Weak from Walsh
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CinemaScope, Color De Luxe, Lucien Ballard photography, AZ locations: it ought to have been good. It wasn’t.
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Slick conman Dan Kehoe (Gable, already 55 years old) arrives in Touchstone where bartender Jay C Flippen tells him the story of Wagon Mound, inhabited only by women now that their men, the outlaw McDades, have been killed (all except perhaps one) in shoot-outs with the law. However, everyone is convinced that the McDades left a hundred thousand in gold hidden at Wagon Mound beforehand. Sadly, once he has recounted this, Flippen is immediately written out and takes no further part in proceedings.
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Flippen wasted
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Kehoe (it always sounds like Keyhole when they talk to him) inveigles his way into the place and proceeds to romance the four young women, though very much mistrusted (rightly) by the grouchy old .45-totin’ Ma McDade, played by Jo Van Fleet. She is probably the best thing about the picture and one of the better grannies-with-a-gun that Westerns have to offer (though only 42 at the time). Ms Van Fleet was a talented Broadway actress who also won an Oscar for her film work. She would later be a young Kate Fisher in Gunfight at the OK Corral. In King & Four Queens she probably overdoes it but is certainly entertaining.
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You don’t want to mess with her
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The four wives or, probably, widows, are brassy moll Birdie (Barbara Nichols), ruthless Ruby in a red dress (Jean Willes), meek Oralie in widow’s weeds (Sara Shane) and strong, clever Sabina (Eleanor Parker). Only Sabina rebuffs Kehoe’s advances – the others are more than ready to go off with him and the gold – and we sense that therefore she will be the one he ends up with.
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The four wives – or widows
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The glam Parker was William Holden’s amour in Escape from Fort Bravo and Robert Taylor’s in Many Rivers to Cross but didn’t really do Westerns (this was her third and last). Nichols too was no Western specialist, only appearing in a few TV shows. This was Shane’s only Western. Only Willes was a regular as a saloon girl/gold-digger/gun moll in TV Westerns. But they only really had to be glamorous/scheming in King & Four Queens.
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He plays hymns on the melodion. It doesn’t soften her.
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The rest of the picture is taken up with the flirting and scheming so as a Western it really bogs down. There’s only a flurry of action in the first and last couple of minutes; the rest is static talking (with the occasional kiss) on a studio sound set. Surprising, really, for an action-lover like Walsh. Walsh said, “I believed they were moving pictures, so I moved ‘em” but he seems on this one to have forgotten his own mantra. The screenplay (her first and last) was by Margaret Fitts, from her own novel, and occasionally there is the mildest of double-entendres but it’s all pretty tame.
It’s just about watchable for the granny with a gun.
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4 Responses
I really like Walsh's work usually but this one has never 'done it' for me.
I rather like "THE TALL MEN" however – some beautiful locations and Gable in his best western role by far, plus Robert Ryan of course……
I do love reading these reviews, Jeff. Please keep'em coming!
Me too. Amazing to compare a rollicking picture like They Died With Their Boots On with this turgid stage-play. You wouldn't think it was th same director.
As fot The Tall Men, Robert Ryan is one of the few good things about it – and he was the only tall man there too. But he looks bemused throughout and never gets a chance to shine.
True, there are some nice Durango location shots but far too much of the picture is on studio sound stages (the whole first part), it's way too talky, the plot's too thin, it's too long, Russell was weak, and it's really slow. Another Walsh dud in my view!
Jeff
You have pretty much "nailed" THE TALL MEN for me Jeff-I agree with your
entire take-especially your Russell comments-never was much of a fan.
Never seen THE KING & FOUR QUEENS-never wanted too.
Ryan was wasted and his other big Fox Western THE PROUD ONES was wonderful in my
book.Walsh's Westerns are a mixed bag with COLORADO TERRITORY,for me being
the best of the lot.CHEYENNE is pretty good and would have been far better
without Dennis Morgan in the lead-never liked Morgan in Westerns.
A DISTANT TRUMPET was a pretty good swan song but needed a stronger lead.
Having said all this I am very fond of Walsh's two Fifties potboilers
THE LAWLESS BREED and GUN FURY-very decent entertainments without the flabbiness
of THE TALL MEN
Yes, a very mixed bag of Westerns from Raoul Walsh. Leaving aside the eight silents that he acted in or directed, we have the epic talkie The Big Trail in 1930, flawed; the rather good Dark Command in 1940; the excellent, flamboyant They Died with Their Boots On in ’41; San Antonio with Errol Flynn which he directed parts of, ho hum, in ’45; one of Walsh’s very best in my view was Pursued, with Mitchum in ’47; more vin ordinaire Errol Flynns; splendid Colorado Territory; then all the rest verging on the weak except the fun The Sheriff of Fractured Jaw. Nearly thirty Westerns but barely a half dozen really good.
Still, he was very dashing!
Jeff