When I see the name of Western novelist Luke Short in the opening
credits of a film, I sit up and take notice. Short's novels provided the
basis for the excellent films STATION WEST (1948) and BLOOD ON THE MOON
(1948), and he wrote the original stories for two more very good
Westerns, RAMROD (1947) and AMBUSH (1950). One of Short's favorite
themes is the loner seeking justice.
That theme appears again in
Short's CORONER CREEK, filmed as a Cinecolor Western starring Randolph
Scott. This is one of the first Westerns in the long partnership of
Scott and producer Harry Joe Brown, and it's an excellent, absorbing
study of a man driven by revenge.
The film has some of Scott's
signature touches of humor, such as the way he checks himself into a
hotel without waking the sleeping clerk, but for the most part this is a
somber, serious tale. In terms of quality, I would rank CORONER CREEK
near the higher end of the Westerns Scott made before his well-known
teaming with director Budd Boetticher in the '50s.
Chris Danning
(Scott) is looking for a blonde man with a scar on his face who was
responsible for the death of Danning's fiancee. Danning doggedly follows
leads until he finally finds his man, Younger Miles (George Macready),
in the town of Coroner Creek. Miles is a powerful land and business
owner, who also has the sheriff (Edgar Buchanan) under his thumb; the
sheriff is the father of Miles's alcoholic wife Abbie (Barbara Read).
Danning
is helped by hotel owner Kate (Marguerite Chapman), local ranch owner
Della (Sally Eilers), and Della's ranch hand Andy (Wallace Ford), who
all have reasons for disliking Miles.
There are a couple of
violent confrontations in the film which are absolutely brutal,
particularly for 1948; this is no light "Saturday shoot-'em-up" Western.
The first notable fight is an extended battle between Chris and Miles's
henchman Ernie (Forrest Tucker), which includes the cringe-worthy
smashing of a couple people's hands. Near the end of the film, Miles's
relentless shooting of someone he knows is downright shocking. It's a
fairly dark film in that regard, but it also makes the moment justice is
served all the more satisfying.
The reference to justice being
served shouldn't be a plot spoiler; after all, this is a Randolph Scott
Western. Does anyone think he'd leave town without getting his man? :)
There is something very comforting about sitting down to watch a
Randolph Scott Western; the viewer knows it will deliver as expected.
This
is what might be called a typical Randolph Scott Western performance,
and that's a good thing. No one should mess with the steely-eyed Scott,
and those who do live to regret it. In his films Scott is something of a
Western superhero, and yet at the same time he's an entirely real
person who at some points suffers excruciating pain, both mental and
physical. Scott is capable of conveying a world of hurt on his weathered
face. In fact, Scott probably does more acting with his eyes than he
does delivering dialogue.
Marguerite Chapman has a fairly bland
part as a religious woman who encourages Chris to give up his quest for
revenge. Her character comes a bit more alive toward the end when she
overcomes her religious scruples about violence to aid Chris; the scene
made me think of Grace Kelly and HIGH NOON.
As a side note,
Chapman has a fairly unattractive wardrobe which is not photographed to
good effect in Cinecolor. There is no wardrobe credit so I wonder if the
filmmakers just pulled some Western dresses out of the costume
department! Better choices could have been made.
Actress Sally
Eilers, who plays Della, had been married to producer Harry Joe Brown,
although they were divorced at the time this film was made. She and
Wallace Ford, who is most enjoyable as the loyal Andy, help provide the
film with its lighter moments. William Bishop, Russell Simpson, and
Douglas Fowley are also in the cast. Incidentally, IMDb credits
stuntman-actor Jock Mahoney with doubling George Macready.
This
was the last of 21 films made by actress Barbara Read, billed here as
Barbara Reed. Read was very personable in the RKO programmer SORORITY
HOUSE (1939). She was also in THREE SMART GIRLS (1936) with Deanna
Durbin and another interesting programmer called MARRIED AND IN LOVE
(1940). She's quite good as Miles's tragic wife.
The film runs 90
minutes. It was directed by Ray Enright and photographed by Fred
Jackman Jr. There's some very nice location shooting in Sedona, Arizona,
although the big battle between Scott and Tucker appears to have been
shot in a soundstage.
CORONER CREEK was released on VHS in the
Columbia Western Classics series. It's a good print, given the inherent
limitations of Cinecolor. (There's a scene where Eilers shows Scott some
ranch land, and as the camera scans the range the hills turn all sorts
of different colors, in the same shot.) There were not any scratches or
other notable defects.
Sunday, January 14, 2001
Coroner Creek review
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movies
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