This 1940s gold-rush
western is jaw dropping. For one thing, it has John Wayne in black face swapping “colored” jokes with African American actress Marietta Canty. What was probably meant to be cheeky and rib-tickling in 1942 looks just plain racially insensitive today. For another,
the movie has Randolph Scott as a slick crook. And it’s no fun watching him use
his patently pleasant and winning persona to trick honest folks into trusting
him.
Another thing.
Veteran actor Harry Carey is more or less wasted in a small two-dimensional
role. And while that makes three strikes, The Spoilers isn’t quite out. It has the saving grace of
Marlene Dietrich as a sultry and spectacularly dressed saloon owner. Her scenes
with both Wayne and Scott are steamy with flirtatious bantering and sexual
innuendo.
Plot. Another point in the film’s favor is its plot.
Based on a bestselling Rex Beach novel of the same name, published in 1906, The
Spoilers tells a ripping story
of claim jumping in the Alaska gold fields. John Wayne and Harry Carey are mine
owning partners whose claim to their mine is being challenged in court.
Randolph Scott, John Wayne, Marlene Dietrich |
Wayne is first
trusting that the case will be settled fairly, while Carey trusts no one, and
the two men part company for a while. When it’s clear they are being had by a
bunch of “spoilers,” they engineer a bank robbery and, after dynamiting the
front door, make off with their safe.
But during the
robbery, the town marshal is accidentally shot dead by another man, and Wayne
is blamed for the killing and thrown in jail to face murder charges. Scott
arranges with the jailer to allow Wayne to escape, intending to have him shot dead
as he attempts to ride off. But Dietrich foils that plan and gets Wayne safely
out of jail herself.
To take back their
mine, Wayne and Carey drive a train locomotive through the barricades set up
around the perimeter and shoot it out with the armed men on guard. That leaves
only a matter to settle with Scott, and the two men have a knock-down-drag-out
fistfight that demolishes most of the saloon. When it’s done, Scott lies
battered in the street, and Wayne comes around in the arms of Dietrich, bloody
but smiling.
John Wayne, Marlene Dietrich |
Wayne plays tough
with her, hoping she’ll relent, but he’s disappointed her once too often. She
tosses him out of her apartment, a comfortably furnished retreat upstairs from
the saloon. One of her employees, a gambler by the name of Bronco (Richard
Barthelmess) has romantic hopes for her himself, but she keeps putting him off.
Enter Scott, who
sets his eye on her, too. She strings him along for reasons of her own. As an
investor in Wayne and Carey’s mine, she has an interest in keeping the mine in
their hands. While Wayne is in jail, she pays a call on Lindsay, the other woman. By this time, father and daughter know the jig is up and are packing their bags to
get out of town.
Why are you running
away, Dietrich wants to know. A woman sticks by the man she loves. And that’s
exactly what Dietrich does, breaking Wayne out of jail. Having learned of
Scott’s scheming, she pretends to grant him some privileges. Thinking Wayne is
dead, he is quick to take advantage.
She’s already said the only kind of brawl she’ll allow in her saloon is one that is over her. And that’s what she gets. When Wayne discovers Scott in her apartment, the fight is on. And as the two men duke it out, she watches anxiously from the balcony outside her rooms. It’s a nearly even match, and both men finally collapse from exhaustion. Dietrich gets to pick the winner, and kneeling beside Wayne, she’s finally got her man.
John Wayne, Harry Carey |
The racial humor is
something else. Marietta Canty was the stereotypical Hollywood housemaid, bug
eyed and wise cracking, easily startled and likely to drop whatever she’s
carrying. Tired of being the only “colored” folk in town, she says she’s
“gettin’ mighty tired pretending Eskimos is from Virginia.” Whatever that’s
supposed to mean.
Putting on black
face for the bank robbery, Wayne and Carey briefly amuse each other talking
like it’s a Jim Crow minstrel routine.
Later, when Wayne shows up in Dietrich’s apartment, Canty takes him
for a handsome black stranger, and again he does his shuck and jive talk. When
she sees it’s Wayne, she says, “You ain’t no colored boy. You’s washable.”
Meanwhile, a Chinese
prisoner in the town jail gives Wayne a noisy reception when he is thrown in a
cell. The jailer tells the man to shut up. “You talk like a foreigner,” he
says. More laughs. Meanwhile, a sure-fire comic surprise for modern-day viewers is a scene in which Wayne appears in hat and gender-bending feather boa.
John Wayne |
The shootout at the
mine is exciting, and the final fistfight between Wayne and Scott is a
punishing four minutes long. The stunt work has the two fighters’ bodies
catapulting around every square foot of the saloon. It’s a thrilling and
amazing climax.
The film was directed by Ray Enright, responsible for numerous westerns from the 1920s to the early 1950s, including Albuquerque (1948), reviewed here recently. Veteran screen writers, Lawrence Hazard and Tom Reed provided the script.
The film was directed by Ray Enright, responsible for numerous westerns from the 1920s to the early 1950s, including Albuquerque (1948), reviewed here recently. Veteran screen writers, Lawrence Hazard and Tom Reed provided the script.
Marietta Canty
appeared in numerous films during 1940-1955, cast routinely as a maid. You’ll
find her in Father of the Bride (1950),
A Streetcar Named Desire (1951),
The Bad and the Beautiful (1952),
and Rebel Without a Cause
(1955). She has a wonderful comic presence on screen, and you have to wonder
what she might have achieved had other kinds of roles been written for her.
It’s an embarrassment now to watch that talent being subverted to reinforce a
racial stereotype.
Rex Beach |
Richard Barthelmess,
as Bronco Kid Farrow, was ending a career after roles in almost 80 films,
starting in 1916. He starred opposite Lillian Gish in D. W. Griffiths’ Broken
Blossoms (1919) and played the
lead role in Henry King’s Tol’able David (1921).
The Spoilers is currently available at netflix and online at youtube. So is the 1914 silent version. You can find DVDs at amazon and
Barnes&Noble. For more of Tuesday’s Overlooked Movies and TV, click on over
to Todd Mason’s blog.
Further reading:
Source: imdb.com
Photo credits:
dukewayne.com
acertaincinema.com
gonemovies.com
acertaincinema.com
gonemovies.com
Coming up: Old West glossary, no. 64
I have seen this film numerous times, and I cant help but love Dietrich!!OMG Wayne is.....just wayne, always watchable, HCarey is a fun actor, always worth a look see.
ReplyDeleteI liked it, but then, as my wife says, I`m easily pleased.
No one could cook up the steam on screen like Dietrich. It's hard to believe that Carey is so nearly fogotten today. There was a time when he was big as John Wayne.
DeleteAs much as I love Wayne and Scott, I think the 1955 version with Jeff Chandler as the hero and Rory Calhoun as the bad guy is better than this one. But I remember liking both fairly well (haven't seen either version in years).
ReplyDeleteThanks for mentioning this version, James. I haven't seen it and neglected to mention it.
DeleteI checked John Wayne's age when he did this film — he was 35. He was quite old by the time I started watching his movies, perhaps because I'd little access to his films in those days. Now. of course, I can though but for some reason I never thought of it. With Scott in, this is a double bonus. Thanks for an excellent review, Ron. It appears to have all the necessary ingredients that make the West. I also hope to read some of Rex Beach's novels.
ReplyDeleteWayne had really just emerged from relative obscurity after a decade of B-westerns. John Ford's STAGECOACH (1939) was his breakthrough role.
DeleteGreat movie! That final fistfight has lingered in my memory for 40 years-- as I originally saw this at about age 9-- on KGUN Tucson's "2 O'Clock Movie" in about 1973-- and I need to just plain watch it again!
ReplyDeleteInterestingly, I DID end up reading Rex Beach's original novel years later... after Pronzini's anthology THE NORTHERNERS led me to it. It is better than the movie (of course) but my soft spot for this film has still never gone away-- at least not completely.
Great review as usual, Ron :)
How did Marlene get away with wearing that see through blouse at the beginning of the movie. Our high definition DVDs surely spices it up nicely. All I can say is those were two of the healthiest and most beautiful breasts I've ever seen .
ReplyDelete