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Man of the West

 
Movies:

Man of the West

  • Director: Anthony Mann
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstar
  • Genre: Western
  • Movie Type: Psychological Western
  • Themes: Obsessive Quests, Out For Revenge, Cons and Scams
  • Main Cast: Gary Cooper, Julie London, Lee J. Cobb, Arthur O'Connell, Jack Lord
  • Release Year: 1958
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 100 minutes

Plot

Anthony Mann's final foray into the western genre is a disturbing examination of man's baser instincts, rising in intensity to the level of Shakespearean tragedy. The film begins as seemingly naive Link (Gary Cooper) leaves his family to take a train to Fort Worth. Also on the train is saloon singer Billie Ellis (Julie London), who is compelled by con man Sam Beasley (Arthur O'Connell) to cheat Link out of his money. But the con comes to naught when the nefarious Dock Tobin (Lee J. Cobb) and his gang rob the train. Link takes Billie and Beasley to Tobin's cabin, where it is revealed the mild-mannered Link is Tobin's nephew and a former member of his cutthroat gang. Dock Tobin draws up a plan to rob a bank which the outlaws find agreeable, but they're reluctant to have Link rejoin their group. Soon it becomes apparent why they feel this way; when Link rejoins his old gang, his shy demeanor falls away and his outlaw instincts rise to the surface. ~ Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide

Review

In his last true Western, Anthony Mann matched the archetypal title with a story about a hero's effort to descend into his outlaw past so that he can exorcise it from his present. Mann initially makes light of Link's discomfort with civilization, before isolating him, saloon girl Billie, and gambler Sam in the wilderness, where their entrance into Dock's dark outlaw lair reveals Link's family-trained past as a hardened criminal, a past abandoned for upstanding married life. Underlining Link's psychological state as he plans to kill the gang, the widescreen landscapes move from more verdant surroundings to the rocky Mojave Desert and a ghost town, as Link's obsessiveness matches his enemies' psychosis. Along with a fistfight and the climactic shootouts, Mann emphasizes Western brutality through the sexual violation of Billie, as she is forced to strip on screen and raped off-screen by Lee J. Cobb's twisted patriarch. To be a defender of civilization, Link must kill his past family, revealing the moral relativity of the no-longer-unquestionably-heroic man of the West. Man of the West was widely overlooked by American critics, although then-film critic Jean-Luc Godard named it one of 1958's best films in the influential French film journal Cahiers du Cinéma. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide

Cast

Royal Dano - Trout; John Dehner - Claude; Robert J. Wilke - Ponch; Jack Williams - Alcutt; Guy Wilkerson - Conductor; Frank Ferguson - Marshal; Emory Parnell - Gribble; Tina Menard - Mexican Woman; Joe Dominguez - Mexican Man; Chuck Robertson - Rifleman

Credit

Yvonne Wood - Costume Designer, Richard Moder - First Assistant Director, Anthony Mann - Director, Victor Heerman - Editor, Richard V. Heermance - Editor, Leigh Harline - Composer (Music Score), Emile LaVigne - Makeup, Hilyard M. Brown - Production Designer, Ernest Haller - Cinematographer, Walter Mirisch - Producer, Edward Boyle - Set Designer, Jack Solomon - Sound/Sound Designer, Reginald Rose - Screenwriter, Will C. Brown - Book Author

Similar Movies

Duel in the Sun; Rancho Notorious
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Man of the West


This file is a candidate for speedy deletion. It may be deleted after seven days from the date of nomination.
Directed by Anthony Mann
Produced by Walter Mirisch
Written by Will C. Brown (novel)
Reginald Rose (screenplay)
Starring Gary Cooper
Julie London
Lee J. Cobb
Music by Leigh Harline
Cinematography Ernest Haller
Editing by Victor Heerman
Richard V. Heerman
Distributed by United Artists
Release date(s) October 1, 1958
Running time 100 min.
Language English

Man of the West is a 1958 western film directed by Anthony Mann in his last film in the genre. The screenplay, written by Reginald Rose, is based on the novel The Border Jumpers by Will C. Brown.

When first released, the film was largely ignored by American critics, though renowned French critic Jean-Luc Godard regarded it as the best one released that year. In the decades since the film's release, it has garnered a cult following as well as considerably greater acclaim. Some, such as The Guardian's Derek Malcolm consider the film Mann's best[1] and a landmark in the western genre's canon. Malcolm included the film in his 2000 list The Century of Film.

Plot

Reformed outlaw Link Jones (Gary Cooper), travels to Crosscut, Texas to catch the train to Fort Worth, where he intends to use the savings of his community of Good Hope to hire a schoolteacher. On the train platform, Sam Beasley (Arthur O'Connell) speaks with Link briefly, rousing the suspicions of the town marshal, who advises Link that Sam is a known con man. When the marshal comments that Link looks familiar, Links is evasive about his identity. Onboard the train, Sam impulsively joins Link and upon learning of his mission in Fort Worth, claims he may be able to help. Their conversation is overheard by shady-looking fellow passenger Alcutt. When the train stops to pick up wood for additional fuel, Sam introduces Link to the Crosscut saloon singer, Billie Ellis (Julie London), who Sam insists would make an ideal teacher. While the other male passengers help load the train with wood, Alcutt remains onboard feigning sleep in order to signal to three other men, Coaley Tobin (Jack Lord), Trout (Royal Dano) and Ponch (Robert J. Wilke), who then attempt to hold up the train. Link tries to intervene and is knocked unconscious. The holdup is prevented by the quick actions of the train guard, who orders the train to pull away. Alcutt takes Link's bag containing Good Hope's money before jumping from the train, but is wounded as the robbers flee. Link revives to discover that he, Sam and Billie have been left behind, many miles from the nearest town. Link leads Billie and Sam to a ramshackle farm, then admits that he used to live there years earlier. While the others wait in the barn, Link enters the run-down house and finds the train robbers hiding inside. Coaley is suspicious of Link's claim that he and the others simply want to rest for the night. The men are interrupted by the appearance of aging outlaw Dock Tobin (Lee J. Cobb), who is startled to see Link, his nephew, whom he raised as a killer and thief and who abandoned him more than a dozen years earlier to go straight. Tobin laments that nothing has been the same since Link's departure and introduces him to the roughnecks he now commands, including Link's own cousin, Coaley.

Disturbed by the revelation of Link's identity, Coaley demonstrates his toughness by killing Alcutt, who is near death from his wound. Realizing the danger of his situation, Link has Sam and Billie brought into the house and lies to Tobin, telling him that he intentionally sought out his uncle after being left by the train. Tobin reveals his long-held ambition to rob the bank at the town of Lassoo and asserts that Link's return to the gang makes that possible. Link agrees to participate in the holdup to protect Billie, and after declaring that she is his girl friend, leaves to assist Sam in digging a grave for Alcutt. Hearing Billie scream, Link finds Coaley drunkenly insisting that she strip. Coaley holds a knife to Link's throat to prevent him from interfering and Tobin remains disinterested until Billie is nearly undressed. The old man then intervenes and laughingly sends Link and Billie to sleep in the barn. There, Billie tells Link that she is incredulous that he ever could have been involved with such degraded, violent men, but Link states that he was just like them, until he forced himself to break away to find another life. When Link finds his empty bag in the hay, he angrily declares that he must get back Good Hope's money even if he has to kill the entire gang. Although frightened by their situation, Billie is touched by Link's sincere efforts to protect her and his gentlemanly manner with her.

The following morning, Link tells Billie of his difficulties in starting over, but that he eventually succeeded and has a wife and two children, as well as the grudging respect of the townspeople, who know about his past and yet trust him enough to give him all of their money. Claude Tobin, another of Link's cousins, arrives inquiring about the train holdup and is displeased about Link's return. Claude then reveals that the Crosscut marshal recalled Link's identity and has connected him to the Tobin gang. Tobin rejects Claude and Coaley's suggestion of killing Link and the others and they depart on the four-day ride to Lassoo. That evening, Link goads Coaley into a fistfight and beats him severely, then forcibly strips him of his clothes, as revenge for what Coaley did to Billie. Deeply humiliated, and against Tobin's orders, Coaley attempts to shoot Link, but Sam intercedes and is killed instead. Tobin then shoots Coaley for disobeying him. That evening during a private conversation with Link, Billie laments that she has finally found a man worth loving, but can never have him. The next day Link asks Claude why he remained with Tobin, prompting Claude to declare that he loves Tobin as the only father he ever had and cautions Link that he will not succeed in defeating the gang.

Outside of Lassoo, Link volunteers for the holdup job, but Tobin insists that he be accompanied by the mute Trout. Link and Trout discover Lassoo is a ghost town and the bank deserted except for a frightened old Mexican woman, whom Trout kills in panic. Link kills Trout, then awaits the arrival of Claude and Ponch. In a drawn-out gun battle, Claude and Ponch attempt to encircle Link, but Link kills Ponch first, then eventually and with some regret, Claude. Returning to the camp, Link discovers Tobin has raped and beaten Billie and goes in search of the old man, who is wandering drunkenly in the nearby mountains. Link tells Tobin that, like Lassoo, he is a ghost and finished, then kills him and reclaims the bag of Good Hope's money. Riding back with Link to civilization, Billie declares she will resume singing, knowing that Link will return to his home and family.

Cooper's love scenes with Julie London were cut, supposedly due to her inexperience as an actress.

Cast

Actor Role
Gary Cooper Link Jones
Julie London Billie Ellis
Lee J. Cobb Dock Tobin
Arthur O'Connell Sam Beasley
Jack Lord Coaley
Royal Dano Trout
John Dehner Claude
Robert J. Wilke Ponch
J. Williams Alcutt
Chief Tahachee Pio

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Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Man of the West" Read more