Film Review
One of John Ford's undisputed masterpieces,
Rio Grande offers a startlingly
realistic portrait of the US cavalry at the time of the great Indian
wars of the 1860s and 1870s. It was the third in a trilogy of
films about the cavalry which Ford made, the other two being
Fort Apache (1948) and
She Wore a Yellow Ribbon
(1949). John Wayne, one of Ford's preferred actors, appeared in
all three films, perfectly cast as a tough yet sympathetic cavalryman
who is up against the odds. Here, Wayne appears along side
Maureen O'Hara for the first time. This winning romantic pairing
would be repeated in two of Ford's later films:
The Quiet Man (1952) and
The Wings of Eagles (1957).
Rio Grande has all the
ingredients of a classic John Ford western - a dusty desert location
(the Monument Valley), believable characters, a strong story and a
satisfying mix of adventure, humour and romance. The film is best
remembered for its stunningly realised battle sequences, which are
amongst the best the genre has offered. Ford skilfully uses
the arid location to convey the harshness of life for those who served
in the cavalry at this time. We see also the camaraderie
and tensions that existed between the men and, mainly through Wayne's
tour-de-force performance, we get an insight into their psychological
traumas - the solitude, the ennui, the fear of death and, worst of all,
the fear of dishonour. It is a film that is beautifully shot in
lustrous black-and-white, with Ford's trademark panoramic shots once
more conveying the uncompromising might of the natural world over which
men struggle to assert their control.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next John Ford film:
The Searchers (1956)
Film Synopsis
Lieutenant Colonel Kirby York commands a remote cavalry post on the
border between the United States and Mexico. Knowing he is
understrength against the mounting threat from the Apaches, he puts in
a request for more recruits. Instead of the two hundred men he
expects, he is given just eighteen, and these include his barely adult
son Jeff, who has just dropped out of a military training school.
York Senior promises his son no favours and says that he will treat him
like any other man under his command, if not harder. Then Jeff's
mother, and York's estranged wife, Kathleen, appears
unexpectedly. She intends to buy her son out of the army and take
him back home with her, but the boy is determined to prove himself and
refuses to go. At this juncture, Yorke is commanded by his
superior, General Sheridan, to cross the Rio Grande river into
Mexico. The cavalryman is reluctant to comply, knowing that this
will only aggravate the situation with the already hostile Apaches...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.