I’ll start with the one good thing I can say about this
muddled western—Gary Cooper. His face is often the only sign of life on the
screen, while the clichés, crazy plot turns, and groaners pile up around
him.
Plot. The plot of
this film is not so much contrived as simply a chopped salad of worn out story
ideas from B-westerns. It’s a confusing mix of revenge, switched identities, a
love triangle, a Confederate colonel who has never surrendered, the theft of a
ranch, rustlers, a villain pretending to be an upstanding citizen, a sociopath
killer, and lots of shooting and chases on horseback.
With several characters pretending to be someone else or
someone different, I was often unsure about who knew what about whom. I admit,
it was late in the day and I was not at my sharpest, but it was all more than I could keep track of.
Cooper. I give the
guy credit for holding his own in this one. As long as Cooper was on the
screen, a scene seemed to be clear, even when it wasn’t. I finally just took to
watching him, as you do when a situation is puzzling and you look for someone
who acts like they know what’s going on.
Gary Cooper, Ruth Roman |
A viewer might argue that the film is meant in part to be a
comedy. It opens with a gun duel in the street between Wild Bill Hickok
and Gary Cooper’s character. It’s an attention grabber if we know that Hickok
died in Deadwood, playing cards. But Cooper is the star of the movie and can’t
expire in the first reel either. Though shots ring out and Cooper drops to the
ground, looking dead, it turns out to be a ruse. Not all that clever, but it
gives you hopes for a movie that never quite lives up to that moment
again.
Two stars. Raymond
Massey plays one of the film’s villains. I don’t know his early work, but in
later years, Massey never seemed to have much range. The grumpy Dr. Gillespie
on Dr. Kildare is how I remember him, and we don’t get anything
different from him in Dallas. Leif
Erickson is cast in the bewildering role of a U.S. marshal from Boston who wears a top hat and cannot shoot a gun.
A lovely Ruth Roman plays the daughter of a Mexican
landowner. She does as much as anyone could to making sense of a part that
calls for her to first fall in love with Erickson and then with Cooper. When
Cooper first meets her, he is already pretending to be her fiancé Erickson. To
prevent her from blurting out the truth, that she’s never met Cooper before, he
clamps her mouth shut with a big kiss.
Used to the logic of Hollywood movies, I guess, she is
nonplussed. The story might have been interesting if her role were written
closer to the reality of a ranchero’s daughter of the time—that is, living a
sequestered life far from contact with men. Cooper’s kiss would have sent her
into complete mental and emotional collapse.
Wrapping up. Veteran
Hollywood writer John Twist has the screenwriting credit for this “oater,” as
it would be deservedly called. Stuart Heisler directed. Both of them (along
with Massey) graduated to TV work as the new medium took over the living rooms
of U.S. households. The film was shot in color on movie ranches in Chatsworth and Calabasas, California.
For Gary Cooper fans, Dallas is currently available at netflix and amazon. For more of Tuesday’s
Overlooked Movies and TV, drift on over to Todd Mason’s blog, Sweet Freedom.
Further reading:
BITS reviews of Gary Cooper westerns
Coming up: Ed Gorman, Blood Game
Never seen it. The only Dallas I know is the TV show. I used to watch it.
ReplyDeleteI liked the costume design and period detail... those 40s "A westerns" could be amazing that way.
ReplyDeleteNot a Gary Cooper fan, but Raymond Massey, yes. Have a look at Things To Come, Woman In The Window, The Fountainhead. Many others. The fifties were pretty lost for him.
ReplyDeleteRuth Roman was called on often to play in this sort of movie. Not a Gary Cooper fan--how could you not be? He could play any part.
ReplyDeleteIt sounds like too many plot lines to keep track of and still enjoy the story.
ReplyDelete