This William Wellman classic defies genre expectations and has a unique tone throughout. Written by Frank Capra, it has the inherent sentiment and good-hearted nature that much of his work is founded upon. But because Capra didn’t have time to direct and instead got William Wellman to helm the film, it is distinctively stark and gritty to the core, exemplifying the kind of toughness found in his other classics like Yellow Sky and The Ox-Bow Incident. It’s also one of the best westerns as far as portraying women in non-stereotypical roles. But ultimately, it’s just a darn great western in its own right, portraying the hardship, toughness and resolve required to get a wagon train to California….except this one is a wagon train full of women.
Set in 1851, Capra’s script centers on a newly settled valley in California,
that just so happens to only have men there at the moment. A man named Roy Whitman
(John McIntire) who founded the settlement wants to have women arrive to marry
the men and start families to populate the area. He hires Buck Wyatt (Robert
Taylor) to go to Chicago and recruit women for the trip. Through a screening
and interview process, he finds 138 women who decide to take the trip….many of
them for different reasons of course. They each pick out a picture of the man
they want to marry and soon they’re off on the California Trail. These women can do a variety of jobs….some can shoot, some can ride horses, some can
drive the wagons. Buck also has with him a small handful of men to help guide
the trip, and tells the men to stay away from the women. One man doesn’t
listen, and gets himself shot. Slowly some of the other men and some of the
women leave the trail and turn back. But for 3 men Buck, Roy, and Ito (Henry
Nakamura….a Japanese cowboy who at first seems like a Hollywood cliché but in
the end defies stereotypes), they’re in it for the long haul with the women as they travel to California.
Part of the success of this movie lies in the fact that it is tough as
nails. Wellman does not pull any punches in this film about women and rarely lets sentiment become
overbearing. There are Native American attacks, rattlesnakes, flash floods and
storms, stampedes, accidental deaths, fisticuffs….it’s a long and brutal wagon
train, in fact one of the toughest, maybe the toughest portrayal of a wagon
train on film that I’ve personally seen. There’s also no music in the film except for the
opening credits and at the very end. This keeps the emotions from swelling
artificially, and gives an element of realism to the whole thing. I
particularly love the camera work and the location shooting,
apparently filmed a great deal in Utah. William Mellor’s camerawork and framing
in the traditional academy ratio is some of the best framing and scenery shots
you’ll ever see. He also photographed a few other renowned classics of the
genre like The Naked Spur, Giant, Bad Day at Black Rock. What’s so fantastic is
the way he employs the low angle shot of groups of women as they look toward
the horizon. This effect gives the women a larger-than-life heroism, allowing
for a stoic characterization to come forward, almost a bit like traditional Russian cinema, when there is often low angled shots that emphasize a
certain powerful, architectural dynamic. So too here, the power of these women
are given a respect throughout the film, both from the script and the camera
work.
2 comments:
Headed over from Wonders to read this, Jon. It's interesting to speculate over how different this would have been if Capra had made it... as it is, I definitely agree that it doesn't pull its punches and is tough and unsentimental. It really feels quite a bit like Wellman's war films, except that the comradeship here is between women rather than men. Great stuff here!
Definitely one of the most surprising films of the recent Wellmann Festival at the Film Forum, and one of the earliest of the sound feminist westerns. You wrote this with a deep and abiding understand and reverence Jon!
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