Film Review
Jesse James was one of two
legendary westerns released in 1939 which brought legitimacy to a genre
which had largely become discredited in the 1930s, thanks to a slew of
cheap and hackneyed productions from Hollywood's poverty row
studios. John Ford's
Stagecoach made John Wayne an
overnight star and established the style of what would become the
classic Hollywood western.
Jesse
James would have a similar, if not greater, impact and
introduced audiences to another stalwart of the genre, Henry
Fonda. Shot in the recently invented Technicolor, this latter
film has a striking modernity and remains one of the most beautifully
photographed and poetic of all westerns.
This was not the first or indeed last telling of the exploits of
America's most famous outlaw, but it is unquestionably the finest, its
slick production values surpassed only by the remarkable performances
from its lead actors. Prior to this, Tyrone Power had been seen
as a lightweight matinee idol. His convincing portrayal of Jesse
James, which combined old west machismo with genuine human frailty, was
to alter audiences' perception of him and helped to elevate him to the
level of a screen icon. Whilst Power is the star of the
film, Henry Fonda gives the better performance, which is all the more
remarkable for its quiet restraint and subtlety. Strong
supporting contributions from Randolph Scott, Nancy Kelly and Brian
Donlevy help to make this one of the most compelling and realistic of
Hollywood westerns.
When they embarked on this project, director Henry King and
screenwriter Nunnally Johnson were keen to deliver the definitive
account of the life and death of Jesse James, but both were more easily
seduced by the myth than the reality. When she viewed the film,
Jesse James's granddaughter remarked that she saw only one tenuous
connection with the life of the famous outlaw - that it was about a man
named Jesse who rode a horse. The grim details of the James
brothers' notorious exploits is glossed over in the film and their
criminality is justified as retribution against the capitalist demon
that was driving hardworking American farmworkers to ruin. This
is the version of history that American audiences wanted to see, one in
which their Robin Hood took on the moneygrubbing bankers and
businessmen in defence of the values of the old west. The film's
popularity encouraged Twentieth Century Fox to make a sequel,
The Return of Frank James
(1940), directed by Fritz Lang, with Henry Fonda reprising the role of Frank James.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
In the aftermath of the American Civil War, the St Louis Midland
railroad company goes from strength to strength, buying up land as
cheaply as possible by threatening and cajoling gullible
landowners. But when one of their employees, Barshee, tries to
rob the James brothers of their land, the tables are turned.
Driven away at gunpoint by Jesse James, Barshee wastes no time
arranging for arrest warrants to be drawn up. With the James
brothers in hiding, Barshee and his henchmen attack their home,
unwittingly killing their old mother in the process. Outraged by
this unprovoked murder, Jesse and Frank James decide to become outlaws
and begin a series of daring raids on trains and banks owned by the St
Louis Midland company. Prompted by Jesse's wife Zee, Marshall
Will Wright offers Jesse the promise of a lenient sentence if he will
give himself up. But when Jesse surrenders, he is thrown into
jail and Wright's promise is quickly forgotten. Jesse is far from
discouraged by this turn of events. He knows that sooner or later
his brother Frank will come to his rescue...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.