This is one of those 1950s westerns where a Richard
Widmark can haul off and slap down a Donna Reed in the last reel with impunity.
It’s also one of those moments like others in the film that seem like western-movie
clip art pasted into the story to make up for lack of actual substance you can believe in.
Some kind of steamy attraction builds between Widmark and
Reed as he forces a so-long kiss on her, and she gives him a slap. Later, she
finds him in the desert and cuts the slug from his shoulder with a Bowie knife,
the only realistic part of it his agonized cries as she does the deed. They
snuggle with more kissing in the campfire light as he swoons under the
influence of a “Southern
painkiller” she has slipped to him. It apparently also is effective as an
antibiotic, as he claims to be mostly recovered the following morning.
Distance is then magically transmuted as the two ride in short order from Arizona to Texas to locate a rancher whose brand was on the horse of the mysterious sixth man. There, not only does Widmark rile the feathers of a young trigger-happy gunslinger (William Campbell). The visitors have arrived in the middle of a range war. Before all is wrapped up, more killings are required, including Morgan, Campbell, and one of the two feuding ranchers (John McIntire). Widmark is the last man standing, as he walks away with Reed at his side.
This is a little surprising in a film from the hands of
John Sturges, who made Gunfight at the OK Corral (1957), The Magnificent Seven (1960), and many others. Not to mention screenwriter Borden Chase, with
a notable list of western scripts that became vehicles for James Stewart.
Plot. Widmark
plays a man determined to find and kill the killer of his father, so the plot
is a revenge story. It’s also a mystery, because he never knew his father, and
he doesn’t know who killed him. There is only a mysterious “sixth man” who
disappeared after the robbery of $60,000 in gold that left several men dead.
Donna Reed, Richard Widmark |
At the start of the film, Reed encounters Widmark at the
scene of the crime. A hardened woman and widow of one of the dead men, she’s
after the gold. Sharing a similar objective, she and Widmark develop an uneasy
alliance.
The rest of the film is filler as a trip to a trading post
to question the Army sergeant who buried the robbed dead men develops into a
siege by Apaches. Escaping that, Widmark tangles with a pair of men (Harry Morgan, Robert J. Wilke) whose brother also died in the robbery. They are after the missing gold, too. A saloon shooting puts Wilke out of the picture, and Widmark takes a slug in the shoulder, but Morgan survives to make trouble later.
Reed with Bowie |
Distance is then magically transmuted as the two ride in short order from Arizona to Texas to locate a rancher whose brand was on the horse of the mysterious sixth man. There, not only does Widmark rile the feathers of a young trigger-happy gunslinger (William Campbell). The visitors have arrived in the middle of a range war. Before all is wrapped up, more killings are required, including Morgan, Campbell, and one of the two feuding ranchers (John McIntire). Widmark is the last man standing, as he walks away with Reed at his side.
Wrapping up. That’s
a lot of plot for 84 minutes of film, and there’s rarely a dull moment. For an
action-adventure, it does not disappoint, unless you’d like it to all add up.
Instead, it seems a little too much like a grab bag of western plot conventions
strung together until the final scenes, which produce a couple of unexpected
surprises.
Widmark, Reed |
The Technicolor Arizona photography is quite handsome, and
the costuming was given some thought, as characters appear in a range of rich
earth tones. Only Donna Reed’s 1950s dude ranch chic outfit in the opening
scene rings false.
The Borden Chase screenplay was based on a novel by Frank
Gruber. The dialogue sometimes assumes a
hard-boiled tone, especially in the opening scenes, as Widmark spars
with Reed. Chase is also remembered for Red River (1948), Winchester ’73 (1950), Bend of the River (1952), The Far Country (1954), and Night Passage (1957). Director Sturges would go on to direct
Richard Widmark in The Law and Jake Wade (1958). His later films of note include Hour of the Gun (1967) and Chino (1973.)
Backlash is
currently available online at youtube and on DVD at amazon. For more Overlooked
movies and TV, click over to Todd Mason’s blog, Sweet Freedom.
Coming up: Michael Zimmer,
Leaving Yuma
sounds like style over substance for sure in this case.
ReplyDeleteThis is an extremely dull picture and I do not accept Widmark in his part, but take much stronger issue with the 'values' of Gunfight at the OK Corral which are not dissipated, but destroyed when Lancaster's Wyatt Earp throws his star in the dust. All it proves is that Leon Uris and John Sturges have seen High Noon.
ReplyDeleteI last saw this a few years ago and was disappointed. I scribbled in one of my film reference books, "Donna Reed ruins this", but then again I'm just burnt out with the romance in westerns, after all these years. I didn't use to be like this but now I'm jaded I guess.
ReplyDeleteWidmark always scares me. And I can see why here.
ReplyDeleteThis was a perfect movie for the 1950s drive-in with snacks from the concession stand, kids in their pajamas popping up and down in the back seat whenever there was gunfire, and the young parents snuggling up front.
ReplyDeleteIagree with Karen. Widmark could act the tough guy.
ReplyDeleteRichard Widmark didn't need an antibiotic. He's Richard Widmark!
ReplyDelete