THE SONS OF KATIE ELDER: Blu-ray (Paramount, 1965) Paramount Home Video
The inklings of an unconventional revenge/tragedy help elevate director, Henry Hathaway’s The Sons of Katie Elder (1965) from the usual western milieu. The picture is one of producer, Hal B. Wallis’ super-productions, in a career populated by such legendary and diverse fare as The Charge of the Light Brigade (1937), The Adventures of Robin Hood (1939), This is The Army (1943), Sorry, Wrong Number (1948), King Creole (1958), Blue Hawaii (1961), Becket (1964) and True Grit (1969) – to scratch but the surface of Wallis’ formidable tenures at Warner Bros. and Paramount. In 1942 alone, Wallis was responsible for Warner’s Casablanca, Yankee Doodle Dandy, Kings Row, and Now, Voyager – virtually all of the megahits of the season. And to suggest Wallis ate, drank and dreamed the movies in his sleep is to merely pay him a modest homage that reeks of incredulity for his master hand in the shaping of some iconic performers of the mid-20th century. Wallis’ legendary career really deserves a more invested going over than is possible in any one movie review. Suffice it to say, he was one of Hollywood’s most prolific picture-makers with an enviable slate of credits, half of which would have made the bones of any other producer toiling in Tinsel Town. The Sons of Katie Elder has long since been regarded in that top-tier of Wallis’ best, from his winding down period – Wallis, in effect, to hang up his spurs after 1975’s Rooster Cogburn – another high-water mark in the career of its star, John Wayne.
Wayne’s towering presence figures prominently in The
Sons of Katie Elder, though arguably, not as the hero of the piece. Indeed,
Wayne’s alter ego, John Elder – the eldest of the Elder brothers, is a
notorious gunslinger, so renown and feared, he cannot even attend the funeral
of his late mother, except to observe from a neighboring hillside. John Wayne’s
movie-land persona had decidedly transgressed to the other side of stoic
goodness by the time The Sons of Katie Elder went before the cameras.
Indeed, the western genre too was no longer considered the adventurous/escapist
backwater where whisky-voiced saloon singers cavorted with brawny cowboy types
between barroom brawls and climactic showdowns with nondescript, and
perennially blood-thirsty red skins. Even
so, the William H. Wright, Allan Weiss and Harry Essex screenplay is rather circumspect
about its Shakespearean trappings. This isn’t a movie that ends in a blaze of
glory and triumphant flourish for our star. There is a blaze, but it is arson,
perpetrated by Wayne’s monument to vigilante justice; John Elder snuffing out
the man who besmirched his family’s name, resulting in the cold-blooded murder
of one brother, Matt (Earl Holliman), and near death of the remaining two;
embittered, Tom (Dean Martin) and, fledgling, Bud (a role slated for ex-Disney alumni,
Tommy Kirk before a bust for marijuana resulted in his being replaced by an
ineffectual Michael Anderson Jr. instead).
The Sons of Katie Elder is an example
of Wallis’ daring to achieve something different within the time-honored cliché
of the stoic ‘frontier family’, steadily to erode the principles by offering a
more mature back story. Katie Elder, whom we never meet, but whose presence permeates
this picture, felt in the beating hearts of her four reluctant offspring, emerges
as the invisible forcefield, driving the motivations of this psychological
western beyond its mere revenge/tragedy trappings. The Elders are ashamedly
reunited only after their mother’s burial, and even then, are a disparate
brood, chronically conflicted and out of sorts, almost to the bitter end. Director,
Henry Hathaway establishes some palpable animosity here between the Elder ‘boys’
– relying primarily on John Wayne’s caustic and sober sense of male pride, ably
abetted by Dean Martin’s frustrated menace. Wayne and Martin had previously
appeared together in 1959’s Rio Bravo, as more amicable, trademarked western
protagonists for director, Howard Hawks. In The Sons of Katie Elder, their
alter egos are at each other’s throats – invested only superficially in the
welfare of their youngest, Bud, already demonstrating his penchant to follow in
their footsteps with a bit of petty larceny, certain to land him in jail or, at
least, in some very hot water.
Screenwriter, William H. Wright was inspired by Glenn
Shirley’s 1953 account of the ‘Life of the Marlows’ and paid the
survivors of the Marlow family each $1,000 to secure the rights for a film
based on their family saga. Although Talbot Jennings would eventually be
credited with the script, Wright contributed much to the eventual narrative.
Yet, this bore only a passing resemblance to its source material. The real
Marlow Brothers bear closer reflection - George H., Boone, Alfred, Lewellyn,
and Charles. Boone, Alfred, and Lewellyn were all killed, Boone later reincarnated
in this movie as Tom Elder – who survives his wounds. The real Boone was
actually a wanted man for the murder of James Holstein – a hired gun sent to intimidate
settlers off their land. The Marlows were later accused of horse thievery. Alas,
mistakenly to have shot Sheriff Marion DeKalb Wallace, Boone fled, leaving his
brothers to face the music. As Wallace was beloved by the townsfolk, a mob rallied
to avenge his murder. Nevertheless, the Marlows were successful at warding off
their attack.
Deputy Tom Collier, along with a small contingent of
law men, then decided to relocate the Marlows, already in custody, for trial.
But their wagons were ambushed by a posse loyal to Wallace with Collier’s
complicity. Alfred and Lewellyn were shot dead in the attack. But George and
Charles escaped to their mother’s house, barricading themselves until the
arrival of a U.S. Marshal from Dallas. Meanwhile, Boone, staying with his
girlfriend and her family, was poisoned by the girl’s brother who later
pretended to shoot the corpse in order to collect the bounty on Boone’s head.
As the charge of horse thievery proved unfounded, Charles and George were both
acquitted and later became deputies themselves in Colorado. And although formal
charges were brought against Collier and his men for the false indictments against
the Marlows and murders of Alfred and Lewellyn, only a handful responsible for
the conspiracy were ever brought to trial, virtually all getting off with a
mere slap on the wrist. As for Collier, he succumbed to typhoid fever while in
jail.
In its early stages, it looked as though The Sons
of Katie Elder would follow the exploits of five brothers on a cattle drive
from Texas to Colorado, Paramount buying up the property outright and assigning
producer, Sam Briskin to hone the reins. The studio also hoped to have John
Sturges direct and Alan Ladd (who still owed Paramount a movie) star, after an
absence of some years. Alas, kismet intervened. Noel Langley began rewriting
the script. But Ladd did not want to make another picture for Paramount and
bought out the remainder of his contract for a cool $135,000. The tragic death
of Ladd from an overdose in 1964 prevented the star from ever appearing on
camera again. From here, Wallis picked up the rights, promptly announcing his
intensions to build the movie as a showcase for Dean Martin. The details here
are more than a little sketchy as to why Martin eventually fell into second position
on the project. Perhaps the elixir of having John Wayne instead proved too good
to pass up. But production hit another snag when Wayne announced he was
diagnosed with lung cancer; the schedule, delayed from Sept. 1964 to Jan. 1965,
allowing for his ‘recovery’ from surgery – the removal of one lung and two
ribs. Refusing to allow a stunt double to perform in his stead, Wayne narrowly
avoided contracting pneumonia during the sequence that required him to be
dragged through a frigid river.
Much of the picture was shot on location in Durango, Mexico,
with the exception of the main titles, photographed on the legendary Denver and
Rio Grande Western Railroad in Colorado. The train depot too is out of
sequence, located in Perkinsville Arizona, and familiar to anyone having seen MGM’s
mammoth western spectacular, How the West was Won (1962), also co-directed
by Henry Hathaway. The working relationship between Hathaway and John Wayne
proved so fruitful, Wayne sought out Hathaway to direct him in True Grit
(1969) - that movie, also playing host to ‘Katie Elder’ alumnus’s,
Strother Martin, Dennis Hopper and Jeremy Slate. As an interesting aside, the name,
Katie Elder was one of several used by Mary Katherine ‘big nose’ Horony
Cummings, the occasional companion of gunfighter, Doc Holliday – a superficial
film reference at best, since the real Cummings lived until 1940, thus rendering
the deceased Katie Elder in this movie of no relation. The final bit of central
casting proved to be composer, Elmer Bernstein – no stranger to scoring
westerns, with memorable themes for The Magnificent Seven (1961) and The
Comancheros (1961).
Bernstein would follow up this movie with further
contributions to the genre (The Hallelujah Trail, 1965, Return of the
Seven, 1966, The Scalphunters, 1968, and Guns of the Magnificent
Seven, and, True Grit - both in 1969). And although iconic from its
first few bars, Bernstein’s main title for The Sons of Katie Elder is a
tad perplexing – a big and boisterous fanfare, accompanied by images of a locomotive
barreling past the Colorado River. As none of this has anything to do with the
movie we are about to see, almost immediately, Bernstein’s compositions settle
into a more intimate and subtler orchestration with barely a glimmer for that
adventurous outdoor spirit usually ascribed the American west. Interestingly, Bernstein, along with composer,
Ernie Sheldon wrote a song entitled ‘The Sons of Katie Elder’ sung by
Johnny Cash, though never featured in the film, but proving a solid ‘single’
for Cash nonetheless.
The plot of The Sons of Katie Elder begins in
earnest as three of the adult sons, Tom, Bud and Matt, of the newly deceased
title character await the noonday train for the arrival of their eldest, John –
an infamous professional gunman. Alas, John is not aboard, and, the boys
reluctantly attend their mother’s burial in bitter silence, unaware John is
already perched on a neighboring hillside, quietly observing the ceremony from
a distance. Later, John reunites with his brothers at their late mother’s
homestead; the brood, reminiscing how each has failed to live up to Katie’s
high moral expectations. Mary Gordon (Martha Hyer) arrives with food for the brothers,
not out of any loyalty to them, but because she made Katie a ‘death bed’ promise
to be kind to them in her absence. The townspeople and new Deputy Sheriff, Ben
Latta (Jeremy Slate) are highly suspicious of the Elder boys, particularly,
John and Tom. However, Katie’s sterling reputation in the community precedes,
as she lived the life of a pious, and seemingly penniless widow after the death
of her husband and without any help from her sons, who now feel a sense of
lingering guilt and responsibility to do right by her legacy. Indeed, it was
Katie’s final wish her youngest should attend college.
Meanwhile, Morgan Hastings (James Gregory), a gunsmith
and rising entrepreneur, has claimed ownership of the Elders’ ranch, presumably
to have won it in a poker game against their father, Bass, later murdered by an
unknown assassin. Outwardly concealing his acrimony, Hastings secretly hires
gunslinger, Curley (George Kennedy) to put a period to the remaining Elders. The
Elders, however, are no fools and begin to suspect Hastings of their father’s death.
To stir the town’s already brewing dissention against the Elders, and cover his
own tracks, Hastings murders the well-loved Sheriff Billy Wilson (Paul Fix), the
one man who empathizes with the family. Hastings then frames the brothers for
this crime. Tom, John, Bud and Matt are arrested, shackled and taken from their
cell, presumably to be brought to trial in a neighboring town where the
mounting animosity against them will not result in a mob lynching. Alas, the
transport is yet another set-up by Hastings, who has influence on the many
accompanying deputies – all except Ben, who is quite unaware they are in for an
ambush. Hastings, his son, Dave (Dennis Hopper) and Curley await the deluge from
a craggy hillside. Mercifully, John suspects a plot afoot, taking refuge along
with his brothers beneath a bridge moments before the countryside erupts in a
hailstorm of gunfire.
Realizing he has been fooled into accepting the Elder’s
guilt, Ben offers to help protect them. Instead, he is executed by Hastings,
leaving no doubt in John’s mind the wily gunsmith also murdered their father. Given
Hastings orders, Curley tosses a lit bundle of dynamite under the bridge. And
although John, Tom and Bud manage to escape the explosion by diving into the
water, Matt is impaled by a wooden projectile of debris, dying in John’s arms.
Determined to avenge his brother, John instructs Tom and Bud to confiscate
pistols and rifles from the neighboring buckboard. Now, the surviving members of
the clan hold off their attackers. John shoots Curley dead, causing the
remaining deputies to flee. Only then, is it discovered Bud is severely wounded
and in need of medical care. Riding back into town – and certain death – John takes
the local blacksmith hostage, ordering him to free them from their shackles,
and also demanding Doc Isdell (Karl Swenson) tend Bud’s wounds in the adjacent
barn. Sometime later, Tom elects to sneak off on his own and confront Dave who,
having been assaulted by his own father, is now more fearful than ever the
truth will come out.
Taking Dave at gunpoint, Tom is shot in the back by
Hastings. Tom manages to get Dave back to the barn where he is interrogated by
John. Alas, the boy will give up nothing. Nevertheless, fearful, Hastings
shoots his own son to prevent a confession; Dave, dying with no loyalty left for
his father, telling everything to John, and, in the presence of the acting
Sheriff Harry Evers (Sheldon Allman). Exonerated of their crimes, John valiantly
goes after Hastings, isolating him inside his own gun shop, loaded with stores
of gun powder. Unable to snuff Hastings out, John shoots at the volatile powder
kegs instead. As the townsfolk look on, the storefront and everything inside it
is incinerated in a hellish fireball. As this execution is deemed righteous by
Evers, John is free to leave the scene of the crime, and, is taken by Mary to
her home where Doc Isdell is attending Bud and Tom’s wounds. So, we are told,
both will live to see another day. As John follows Mary, the camera settles on
a close-up of the rocking chair that belonged to Katie Elder, a present from
her late husband and her most prized possession.
The last act of The Sons of Katie Elder is
strangely less than satisfying. While the strengths of the picture – its superior
cast, exceptional location work, and Elmer Bernstein’s score offer a tapestry of
enviable riches to enliven the tale, the screenplay occasionally wallows in too
much introspection of the psychologically mislaid ilk. Why the Elders behave as
they do, becomes the focus of our story about midway through this
revenge/tragedy, leaving the motivations of baddie, Morgan Hastings, out in the
cold. No kidding, Hastings has to be one of the most cardboard cutout villains
ever featured in a western – his insidious greed, knowing no bounds, even to
the point of murdering his own son to keep his ugly secrets buried. Although the picture was wildly popular with
audiences in 1967, its reputation today has slipped marginally, and
comparatively, in the pantheon with other westerns in general and other John
Wayne westerns in particular. While the genuineness of the cast remains palpable
and appealing (Earl Holliman’s superb acting makes Matt’s dying moments utterly
heartbreaking), the cumulative effect of the piece is more par for the course
of a good solid western than an absolute standout from the rest. Cinematographer,
Lucien Ballard creates some absolutely flawless rustic vistas, and, Hal Pereira
and Walter H. Tyler’s production design is peerless. Yet, in the end we are
left with more ennui than exhilaration, the all-too-quick dispatch of Morgan
Hastings leaving us to wonder why Wayne’s John did not rid himself of this proverbial
pebble in his shoe a lot sooner.
The Sons of Katie Elder arrives on
Blu-ray via Paramount Home Video. Alas, this newly minted 1080p transfer is
problematically soft. But is it waxy? At times, yes. Several close-ups of Wayne
and medium close-ups of the ensemble lend credence to the suspicion too much
DNR has been liberally applied to homogenize the image. Colors, while generally
well-balanced, occasionally are anemic. The palette favors beiges and greens,
with a slightly yellowish caste to flesh. Yet, it is the subtler nuances here
that are missing: the layering of textures, tints and hues we are used to
seeing in big and sprawling Panavision westerns from this vintage are just not
here. Age-related artifacts are not an issue. But the image is missing even a
light smattering of film grain that ought to have been indigenous to this
source. Contrast is adequate, but again, not exactly perfect. Overall, this is
a middling effort, and so disappointing for those who had hoped for the movie’s
hi-def debut to offer up something better. The 2.0 mono audio is adequate,
though only just, with a hint of distortion, particularly during the main
titles and action sequences. Dialogue is consistently clean, if flat and SFX have
little impact beyond a muddled and grating bombast – gunfire sounding strident,
yet tinny. There are no extras. Bottom line: The Sons of Katie Elder is
an admirable John Wayne western, since slipped to second-tier status in Wayne’s
canon of classics, which is pretty much superior to first-tier everybody else.
This Blu-ray rates less than that consideration. Regrets.
FILM RATING (out of 5 – 5 being the best)
3.5
VIDEO/AUDIO
2.5
EXTRAS
0
Comments
I wish there was a way to let studios know that you didn't buy it, not because you weren't interested but because they couldn't make the effort to turn out a quality transfer.