I love a good western. It is the quintessential American genre. A
portrait of ourselves at both our most noble and most despicable. A
genre of selfless heroes and terrible villains. A showcase of the
American landscape, as seen by the men and women who first braved to
cross it - full of wonder and awe.
There is no better western than The Searchers.
Sixty
years ago this year, The Searchers made its debut and forever changed
the western - even though it was tepidly received upon its initial
release. Today it is revered by casual filmgoers, critics, and
filmmakers alike as one of the most important films of all time. It is
one of director John Ford's best films and arguably star John Wayne's
best performance of his career.
The film follows a former
Confederate soldier, Ethan Edwards (John Wayne), and his kinsman, Martin
Pauley (Jeffrey Hunter), as they brave obstacles (natural and
unnatural) and the slow passage of time to attempt to find a member of
their family kidnapped by the Comanche Indians. The journey becomes an
unhealthy obsession, as Ethan's quest to find his niece, Debbie, slowly
devolves into vengeance-fueled madness.
The Searchers has
influenced many filmmakers in the six decades since its debut. Legendary
director Martin Scorsese has often cited The Searchers as one of his
favorites and has talked extensively about the film. Its staying power
is derived from its themes and characterizations. The film has a lot to
say about thematic concepts that are just as relevant to today's world.
The Picturesque West of John Ford
With
each of his films I see, John Ford becomes, more and more, one of my
favorite directors. His instincts on camera placement, movement, and
focus are amazing. Ford really cemented his place in cinema history as
being the vision of the west that most movie audiences picture in their
minds.
The Searchers was filmed almost entirely in Monument
Valley, located in both Arizona and Utah. It was a favorite filming
location of Ford's, as it became a background to many of his films. When
modern moviegoers think of the west, it is most likely via Monument
Valley and Ford's lens. In fact, the most modern western film (that I've
seen) to utilize Monument Valley was the most recent version of The
Lone Ranger in 2013.
Women-in-The-SearchersThere is really no bad
shot in The Searchers. Each frame could be hung up as a painting. The
stoic buttes, the sandy monoliths of Monument Valley, stand as a
constant in the backgrounds, displaying God's awesome artistry of the
land. The greenery of the valley floor gives those wide shots splotches
of mixed colors that are appealing. And that sky - most of the shots are
almost two-thirds deep blue with wispy clouds. Simply beautiful.
But
the scenery does more than look pretty. Through the eyes of Ford, the
land evokes emotion that transfers to the audience. Both the Edwards and
Jorgensen homesteads are solitary, almost enveloped by the valley.
There are no towns visited as part of the story, just lonely outposts of
civilization. Not only does this invoke feelings of the hard-scrabble
life of the frontier and the rugged individualism of the American West;
there is also a loneliness to it that carries itself through the entire
picture, creating a visual theme.
The visuals of The Searchers
also offer a sort of poetry, the most famous being the first and last
shots of the film. The movie opens and closes, literally, with a door.
This provides the audience with a window into the expansive wilderness
and a way back into the sanctity of the home.
The Western Grows Up
john-fordBeing
a "pioneer" of the western film genre, John Ford was there at its very
beginning. His early films reflected a more simple, romantic look at the
wild west. In movies like Ford's Stagecoach (1939), the heroes were
gruff but had hearts of gold and the villainous Native Americans were
one-dimensional. The world was very black and white.
By the time
The Searchers came along, Ford was venturing into new territory. The
western was now turning shades of grey. There was more honesty to the
stories and more layers to the characters. It was a gradual turn,
though. Part of Ford's brilliance with this film is his use of common
western tropes of the time and giving them a new twist to ease into the
darker nature of the story.
The music, written by celebrated
composer Max Steiner, is a classic example of a typical western trope.
Steiner was known for his sweeping, epic scores to films like King Kong,
Casablanca, and Gone with the Wind. The score of The Searchers is no
different - using epic phrasing and leitmotifs to make the viewer feel
at home in a western. It was an aural framework into which Ford could
weave his story.
Steiner's score is also littered with popular
tunes of the Civil War era (the film takes place three years after the
war's end) like "Bonnie Blue Flag" and "Lorena." "Lorena" is especially
poignant, as it was very popular on both sides of the conflict,
reminding the men of loved ones and home.
roy-rogers-e-sons-of-the-pioneers-otimaThe
presence of The Sons of the Pioneers to the musical makeup of The
Searchers is not to be taken lightly. The Sons of the Pioneers were very
popular for their cheery, harmonious country singing, and are most
famous as a supporting group for Roy Rogers - probably one of the most
famous romanticized, "old school" cowboys ever. To include them was also
a nod to what had come before, creating a melodic irony in the title
song.
But Ford's biggest trope turnaround was that of the western
leading man. With Ethan Edwards, Ford gave star John Wayne one of his
most complex characters, and probably his best performance. Ford knew
how to use the Duke better than any other director. Just as James
Cameron did with Arnold Schwarzenegger, Ford utilized Wayne's strengths
as an actor to maximum effect. Anyone who believes John Wayne was not
much of an actor has clearly never really studied The Searchers.
Ford
actually made John Wayne a star back in 1939 with Stagecoach. There the
Duke was the prototypical western hero - an outlaw, but an honorable
one. It was a reflection of the simpler times mentioned above. Wayne's
swagger and charisma soon catapulted him into iconic status. Now people
around the world would think of the Duke when they pictured the rugged
American cowboy.
In The Searchers, Ford uses Wayne's heroic persona to catch the audience
off guard - making the emotional impact of events taking place much
more resonant. The normally fearless Duke is brought to his knees many
times at the off-screen sight and recollection of his raped and murdered
kin.
Martin Scorsese recalled that seeing Wayne visibly
distraught made him imagine what was offscreen had to be absolutely
horrible, more so than anything that could have actually been shown
onscreen. Indeed the imagination can be much more terrifying.
Relating
the notion of changing tropes to Ethan, it's interesting that the
dynamic between Ethan and Martin is a role reversal - the older, wiser
man usually imparts good judgement and humility on to the brash and
haughty younger man in the typical western. In The Searchers, however,
the younger Martin is the one with common sense and reminds Ethan of his
humanity.
Searching for Vengeance
"What makes a man wander? What makes a man roam? What makes a man leave his bed and board, and turn his back on home?"
The
Ethan Edwards character himself is a personification of John Ford's
"new old west." He is a deeply flawed man consumed by vengeance and
hatred - the center of the film's moral questions.
At the
beginning of the film's search, Ethan's motives for finding Debbie are
harder to decipher. We assume that his intentions are noble as a
bi-product of seeing the form of John Wayne. But as the search goes on,
it becomes clearer that he is on a quest to wreak vengeance on the
Comanche, simply for being Comanche. In Ethan's mind, being Comanche is
not being human.
Ethan's hatred of the Comanche extends even
beyond death. Early in the film, Ethan and his posse stumble upon a dead
Comanche from the raid that killed his brother Aaron and his family.
As
Scorsese has pointed out, Ethan is not content to let the dead Comanche
rest in peace. He must make sure this dead Indian wanders and suffers
forever. The satisfaction in his face as he shoots out the dead man's
eyes is disturbing, and Ethan's comrades, particularly Reverend Clayton,
don't take too kindly to it.
The name he gives Martin at the end
of that scene ("blankethead") is also a manifestation of his racism.
Martin is part Native American, and Ethan spends most of the film
denying Martin as his kin - despite being raised by Ethan's brother as a
son.
With Ethan's demeanor, Ford wrestles with the truth that
both the settlers and Native Americans could be both noble and cruel - a
fact of our own sin nature. There is no "noble savage" here, nor is
there a wholesome settler, either. Even the settler women like Laurie
Jorgensen (Vera Miles) exhibit racist tendencies, like when she told
Martin that Debbie's mother would have wanted Ethan to kill Debbie after
she had been with the Comanche for so long.
Granted that the
Comanche, particularly the chief Scar, are indeed awful in their
treatment of the settlers, and there is no justification for the
violence against the women and children. However, both Scar and Ethan
share their penchant for revenge. Scar's entire reason for raiding the
Edwards homestead and murdering Ethan's kin was vengeance for the deaths
of his sons. It's a terrible cycle of violence that will not end until
one or both of them are dead.
John-Wayne-in-The-Searchers"A man
will search his heart and soul, go searchin' way out there. His peace of
mind he know's he'll find. But where, of Lord, Lord where?"
Ethan's
quest for hate and revenge is one of the finest cinematic examples of
what such feelings to do one's soul, as well as the physical
consequences.
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