Film Review
With his time at 20th Century Fox almost up director Nicholas Ray was
persuaded by the studio to take on a big budget remake of Henry King's
classic
Jesse James (1939). Ray
was the obvious candidate to direct the film, as its central
protagonist was the kind of likeable outsider, a symbol of defiant
youth, he closely identified with and who featured in many of his
films. Had be been given a totally free hand Ray's take on the
Jesse James legend might have been an extraordinarily daring
proposition, even more brazenly idiosyncratic than his earlier western
Johnny
Guitar (1954), but the executives at Fox thought they knew
better and over-ruled almost every left-field thought that entered his
cranium. What Ray had initially conceived as an expressionistic
ballad, complete with painted backdrops and obviously fake horses,
ended up as a routine western that feels as if the life has been sucked
out of it. Ray's flair for creativity shines through in a few
dazzling scenes, but for the most part
The True Story of Jesse James is a
plodding and routine affair, made without any real commitment or flair.
One of Ray's saner plans for the film was to cast Elvis Presley in the
lead role of Jesse James. Presley had recently proven he could
act in his debut feature
Love Me
Tender (1956) and, more crucially, had star presence by the
cartload, but for 20th Century Fox he was just too big a gamble.
Instead, the studio played it safe and gave the role to one of its
contract players who was being groomed for stardom, Robert
Wagner. Capable actor as he was, Wagner had nothing like the
charisma, authority and heroic presence that the part required.
It is hard to see how his Jesse James could ever have inspired undying
loyalty in his followers, let alone became a mythic hero.
Maybe Wagner is being too subtle, playing his character in an ironic
vein as if to imply there is nothing to James beyond a trumped up folk
legend, but his inability to take centre stage means that he is too
easily overshadowed by the stronger personalities in the supporting
cast, notably Jeffrey Hunter and Alan Hale Jr. Without a strong
central performance, the film can hardly help appearing insipid and
unfocused. Another poor casting decision was Hope Lange for the
role of James' wife Zee. Lange's performance is so wooden that
you could easily mistake her for a ventriloquist's doll.
Perhaps the most interesting idea that Ray had for the film was to
probe the psychology of its doomed protagonist rather than merely
present as fact the half-truths that made up the famous legend of Jesse
James. Ray's view was that the outlaw had a deathwish and
consciously sought his destruction in his later years. Why else
would he put a gun in the hands of his killer (Robert Ford), remind him
of the price on his head, and then conveniently turn his back on
him? In one scene (which was actually shot), Ray left his
audience in know doubt that Jesse James had deliberately engineered his
own death, but, as it had done right down the line, overriding
virtually every creative decision the director made, Fox vetoed this
suggestion and the crucial scene was cut. Ron Hansen espoused the
same (not implausible) theory in his 1983 book
The Assassination of Jesse James by the
Coward Robert Ford, which was in 2007 made into a film of the
same title, starring Brad Pitt and Casey Affleck.
The one advantage that
The True
Story of Jesse James has over the 1939 film that inspired it is
its dramatic use of the recently created CinemaScope process. The
action scenes (most closely modelled on those in the original film)
have far greater visual impact, and there is an astounding lyrical
beauty to the sequence in which the outlaw is seen in silhouette making
his away atop the train he is about to rob. Regrettably, too much
of the film is lazily staged with static set-ups that would be more at
home in a piece of staged theatre. Ray gives the film his best
shot but it is clear right from the start that his heart just isn't in
it, and who can blame him? His paymasters at 20th Century Fox
insisted that he played it safe and that's what he did, the result
being nothing more than a mundane rehash of an earlier film. When
you think what this
might
have been you have to weep.
© James Travers 2014
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
When a bank robbery in Northfield, Minnesota goes disastrously wrong,
Jesse James and his brother Frank escape across country on horseback,
leaving most of their gang behind, either dead or captured. Hot
on their heels is the Remington Detective Agency, which hopes to pocket
the $30,000 reward for the arrest of the notorious outlaw. As
they await what fate has in store for them, the James brothers recall
the unlikely series of events that led them to become the most famous
criminals of their day. It all began during the American Civil
War, when Frank James was pursued by Union soldiers after his home
state of Missouri switched allegiance to support the North...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.