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Rio Grande

 
Movies:

Rio Grande

  • Director: John Ford
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Western
  • Movie Type: Cavalry Film
  • Themes: Taming the West, Fathers and Sons
  • Main Cast: John Wayne, Maureen O'Hara, Ben Johnson, Claude Jarman, Jr., Harry Carey, Jr.
  • Release Year: 1950
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 105 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: NR

Plot

John Wayne stars as Lt. Col. Kirby Yorke, whose devotion to duty has cost him his marriage to his beloved Kathleen (Maureen O'Hara). Yorke gets word that his son, Jeff (Claude Jarman Jr.) -- whom he hasn't seen in 15 years -- has been dropped as a cadet from West Point, and that he lied about his age to enlist in the cavalry, in an effort to redeem himself. By chance, the boy is then assigned to his father's post. Once more, as a function of his duty as a cavalry officer, Yorke must sacrifice his love of family -- he cannot show any preferential treatment to the boy, or exhibit any sign of love and affection. But Jeff is too strong to be injured by his father's actions, and already enough of a man that he is befriended by two older recruits, troopers Tyree (Ben Johnson) and Boone (Harry Carey Jr.), who watch out for him while taking him in as a virtual equal. Yorke's resolve is further tested when his estranged wife, Kathleen, arrives at the post, the better to look after her son -- and possibly to buy back the boy's enlistment, which Yorke, as commanding officer in a remote post with a critical shortage of men, can't and won't permit. After an attack by the Apaches, Yorke orders the post's women and children to be moved to safety, and Jeff is assigned as part of the troop conducting the caravan, despite his wish to participate in the planned action against the Apaches. The caravan is attacked, and the wagon with the children is taken by the Apaches to their encampment in a deserted village across the Rio Grande in Mexico. Yorke has been given permission by General Sheridan (J. Carrol Naish) to take his men into Mexico in pursuit of the Apaches, but the punitive expedition is now a rescue mission, as the Indians' night-time vengeance dance is the prelude to certain slaughter of the children at daybreak. As part of the mission, it's up to Tyree, the slyest man in the troop, to infiltrate the enemy camp, and he chooses Jeff and Boone as the two men he wants with him on this dangerous mission. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide

Review

Rio Grande was the third part of John Ford's renowned "Cavalry Trilogy" (the other two, Fort Apache and She Wore a Yellow Ribbon, both also starring John Wayne, had been released by RKO in 1948 and 1949, respectively). Ironically, although it has come to be regarded as the best of the three movies, and was extremely successful in its own time, Ford did not want to make Rio Grande, and had a much more personal priority on his mind in 1950 -- making The Quiet Man, which he'd been trying to get into production for a decade. But the only studio that was willing to back him on the project was Republic Pictures, a B-picture studio best known for producing low-budget serials, singing cowboy pictures starring Gene Autry and Roy Rogers, action films, and comedies. The studio's president, Herbert J. Yates, recognized the changes coming to the B-movie market with the encroachment of television, and had begun producing some much more ambitious, bigger-budgeted movies after World War II, and getting John Ford to direct pictures at Republic was a coup second to none. Yates wanted a guaranteed hit to balance the risk he was taking with The Quiet Man, and made the production of Rio Grande the pre-condition to Ford making The Quiet Man.

Both Ford and Yates could be proud of the result, for Rio Grande was the most exciting and emotionally involving, and (relatively speaking) the least sentimental, of the three cavalry movies. It also proved a high-water mark for the Western of this era, and for many of those involved. John Wayne was coming to the end of a string of highly demanding, serious acting roles that had commenced with Red River, and was at the peak of his acting ability for the role of the quietly suffering martinet Yorke. Also, his first teaming opposite Maureen O'Hara established one of the movies' most beloved onscreen couples, as well as a friendship that would endure between the two actors for the rest of their lives. Claude Jarman Jr., Ben Johnson, and Harry Carey Jr. were just as good in their roles, with Johnson displaying here (and in Ford's Wagon Master, released earlier the same year) the first real flashes of the acting ability that would carry him to an Oscar as Best Supporting Actor in The Last Picture Show two decades later. The rest of the Ford stock company is also on hand in excellent supporting roles, including Victor McLaglen (in the next-to-last of the 11 movies he did with Ford), Jack Pennick, Grant Withers, Ken Curtis, etc. The music -- mostly in the form of folk songs -- is provided principally by the Sons of the Pioneers singing group, of which Curtis (who was Ford's son-in-law) was a member. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide

Cast

Victor McLaglen - Sgt. Maj. Quincannon; Chill Wills - Dr. Wilkins; J. Carrol Naish - Gen. Philip Sheridan; Grant Withers - Deputy Marshal; Peter Ortiz - Capt. St. Jacques; Gaylord "Steve" Pendleton - Capt. Prescott; Karolyn Grimes - Margaret Mary; Alberto Morin - Lieutenant; Stan Jones - Sergeant; Fred Kennedy - Heinze; Sunset Carson; Ken Curtis - Regimental singer; Shug Fisher - Regimental singer; Henry Garcia; Cliff Lyons - Soldier; Lee Morgan; Chuck Roberson - Officer; Patrick Wayne - Boy; Jack Pennick - Sergeant; Carl Farr; Hugh Farr; Bobby Clark

Credit

Frank Hotaling - Art Director, Adele Palmer - Costume Designer, John Ford - Director, Jack Murray - Editor, Victor Young - Composer (Music Score), Dale Evans - Songwriter, Tex Owens - Songwriter, Stan Jones - Songwriter, Bert Glennon - Cinematographer, Archie J. Stout - Cinematographer, Merian C. Cooper - Producer, John Ford - Producer, John McCarthy - Set Designer, Charles Thompson - Set Designer, Howard Lydecker - Special Effects, Theodore Lydecker - Special Effects, James K. McGuinness - Screenwriter, James Warner Bellah - Short Story Author
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Artist: Rio Grande
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  • Formed: 1996
  • Genres: Rock
  • Representative Albums: "Rio Grande," "Dia de Concerto"

Biography

The Latin band Rio Grande released its self-titled debut album for EMI in late 1996. ~ John Bush, All Music Guide
Wikipedia: Rio Grande (film)
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Rio Grande
Directed by John Ford
Produced by Merian C. Cooper
John Ford
Written by James Warner Bellah
(story)
James K. McGuinness
(screenplay)
Starring John Wayne
Maureen O'Hara
Music by Victor Young
Cinematography Bert Glennon
Archie J. Stout
Editing by Jack Murray
Distributed by Republic
Release date(s) November 15, 1950
Running time 105 minutes
Country  United States
Language English

Rio Grande is a 1950 western film and the third installment of John Ford's "cavalry trilogy", following two RKO Pictures releases: Fort Apache (1948) and She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (1949).

John Wayne stars in all three films, as Captain Kirby Yorke in Fort Apache, then as Captain of Cavalry Nathan Cutting Brittles in She Wore a Yellow Ribbon, and finally as a promoted Lieutenant Colonel Kirby Yorke in Rio Grande (scripts and production billing spell the York/Yorke character's last name differently in Fort Apache and Rio Grande).

The film is based on a short story "Mission With No Record" by James Warner Bellah, that appeared in the The Saturday Evening Post on September 27, 1947, and the screenplay was written by James Kevin McGuinness.[1][2]

Contents

Production

Ford wanted to make The Quiet Man first, but Republic Pictures studio president Herbert Yates, insisted that Ford make Rio Grande first, using the same combination of Wayne and Maureen O'Hara; Yates did not feel that the script of The Quiet Man was very good, and wanted Rio Grande to be released first to pay for The Quiet Man. (To Yates's surprise The Quiet Man, on its eventual release in 1952, would become Republic's number one film in terms of box office receipts.)[citation needed]

The film was shot in Monument Valley, and other locations in southeastern Utah around the town of Moab and along the Colorado River.[3]

Plot

In Rio Grande, Lt. Col. Kirby Yorke is posted on the Texas frontier to defend settlers against depredations of marauding Apaches. Col. Yorke is under considerable stress between the Apaches using Mexico as a sanctuary from pursuit and by a serious shortage of troops of his command.

Tension is added when Yorke's son (whom he hasn't seen in fifteen years), Trooper Jeff Yorke (Claude Jarman Jr.), is one of 18 recruits sent to the regiment. He has flunked out of West Point and immediately enlisted as a private in the Army. Not wanting to give any impression that he is showing favoritism towards his son, Col. Yorke ends up being harsher dealing with Jeff than the others. By his willingness to undergo any test and trial, Jeff is befriended by a pair of older recruits, Travis Tyree (Ben Johnson) (who is on the run from the law) and "Sandy" Boone (Harry Carey, Jr.), who take him under their wings.

With the arrival of Yorke's estranged wife, Kathleen (Maureen O'Hara), who has come to take the under-age Yorke home with her, further tension is added. During the war, Yorke had been forced by circumstances to burn Bridesdale, his wife's plantation home in the Shenandoah valley. Sgt. Quincannon (Victor McLaglen), who put the torch to Bridesdale, is still with Yorke and provides a constant reminder to Kathleen of the episode. In a showdown with his mother, Jeff refuses her attempt by reminding her that not only the commander's signature is required to discharge him, but his own as well, and he chooses to stay in the Army. The tension brought about in the struggle over their son's future (and possibly the attentions shown to her by Yorke's junior officers) rekindles the romance the couple once felt for each other.

Yorke is visited by his former Civil War commander, Philip Sheridan (J. Carrol Naish), now commanding general of his department. Sheridan has decided to order Yorke to cross the Rio Grande into Mexico in pursuit of the Apaches, an action with serious political implications since it violates the sovereignty of another nation.

If Yorke fails in his mission to destroy the Apache threat he faces the threat of court-martial. Sheridan, in a quiet act of acknowledgment of what he is asking Yorke to risk, promises that the members of the court will be men "who rode down the Shenandoah" with them during the Civil War. Yorke accepts the mission. Now Col. Yorke must fight to save, and put back together, his family and his honor.

Basis

Some aspects of the story, notably the regiment's crossing into Mexico, and undertaking a campaign there, loosely resemble the expedition conducted by the 4th Cavalry Regiment (United States) under Colonel Ranald S. Mackenzie in 1873.[citation needed]

Cast

Actor Role
John Wayne Lt. Col. Kirby Yorke
Maureen O'Hara Kathleen Yorke
Ben Johnson Trooper Tyree
Claude Jarman Jr. Trooper Jeff Yorke
Harry Carey Jr. Trooper Daniel "Sandy" Boone
Victor McLaglen Sgt. Maj. Quincannon
Chill Wills Dr. Wilkins
J. Carrol Naish Gen. Philip Sheridan
Grant Withers Deputy Marshal
Peter Julien Ortiz Capt. St. Jacques
Gaylord Pendleton Capt. Prescott
Karolyn Grimes Margaret Mary

Music

The film contains folk songs led by the Sons of the Pioneers, one of which is Ken Curtis (Ford's son-in-law and best known for his role as Festus Haggen on Gunsmoke).

References

  1. ^ "Mission With No Record". - The Saturday Evening Post. - volume 220, number 13. - September 27, 1947. - Retrieved 2008-07-21
  2. ^ Rio Grande at the Internet Movie Database
  3. ^ Filming locations for Rio Grande. - IMDb. - Retrieved 2008-07-21

External links


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