Movie Memories
“Darmok and Geladd at Tanoglah--arms open.”
--Captain John-Luc Picard.
RB= RIO BRAVO (1959)
ED= EL DORADO (1967)
John Wayne straddled the two films
like a trick rider with his legs wide
standing on two horses at the rodeo,
the big man in the battered hat,
Sheriff John T. Chance in RB,
that cavalry hat first seen in
SHE WORE A YELLOW RIBBON
and then again in HONDO, using
a tricked out Winchester carbine
that had an enlarged shell lever,
copied later for THE RIFLEMAN,
and sawed off and strapped to
the lean right hip of Steve McQueen in
WANTED, DEAD OR ALIVE;
as Duke became the bigger man,
gunfighter Cole Thornton in ED,
his girth widened, making his pearl-handled
pistol seem smaller.
Howard Hawks at the helm
of both westerns, the bold retelling
with new faces, yet plotted parallel,
an audacious tribute to this film pioneer,
former pilot and race car driver,
who started fresh-faced as a best boy
in the silents before he forged on
to become the master of twice-told tales.
Dean Martin graced RB as the former gunfighter,
Dude, who became the drunken Borachon,
the deputy undone by a love affair gone bad,
and his character morphed into Robert Mitchum
in ED as Sheriff J. P. Harrah, once feared
and then mocked as a drunken hulk undone
by an unforgiving and malicious siren
of the saloons and backrooms.
Walter Brennan stole RB flat-footed
as deputy Stumpy, perfecting his whine
and limp in preparation for his TV series
THE REAL McCOYS, and he was nearly
matched and checkmated by the folksy
and comedic skills of Arthur Hunnicutt in ED
as deputy Bull Harris, carrying a bugle
and a Sharps rifle, struggling to maintain
order as Mitchum sank to depths
of degradation, rags, vomit, shame, and filth.
Teen-aged Ricky Nelson got to stand up
with the big boys as gunfighter turned deputy
“Colorado” Ryan in RB, wearing two pistols,
two fisted and blazing, but still found time
to sing one song with Dean Martin,
and Ricky’s rattlesnake character became
the young James Caan as the wayward avenger
Alan Bourdillion “Mississippi” Traherne,
who wore an easterner’s hat, was better
with a knife than a gun, and as the new deputy
had to resort to using a sawed off shotgun
to compensate.
Fetching young Angie Dickinson played Feathers
in RB, asserting her sexuality, nervous as a cat,
too young for the Duke but didn’t give a damn
as the saloon girl with the thighs of gold,
who disappointingly became Marina Ghane
as Maria in EL, a minor love interest for
Mr. Morrison, a lovely buxom actress who
had a film career shorter than mine.
Tall man John Russell was the heavy,
Nathan Burdette in RB, with presence
both commanding and lethal, just before
he playedTHE LAWMAN, and the villian
became Ed Asner in ED as cattle baron
Bart Jason, who had both
a hired gang of cutthroats
and a Napoleonic complex.
Yes, the showdowns were different
but the outcomes were identical,
with the Duke triumphing
and alcohol defeated,
bad boys buried, hung, and incarcerated,
saloon girls getting laid,
and sidekicks chortling,
as the end credits rolled
and the Technicolor red curtain closed
as these Hawksian fraternal twins
of celluloid rode arm in arm,
stirrup to stirrup, haunch to haunch,
into either a sunset or rise.
Glenn Buttkus October 2010
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