texas hangs on the wall of Mitchum’s office.
El Dorado is
currently available at netflix and amazon and Barnes&Noble. The DVD has an
interesting audio commentary by Richard Schickel. For more of Tuesday’s
Overlooked Movies, click on over to Todd Mason’s blog.
Coming up: Old West
glossary, no. 51
Hi Ron!.....This movie, I liked, it was fun! I got the impression, that Mitchum et al, played it for laughs, not to much, but there was that thread there.
ReplyDeleteI always loved any part Arthur Hunicutt did, he always gave good support.
Caan, well, a little out of his depth I thought, but good fun.
I wanted to mention Hunnicutt but ran out of steam. He's good in the "Walter Brennan role" for sure. And I had the feeling Caan was a little unsure about the character he was supposed to be playing. For a guy who had killed four men, it seemed not to have left a mark on him.
DeleteI was just writing a piece about sympathetic characters where I talked about the western theme of the little farmer/rancher against the big one.
ReplyDeleteThis isn't so much a "little" farmer/rancher. He's a decent man with a big spread and a big family who's just up against a ruthless neighboring rancher. Look to SHANE for a "little" farmer.
DeleteJames Caan sure looks like a baby. I don't think I have seen this one.
ReplyDeleteYeah, Caan is something of a big kid. Hard to tell how he was directed. He seems a little unsure in some scenes.
DeleteI like traditional westerns that end in a shootout in a saloon or out in the street. Ron, you are right about the similarities between EL DORADO and RIO BRAVO, particularly Robert Mitchum's alcoholism in the first and Dean Martin's drunkenness in the other, one a sheriff and the other a sheriff's deputy. And James Caan in place of Ricky Nelson. The Hawks-Brackett formula seems to have worked well in both films. I saw this movie many years ago and wouldn't mind seeing both together again.
ReplyDeleteI agree, Prashant. The two are similar, but it's such a good story, you don't care.
DeleteOne also wonders what kind of negotiations Brackett and Hawks were making with each other about the script...though Brackett was rather a centrist conservative in some ways, at least. A lot of history between them. (And, as you know, a few years later she would write the script for the Robert Altman-directed THE LONG GOODBYE.)
ReplyDeleteI don't know their story, Todd. I noticed the Altman script when I checked her credits. I believe she also had a hand in THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK.
DeleteShe wrote the treatment, but alas died before she could go further with that. Hawks, in putting together an adaptation team for THE BIG SLEEP, initially sought her out after reading NO GOOD FOR A CORPSE, and was thrown mightily when learning Leigh was a woman's name in this case. Decided that talent might just be the deciding factor.
DeleteGood choice for reviewing, Ron. Very enjoyable movie, one of my favorites, and Hawks is for sure my all-time favorite director. As noted, it has many similarities to RIO BRAVO, and Hawks/Wayne even did it all over again in RIO LOBO (Hawks's final film and a very weak entry into what might be called a trilogy --- reportedly, when Hawks called Wayne to propose LOBO, Duke said, "Do I get to play the drunk this time?") But getting back to EL DORADO, what I always found interesting about it was not the similarities but rather the contrasts ... The theme of many of Hawks's films have had to do with strong men of action measuring themselves against whether or not they are "good enough". (In a key scene between Wayne and George in EL DORADO, after a near-ambush of Wayne by two of George's men causes George to lament that "it always seems to take more than one", Duke replies: "That's because they're no good.") This sets up the scene you describe that comes later in the film when Wayne, crippled by the bullet pressing his spine, has to resort to trickery in order to best George because, as he's forced to admit, George was "too good to give a chance to." ... In RIO BRAVO, when Ward Bond points out to Wayne that a cripple and a drunk are "all you've got" (to help him against the bad guys), Duke corrects him by saying confidently, "That's WHAT I've got." ... In EL DORADO, there seems to be a resignation to the sad fact that Wayne, Mitchum, and crew are older, more battred, out-gunned --- therefore not as "good" as they used to be --- so they are in fact "all" there is against the bad guys and have to adjust their stand accordingly ... Hawks is always strong on contrasting, slowly developed characterization and this is another fine example.
ReplyDeleteWell said, Wayne. Couldn't agree more. Resignation is a good word. There is that undercurrent of melancholy that starts early in the film with the needless death of the young Macdonald boy.
DeleteVery nice piece, Ron, on one of my favorite Hawks/Wayne pairings. I'm glad you mentioned the slightly melancholy tone (apparently the original script went much further down this path) to what is otherwise a bit of an easy-going lark of a film.
ReplyDeleteI go back and forth on which I generally prefer, this or RIO BRAVO. RIO BRAVO is the ultimate in comfort food cinema, a film I go back to time and again and never tire of, and probably is the obvious winner. EL DORADO, though, has more than its fair share of charms, and works enough changes on the same basic story to stand up well to the earlier film.
Cheers!
Jeff
thestalkingmoon.weebly.com
Thanks, Jeff. It's a toss-up for me, too. Dean Martin is good, but Mitchum really nails the role of the alcoholic lawman.
DeleteOne of our family's favorite Westerns and one we quote at each other all the time ("He was limping when he left." "He was limping when he got here!")
ReplyDeleteThere are a good many lines like that in the movie. Perfect for Wayne's wry delivery.
DeleteI agree a great review. I have seen this movie umpteen times but your review is making me want to watch it again.In fact I think I'll watch both El Dorado and Rio Bravo over the holiday period.
ReplyDeleteLet us know how they compare when you watch them back-to-back.
Delete