9/10
When a man's riding high...
4 March 2009
Warning: Spoilers
This 3rd film in the Boetticher/Scott series shows a marked departure from the first two films, evidenced almost at once when an unshaven Scott as Bart Allison, a passenger in a stagecoach, orders it to halt at gunpoint. Is he a bandit or a murderer? Well, no, that would be too much, but he is a desperate man not interested in working inside or with the law, a route he follows for the whole film. After a tense couple of moments, the stagecoach halts but instead of robbing or gun-play, Allison merely allows it to ride off as he is met by his companion Sam (Noah Beery Jr) with two horses. Sam tells Bart that the man he seeks, Tate Kimbrough, is in Sundown a few miles away, and the two ride grimly off.

Kimbrough it turns out is the big cheese in Sundown and is about to marry Lucy (Karen Steele), the daughter of Mr. Summerton (John Litel) the other bigwig in town -- though it seems that he has only recently torn off from a relationship with Ruby, a woman he's left in the dust for greater rewards, though she clearly loves him. And Allison is here to kill him. As in The Tall T there are a few minutes of nice character development and "business" as Allison gets a shave and he and Sam have a couple of drinks in the saloon, Sam whining about his hunger and Allison defaming Kimbrough to everybody whether they want to hear it or not - though in characteristic Randolph Scott fashion, he waits for his opportunities and keeps his insults terse. There's some nice subtle development of the town's attitude here - at first it seems that everybody is happy for Tate and Lucy, but by the time Allison goes to disrupt the wedding at the church it's become clear that the townsfolk fear Kimbrough and respect his power, nothing more.

Allison by this time has already shown that his vengeance takes precedence over everything else and after making threats at the wedding he manages to get Sam and himself trapped inside a livery stable where they remain for most of the rest of the film. Slowly we learn little bit of Allison's past and his hatred, but it never becomes clear that Kimbrough did anything worth killing; perhaps he had an affair with Mary, Allison's dead wife -- and perhaps she died as a result -- but it is clear that his hatred has driven Allison to the verge of insanity. Kimbrough tries to buy him off...others try to reason with him...to no avail. Meanwhile the townspeople have gotten restless as they see that Kimbrough's bought-and-paid for sheriff, Swede (Jim Duggan) and his deputies aren't doing much of anything to ease the situation. Egged on by free whiskey (courtesy of Kimbrough) they start to make their true feelings heard, especially after Sam, who has left Allison but goes back to try to reason with him, is shot in the back by Swede and his deputy Spanish. They rally and let Kimbrough and the sheriff know they've had enough, and force the sheriff to meet a now even more vengeful Allison one to one.

Sheriff faced and dispatched, there's only Kimbrough -- but Kimbrough's true love Ruby won't let him be gunned down, and neither she nor the doctor will allow Allison to continue his madness without hearing the truth about his wife - that she was a tramp, that Kimbrough wasn't the first man to cuckold him, and that she died by her own hand, sick of herself and the world. Finally Allison is disabused of his quest, and the film ends with Kimbrough and Lucy leaving town, to start over hopefully wiser and stronger --- and Allison leaving too, after drowning his sorrow at the loss of Sam, his only real link to humanity, and leaving also, broken and bitter.

This finish is quite extraordinary - there is no final gunfight, the "bad guy" Kimbrough turns out not to be the bad guy that the hero thought he was (but much worse in some respects - except Allison doesn't care about that) and goes away having lost his power and influence but gained some self-knowledge; and Randolph Scott's good guy is found wanting and chastened himself, having lived a lie for years and not really understanding how to deal with it. It's this ending that really resonates and elevates the film to a fairly high caliber, though it doesn't entirely make up for the faults in Charles Lang's screenplay, which include a too-Hollywood and corny speech by the doctor rallying the town (along with several earlier bits of flat and "movie" dialog), a somewhat larger cast and corresponding weak characterizations for some of the more important secondary characters, and most importantly perhaps a rather unbelievable and very unlikable hero -- in the other Scott westerns his characters' deficiencies are more made up for by a juicier and more interesting supporting cast; here nearly everyone is unpleasant, which makes the doctor's speech and a few lines from the bartender resonate all the more - but doesn't make it any easier for us to care for our "hero." In the end, it is the doctor and the two women who are the moral centers of the film, but none of them has enough time or development, and the film seems quite cynical and bleak, beyond its intentions I think.

So all in all, not quite up to the level of the first two, but quite enjoyable and exciting overall, with a lot of fascinating stuff to say about the dangers of obsession, and also the worthlessness of a greed that allows a town to be cowed by its richest man despite hating him all the while. I suppose some could read this as a metaphor about the Red scare; I wouldn't go that far, but it does give one something to chew on.
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