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This Western represents the 12th pairing of John Ford and John Wayne, and it displays the exceptional and seasoned skills of both director and actor. The Searchers is always considered one of Ford's best directorial efforts and usually Wayne's best acting performance. Wayne often acknowledged that Ethan Edwards was his favorite role and the work he was most proud of. Those who are adamant that John Wayne cannot act should watch The Searchers. Any lover of Westerns or American cinema in general should view and review this movie. Wayne's character Ethan and the obsessive hatred that motivates his endless quest is the central, driving force of this film. The movie's first image, after the camera moves through the doorway and looks out onto Monument Valley, is of Ethan, the lone rider, approaching his brother Aaron's ranch after a long absence. "Ethan?", Aaron asks, for the movie's first word. Ethan. He arrives under mysterious circumstances after an unexplained absence. The movie opens, "Texas, 1868". Ethan fought for the Confederacy in the Civil War, but didn't surrender as he informs the Reverend/Captain. "Why didn't you come home before now?" his nephew asks. We get many and varied clues to Ethan's background during the first moments of the movie. He is undoubtedly one of the Westerns most unusual 'heros', probably an early 'anti-hero'. His confederate past and postwar criminal record link him to Jesse James and the cult of the populist outlaw. He comes from the Juarez/Maximillian war where he was a mercenary gunfighter. We will learn that he was a cavalryman (for the South) a Texas Ranger and an Indian-fighter. Ethan thus combines attributes of nearly all the heroic stereotypes developed in Westerns since 1939. (Slotkin) Behind Ethan lies two essentially unresolved conflicts, the American and Mexican civil wars. This immediate background only partially explains his torn character. Ethan is in love with his brother's wife,
Martha, and, evidently, she with him. This separated and mutually unrequited
love is displayed in only a few moments of beautifully subtle gestures
and glances. The romantic The Searchers is another of Ford's Monument Valley Westerns, the one in which he uses this hauntingly beautiful landscape to its fullest effect. John Ford shot this movie, and most of his Westerns, on location in the Valley, cast and crew living in tents and eating from chuckwagons. Monument Valley in the 1950s was still quite remote, in fact, the place furthest from any railroad lines in the continental United States. Many of the traditional John Ford company worked on The Searchers, including Ford's son Patrick producing, his son-in-law Frank Nugent writing, and John Wayne, his son Patrick, Ward Bond and Harry Carey, Jr. acting. In keeping with the family In keeping with the family atmosphere, the young Debbie is actually played by Natalie Wood's younger sister Lana. All these people lived and worked together for months out in the heat and dust of the West. John Wayne once said that making a Ford Western was like living in the Old West. (Ebert) This authentic, community approach to movie-making shows in the resulting quality of The Searchers. The movie overall, like Ethan's character,
is beautifully ambiguous, amazingly so by 1950s (and Westerns) standards.
As we follow Ethan and Martin's endless quest and discover Ethan's ugly
agenda, the ending becomes increasingly impossible to predict. The Searchers
can be considered an early revisionist Western in that it offers a less
one-dimensional view of Indians. The film presents a particularly challenging
view of the 'Indian Wars' waged by white settlers and the cavalry. Many
youngsters viewing the movie today It is likely that Ford was commenting not
only on the post-Civil War Indian Wars in The Searchers, but also on the
international Cold War and Civil Rights struggles of the 1950s. Many have
contended that, along with other postwar revisionist Westerns, The Searchers
rewrites the Western genre in response to the ideological struggles of
the fifties. (Dagle) If so, Ford should be commended and not condemned
for his treatment, taking it in historical context and not comparing it
with today's hyper-politically correct standards. Besides, to dismiss
-- or perhaps even at all to critique -- this movie on political grounds
is missing the point. It is a movie, and a fine one. Watch the directing,
the acting, the beautiful cinematography. The list of later films and directors influenced
by The Searchers is notable and long. The plot line and specific shots
were referenced in Star Wars. The rescuing quest and alienated hero is
the acknowledged source for the story and themes of Martin Scorsese's
Taxi Driver. The shots of the Ranger/Cavalry attack on the Comanche village
at the end of the film are clearly mimicked in the helicopter attack scenes
in Apocalypse Now. Ford's legacy and influence is readily heralded by
all working directors. It is disappointing that most of today's young
audience has little idea who John Ford is. It is worth noting that during
Ford's lifetime, when his skills and accomplishments were universally
acknowledged, The Grapes of Wrath was cited by consensus as the greatest
American film. Today it is the more 'artistic' and sophisticated' Citizen
Kane. However, at CouchCowboy, we still recognize and herald Ford and
accordingly acknowledge The Searchers as an undisputed, enduring classic.
JED |
| Director: John Ford |
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Screenwriter: Frank S. Nugent from Alan LeMay's novel Cast: John
Wayne --- Ethan
Edwards |
| Date: 1956 119 mins. |
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