DUEL IN THE SUN: Blu-ray (Selznick International 1946) Kino Lorber
When David O.
Selznick elected to make a picture from Niven Busch’s infamous novel, Duel in the Sun (1946) he had but two
primary objects; the first, to create another opus magnum on par with his unimpeachable
masterwork, Gone With the Wind
(1939), still – thanks to reissues – ringing cash registers around the world;
and second, to force through the curiously stagnated career of his lover (and
soon to be wife) Jennifer Jones. What ‘Wind’ had done for the South, ‘Duel’
was going to do for the ‘West’ – or
rather ‘western’; a much maligned
genre. Indeed, prior to Duel in the Sun,
even Selznick shown little interest in the western as ‘legitimate’
entertainment; once asked by a reporter, how far it had come, slyly commenting,
“From Wyoming to Arizona…and back!” Perhaps
Selznick was blind sighted in this former endeavor by his own affaire du coeur
with Jones, whom he had helped launch to critical acclaim in her first major
role; a loan out to Fox for The Song of
Bernadette (1943), before recalling her to his own stable for the then
renowned (though today, largely forgotten, Since
You Went Away (1944). Lest we remember, Hollywood then needed to at least
imply it adhered to the moral stringencies that the rest of the United States
subscribed, and Selznick’s divorce from Irene Mayer (Louis B. Mayer’s daughter)
to marry Jones, after wrecking her marriage to actor, Robert Walker, had its
share of hectoring detractors. Selznick may have thought he could merely whitewash
and glad-hand all of this bad blood away. The
Song of Bernadette ought to have made Jennifer Jones a great star. Instead,
and with the exception of Since You Went
Away, she all but languished thereafter. Hence, Selznick approached Duel in the Sun as a star re-making
opportunity to elevate Jones’ stature to that of the bona fide grand dames from
this golden epoch. The difficulty here was Jones herself, whose wholesomeness
in ‘Bernadette’
was rechristened as unadulterated sexpot sinfulness – an awkward attempt on Selznick’s
part to transform her into another Hedy Lamarr after Lamarr first turned Duel in the Sun down.
To this end,
Selznick assembled the finest cast of the year, headlined by Jones and Gregory
Peck, amply supported by Joseph Cotten, Lionel Barrymore, Herbert Marshall,
Lillian Gish and Walter Huston; to say nothing of Dimitri Tiomkin’s iconic
score, and the formidable cinematographic lushness achieved by three of his
stellar contract artisans, toiling in Technicolor: Lee Garmes, Ray Rennahan and
Harold Rosson. To direct, Selznick handed the reigns of his unwieldy and
mammoth production to Hollywood war horse, King Vidor – who hadn’t made a good
picture since 1939’s Stella Dallas. The
property had come to Selznick’s attention as early as 1944, when RKO expressed
an interest for the loan out of Jennifer Jones to star as Pearl Chavez, the Mestiza
blossom of the sagebrush and pampas, pursued by two brothers from the same
family. In the novel, the spitfire is repeatedly raped by the younger brother,
Lewt McCanles (Gregory Peck) from the age of fourteen until her young adulthood
when, after refusing to marry her, she pumps a bullet into him, leaving open
another path of desire to pursue his elder and more forthright brother, Jesse
(Joseph Cotten), always in love with Pearl from afar. Try as he did at
considerable expense to fashion another road show epic in blazing Technicolor,
lightning would not strike twice for Selznick on Duel in the Sun. Referenced by its detractors as ‘Lust in the Dust’, big, sprawling,
overheated, colorful, but not very good, Selznick could only stand back and
observe with incredulity as his staggering wealth of talent fell short of
everyone’s expectations, on a particularly problematic and occasionally dull
screenplay cobbled together from his own efforts, slightly augmented by
playwrights, Oliver Garrett and Ben Hecht.
In retrospect,
Duel in the Sun is hardly an
artistic disaster, as say Selznick’s forced march entrenchment on his remake of
A Farewell to Arms (1957 and a
genuine fanny-twitcher), although, conversely, one could never confuse it with
a creative triumph either. On this rare occasion, Selznick elected to deviate
considerably from his source material (highly unusual for a man who considered
himself a literary purist); deleting pivotal sequences from the novel and
transforming Pearl and Lewt from their psychologically complex flagrante
delictos in the book into mere sexual ciphers, simply indulging in the trigger
impulses of their unbridled lust, ultimately to lead both to their ethical
mortification in the desert. Duel in the
Sun was to be more lurid, earthy and steamy than the novel; Selznick,
charged to launch into in the raunch as it were, but hesitant his foray would
cause the censors to get their proverbial knickers in a ball as they had done
on Howard Hughes, The Outlaw (1943);
a relatively shameless fluff piece of sexploitation with the amply endowed Jane
Russell’s heavin’ cleavage – loosely fitted in thin cotton to show off every
curve – enough for the Hays Office to revoke the movie’s seal of approval.
Regardless, the picture made money. Something else to consider: Selznick too
had changed and arguably, not for the better. Ten years earlier he had been a
happily married, aspiring indie filmmaker, diligently toiling to make the best
pictures in the biz under a somewhat diplomatic self-importance, disseminated
throughout his entire organization with a hearty balance of frenzy, good humor,
idealism and all those ‘damn memos’ attesting to his daily ‘collaborative’ involvement
with cast and crew. However, by the time Duel
in the Sun went into production, Selznick had morphed into an almost
intractable and calculating autocrat; relentlessly myopic where his passions
lay and increasingly at odds with everyone – particularly as his ego had
already decided for him he was increasingly surrounded by ineptitude and
stupidity.
Selznick spent
a then whopping $3 million on Duel in
the Sun; a sizable chunk going to the lengthy location shoot fort miles
from Tucson, Arizona where Selznick had Production Designer J. McMillan Johnson
and Art Director James Basevi construct a sprawling 2-story prefabricated ranch
house, complete with two barns and a windmill. Crew repainted cacti so they
would properly photograph in Technicolor and trucked in nearly eight hundred
head of cattle and horses; the lavishness of it all hemorrhaging $15,000 a day.
It might have been worth it, except the weather refused to comply; a light snow
blanketing the area, causing Jennifer Jones lips to turn blue and the sets
steadily to deteriorate; constantly in need of touch-ups. As King Vidor settled
in to create what Selznick had initially promised him would be “an intimate picture” unencumbered by his
constant meddling, Vidor was instead quick to learn Selznick had virtually no
intent on remaining true to such a promise. Daily, rewrites came down from on
high; Selznick fastidiously authoring ‘new’ additions to his screenplay with giddy
excitement to see them filmed. “This
began to happen more often,” Vidor would later reflect with startling
magnanimity for all the struggles he had endured on the set “…and, of course, it cost extra money…and in
that sense, David was the only producer I ever worked with who really earned
the title of producer because he wanted the best of everything and he worked
like hell to get it…he made sure you go what he thought was necessary.”
Somewhere in
the midst of all this chaos, a general strike of all the set designers and decorators
ensued, forcing Selznick to keep cast and crew on the payroll at a staggering
expense of $360,000 until their issues could be resolved. And then there was
the sudden and untimely death of President Franklin Roosevelt to consider.
Roosevelt had been such a watershed ‘father figure’ in the social fabric of the
nation that to cogitate on an America now without him seemed almost heretical.
As a spokesman for the Republican Party, Selznick wrote one of his finest
declarations to both mark and set the tone in Hollywood’s commitment to
Roosevelt’s ‘dream’. “Here in Hollywood…”
Selznick suggested, “…we of the motion
picture business are humbly conscious of the power of the medium which is ours
(and) will do its share to the end that “my friends” (Roosevelt’s catch phrase
in his addresses to the nation) will be not merely a nostalgic phrase, but a
national pledge toward all mankind.” The day after Roosevelt’s funeral,
Selznick was back at work. So was Vidor, recovering from the flu and in
constant flux with Jennifer Jones to get the motivations of her character down
pat.
“Pearl was dominated completed by her physical
emotions,” Vidor later explained, “…and
Jennifer wasn’t like that at all… (But) she’s like putty in your hands.”
Vidor had less difficulty getting co-star Gregory Peck ‘in the mood’. Despite
the actor’s reputation for being a man of integrity, after one consultation
with Vidor, Peck slipped into the insolent and smoldering sexuality of his
alter ego. More delays and another strike, and Duel in the Sun’s budget ballooned to $4 million; by far the most
expensive production shooting in Hollywood then, and arguably, the costliest of
all time until then. In the middle of
preparing the picture’s absurdly lavish $1 million dollar marketing campaign,
Selznick and his wife split for good. Irene Mayer Selznick had been more than
David’s mate. Indeed, he had often referred to her as “…the smartest woman I ever knew” and the multifaceted nature of
the parts she played in their marriage, as confidant, confessor, counselor and
the singular stabilizing figure in an otherwise totally chaotic lifestyle, were
what kept David sane, if hardly humble. But she had had quite enough of her
husband’s erratic behavior. Meanwhile, Selznick was incurring wrath of another
kind from censor Joe Breen, who, upon viewing the rushes from an erotic dance
choreographed by respected Viennese Tilly Losch and performed by Jennifer
Jones, where Ms. Jones appeared to be ‘humping a tree’, reasoned the picture
would never receive his approval. The ‘obscenity’ was promptly re-choreographed.
And then there was the final split with Vidor, who walked off the set, forcing
Selznick to regroup, direct part of the picture himself, before hiring William
Dieterle, who had emphatically refused any part of it the first time around.
In retrospect,
Duel in the Sun attests to an old
adage in an industry that considered directors mostly as ‘part of the staff’, interchangeable and frequently to share the
rigors of a single production without receiving any credit for their work. In
tandem with Vidor’s sizable efforts, ‘Duel’ possessed the expertise of
such stalwart filmmakers as Sidney Franklin, William Cameron Menzies and Josef
von Sternberg. Selznick, more wounded than baffled by Vidor’s exacerbated
refusal to partake any longer and his sudden departure, now sought to have their
contractually agreed upon title card “King
Vidor’s production of…” removed from the credits; a decision incurring
Vidor’s displeasure and a lawsuit where Selznick attested to the Screen
Directors Guild Vidor has shot 6,280 ft. of useable footage in comparison to
7,739 ft. photographed by himself and the aforementioned ensemble of talent
that had replaced him. For whatever reason, and in their infinite wisdom, the
Arbitration Board awarded Vidor sole credit. As the dust had yet to settle on Duel in the Sun, Selznick reasoned he
had already spent $4,575,000 more than the negative cost of Gone with the Wind; his extensive
rewrites/re-shoots yielding 26 hour and 13 minutes of footage now in desperate
need of editor, Hal Kern’s gentle finesse. Even under Kern’s guidance – with
Selznick right at his side – the nearly 4 hr. rough cut preview held at
Oakland’s Grand Lake Theater elicited some of the worst reviews of any Selznick
picture. Desperate to save Duel in the
Sun, Selznick began two months of extensive retakes, toting more additional
scenes that added another $500,000 to the post-production budget. Whittling
down the run time to just 2 hrs. 18 min., Selznick turned his attentions to
Dimitri Tiomkin’s scoring sessions.
In the
meantime, RKO’s studio chief, Charles Koerner unexpectedly died; his
replacement, Dore Schary whom Selznick released from his ironclad contract with
the provision that virtually all of Schary’s already scheduled Vanguard
Productions would be made by RKO. The studio agreed, but United Artists (UA)
was appalled Selznick had orchestrated such a lock, stock and barrel sell-off
of properties in whose considerable profits they would have preferred to
partake. Now, UA retaliated, absolutely refusing to distribute Duel in the Sun for Selznick and filing
a lawsuit against Selznick for breach of contract. Selznick reacted with a suit
of his own against both Mary Pickford and Charles Chaplin (co-founders of UA),
asking $13.5 million in damages. Refusing to bend, and with time running out to
recoup Duel in the Sun’s epic
$5,255,000 outlay, Selznick finally did what he had been threatening to do all
along: set up his own distribution apparatus, calling it Selznick Releasing
Organization, and slashing the costs of distribution by almost sixty percent. But a last minute strike at Technicolor
threatened Selznick’s plans to simultaneously release Duel in the Sun into several theaters at once. Prostrating himself
on the altar of Technicolor founder, Herbert Kalmus, the deadline to produce
two prints for a dual release at Hollywood’s Egyptian and Vogue theaters was
narrowly achieved on time. Only one thing worried Selznick now: how the
Catholic National League of Decency would respond to his efforts. Unlike
Hollywood’s governing board of censorship, the league held no ‘official’
authority on the matter. But its influence on parishioners of the Catholic
faith in deeming certain pictures ‘morally unsuitable’ was enormous and could
ostensibly hamper Duel in the Sun’s
market saturation. Indeed, Selznick’s greatest fears were realized when
Archbishop John J. Cantwell condemned ‘Duel’ as ‘morally offensive and spiritually depressing’ urging Catholics in
good faith to abstain from attending it. More disconcerting to Selznick was the
harsh reaction ‘Duel’ was presently receiving in the press; Life magazine
leading the charge with “When a single
movie offers murder, rape, attempted fratricide, train wrecking, fisticuffs,
singing, dancing, drunkenness, religion, range wars, prostitution…sacred and
profane love – all in 135 minutes, the fact it has neither taste nor art is not
likely to deter the unsqueamish!”
Immediately
following Dimitri Tiomkin’s bombastic main title, Duel in the Sun opens on a saloon in an almost forgotten Texas
backwater. Like everything else in the picture, the saloon is neither squalid
nor small, but a sprawling western-esque gambler’s paradise, complete with live
entertainment for the men. It is here that we catch a glimpse of Pearl Chavez’s
mother (Tilly Losch), an Indian performing a bawdy dance for the patrons, much
to the chagrin of her husband, Scott Chavez (Herbert Marshall) who shortly
thereafter murders his beloved and her lover (Sidney Blackmer) out of sad-eyed
jealousy and regret. The couple’s daughter, Pearl (Jennifer Jones) is
overwrought with guilt. Scott’s one true regret is he did not give his
broken-hearted girl a better start in life. As something to make the mends, on
the eve of his execution he arranges for Pearl to make a journey far away and
live with his prosperous second cousin, Laura Belle (Lillian Gish) who has
married the boorish, Senator Jackson McCanles (Lionel Barrymore). Pearl’s
journey is dealt with short shrift in a montage of picturesque sunsets; her
arrival on the McCanles’ gigantic cattle ranch, Spanish Bit, cause for some
consternation.
The Senator
is, in fact, a racist, regarding Pearl’s half-blood heritage as something of a
curse upon her otherwise potent womanhood. Pearl’s stagecoach is met by the
elder son, Jesse McCanles (Joseph Cotten); gentle, polite and thus, considered
the slighter in line to inherit Spanish Bit. The younger McCanles is Lewt
(Gregory Peck), a drop-dead handsome lady-killer, manipulative, decisive and
cruel. Lewt’s overt and immediate attraction to Pearl is outwardly rejected;
Pearl, determined not to meet a similar end as her own mother. However, sensing
the hypnotic pull Lewt has on her, Laura Belle calls upon Mr. Jubal Crabbe, (Walter
Huston), a gun-toting preacher, to sternly counsel the girl on the evils of
temptation. Pearl is also introduced to the family’s dimwitted servant, Vashti
(Butterfly McQueen); increasingly, a constant reminder of her own ‘impure’
bloodline. Though Pearl may ‘pass for white’ she cannot deny her heritage.
Hence, when she finally submits to Lewt's hard-hitting advances one night she
views her indiscretion as deriving from the inherent weakness of her own mixed
race. Vowing to take an interest in Jesse instead, Pearl’s future with the more
sensitive brother is ruined when the Senator orders him off the ranch for
siding with the railroad men headed by Mr. Langford (Otto Kruger).
Jesse can see
to reason. The railroad must – and will – go through. Moreover, it is a sign of
progress for which Sen. McCanles counterintuitively represents stagnation and
eventual regression into the past from whence his own fortunes came, but shall
now be destroyed. Despite his genuine love for Pearl, Jesse departs for Austin
to pursue his political ambitions; later, becoming engaged to Mr. Langford’s
daughter, Helen (Joan Tetzel). Pearl willingly falls prey to Lewt; their
passion, all fun and games until he eventually reneges on his promise of
marriage. To spite Lewt, Pearl takes up with neighboring rancher Sam Pierce
(Charles Bickford): an engagement that ends only when Lewt jealously, and
without remorse or cause, guns Sam down inside a saloon. Branded an outlaw,
surely to be hanged for murder, Lewt rides out of town, vowing Pearl will
‘belong’ to no man but him. As Lewt was
always the Senator’s favorite son, his status as a ‘wanted desperado’ nearly
breaks Jackson’s heart. Lewt continues to live obscurely by his devious wits,
derailing trains and sneaking back to Spanish Bit under the cover of night to continue
his adulterous affair with Pearl, now completely his love slave. She refuses to
be parted from him; but after one of their torrid rendezvous, Lewt brutally
casts Pearl aside, even dragging her across the floor before kicking her to
near unconsciousness.
Aware of the
mess and mayhem brought upon their household, Laura Belle’s health takes a turn
for the worse; the Senator admitting his love for her before she dies. Jesse
returns to Spanish Bit an accomplished statesman – too little/too late to see
his mother alive. Despite his stature, the Senator continues to shun ‘the good
son’ in favor of the black sheep. Aware Jesse still harbors a yen for Pearl,
Lewt confronts his brother as the town looks on, threatening him to get out of
town. Jesse is un-phased; Lewt, upping the ante by tossing a loaded pistol in
his direction and ordering him to pick it up. Jesse refuses, and instead
forewarns Lewt he will hang for murder. In reply, Lewt callously shoots Jesse.
At last stirred to compassion, the Senator is comforted by old friend Lem Smoot
(Harry Carey) who informs him Jesse's wound is not mortal. A livid Pearl is
relieved. Hence, when Helen arrives, Jesse offers Pearl a way out - to leave
Spanish Bit forever to live with them in Austin. Pearl agrees. However, as she prepares
for their departure she is tipped off by one of the ranch hands, Sid (Scott
McKay) Lewt is one the prowl, intending to come after Jesse and finish the job.
Refusing Jesse and Helen’s kind offer, Pearl instead arms herself and hides in
the nearby craggy dunes to wait for Lewt. She lures her former lover to a high
plateau with the promise of rekindling their passion. Instead, she turns her
pistols on him and Lewt, mortally wounded but still very much alive,
reciprocates the gunfire, mortally wounding Pearl. As the two old flames
flicker to extinction, they claw their way through the blood, sweat and dirt,
dying in each other’s arms as the noonday sun overtakes them.
It is not
overstating the fact to suggest Duel in
the Sun shook Hollywood’s ensconced puritanism to its core. Threatened with
a ‘C’ rating from the League of Decency, Selznick begrudgingly made several
appeals to the Producers Association that fell on deaf ears and was then even
more un-generously forced to make thirty separate cuts to the picture after its
sneak previews, totaling a very slight loss of three minutes of actual content
– most of it virtually unnoticeable. Duel’s initial widespread release
caused audiences in New York and other major metropolitan hubs to flock to see
what all the fuss was about. For the most part, they were not disappointed. For
Duel
marked the first time a motion picture of such stature and star-power
dared to be so blatantly tawdry; a magnum opus of super-kitsch and the
quintessence of Hollywood’s then noteworthy neurotic romanticism; in hindsight,
a dizzying ‘last fling’ before the
industry, recovering from Selznick’s daring and sweat-laden curiosity with
carnality and eroticism seemingly run amuck, settled back into a decade’s worth
of ‘good taste’ for the duration of the buttoned-down 1950s. Alas, Selznick’s reputation, and that of
Jennifer Jones, was to suffer greatly thereafter. Despite his formidable
marketing campaign, and Duel’s fairly spectacular
performance at the box office, its $20,408,163 was offset by Selznick’s
crippling final budget of nearly $8 million, not counting his obscene outlay
spent profligately to publicize and promote the picture. In the end, Selznick’s
reputation as a purveyor of ‘good taste’ was all but left in tatters, save
MGM’s re-release of Gone with the Wind
in 1947; encouragement for Selznick that a younger audience might come to
re-investigate the ole master in his prime.
Alas, the
specter of Selznick’s ambition to transform Jennifer Jones into a big star after
Duel in the Sun could not be
quelled. Throughout the late 1940s, Selznick struggled to keep his reputation,
as well as his financial standing above the high water mark of personal debt,
hoping against hope his later projects – including Hitchcock’s The Paradine Case, would turn the
corner and rejuvenate his coffers. They did not. During this same period,
Selznick was also forced to sell off ‘package
deals’; projects he had hoped to make himself, now sold in totem to competing
studios; albeit at a premium. Hitchcock’s Notorious
(1946), The Bachelor and the Bobby-Soxer
(1947) and Mr. Blandings Builds His
Dream House (1948) all went to RKO and, to Selznick’s everlasting chagrin,
proved rainmakers for that company; as did I’ll
Be Seeing You (1945), a wartime weepy initially begun by Selznick International’s
offshoot, Vanguard, but later carried over by Dore Schary as part of his RKO
deal. Selznick would make last ditch efforts to resurrect Jones’ career in
another home-grown production: the doomed fantasy, Portrait of Jennie (1948). Gradually, Jones’ reputation in the
industry recovered from this, but her best work would be done for other studios
throughout the 1950’s.
Today, the
jury remains out on the legitimacy of Duel
in the Sun. Some regard it as a truly great Selznick picture, while others
cite it as the beginning of the end for Selznick’s indie empire and a sign of
his having lost the ability to be a great storyteller. To some extent, this
latter assessment is not entirely unfounded. There are moments in Duel
that hark back to Selznick’s very transparent desire to transform it into
another Gone with the Wind; most
notably, in the casting of Butterfly McQueen in a part almost carbon-copying Wind’s
simply-minded Prissy. The look of the picture is very Wind-esque also; its’
lurid Technicolor hues taken even more to the extreme; the impeccable
matte-work suggesting those iconic imaginary vistas from Selznick’s 1939
masterpiece. And yet, Duel is a picture that stands alone
and, once seen, is almost osmotically absorbed, continuing to haunt from the
peripheries of the mind. A bad movie can achieve a similar effect, remembered
for the audacity of its awfulness. However, Duel in the Sun is not such a movie. Rather, it is Selznick’s last
hurrah as a filmmaker of quality beyond compare. If the sum of its parts proved
more powerful than the whole, this remains quite another aspect from its
production to consider best upon repeat viewings and further analysis.
For now, we
turn to Kino Lorber’s Blu-ray release. The original film elements were
re-composited more than a decade ago at Disney Inc.’s ABC Video offshoot, and
this Blu-ray is characteristic of the limitations achieved in an analog world
with no further digital re-visitation and/or clean-up. There are some wonky
opticals scattered throughout this 1080p release and a few cringe-worthy
problems where the recombine of the cyan, magenta and yellow records is a complete
fail. Without a proper restoration – hell, even a half-ass appropriation of
necessary dollars assigned to do the bare minimum – nothing more could have
been achieved herein. Color saturation on the Blu-ray is far cooler than
anticipated. That said, the bulk of Duel
in the Sun in 1080p is still very impressive looking…for the most part. The
technical shortcomings exhibited herein could only be addressed by a full-on 4K
rescan of the original camera negative (it still exists). Cost prohibitive,
perhaps. Necessary? Well, it would have been prudent to see Kino or Disney go
the extra mile. As the former cannot afford to and Disney of late seems most
unwilling to revisit even its own catalog in hi-def, we will begrudgingly
accept this is the best Duel in the Sun
will ever look in hi-def…for now. The DTS 2.0 mono is more than acceptable;
occasionally strident, but otherwise in keeping with the vintage Westrex track.
Kino has gone the extra mile with a pair of great extras; chiefly, an informative
audio commentary by historian, Gaylen Studlar, plus another 10-minute interview
puff piece with Gregory Peck’s children, Cecilia Peck, Carey and Anthony,
waxing about the making of Duel in the
Sun and Selznick. Bottom line: Duel
in the Sun is required viewing for many – and a hell of a big and
boisterous picture for the rest. The Blu-ray is imperfect – as far too many
Blu-rays of vintage Hollywood product are – but watchable nonetheless. Enjoy.
With caveats, I certainly did.
FILM RATING (out of 5 – 5 being the best)
3.5
VIDEO/AUDIO
3.5
EXTRAS
2
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