Tue 7 Oct 2014
A Western Movie Review by Jonathan Lewis: THE VIRGINIAN (1946).
Posted by Steve under Reviews , Western movies[7] Comments
THE VIRGINIAN. Paramount, 1946. Joel McCrea, Brian Donlevy, Sonny Tufts, Barbara Britton, Fay Bainter, Tom Tully. Based on the novel by Owen Wister. Director: Stuart Gilmore.
The Virginian has many of the elements one would expect to find in a solid Western that, all things considered, stands the test of time. This postwar film adaptation of Owen Wister’s 1904 iconic tale of the Old West has romance, a dastardly villain, cattle rustling, a genteel New England woman adapting to life on the frontier, and a friendship strained by one man’s poor decisions.
Directed by Stuart Gilmore, who is perhaps better known by cineastes for his editing work, The Virginian stars Joel McCrea in one of his earlier Western features. He portrays a man simply known as “The Virginian,†a Wyoming cowhand originally from the Old Dominion who is making a new life for himself out West. He’s playful and stoic, laconic and willing to speak his mind. The Virginian isn’t a man of formal education, yet he has a solid grasp on the way of the world. And he knows the difference between right and wrong.
The plot isn’t particularly complex. But it doesn’t need to be. It’s 1885, and a Bennington, Vermont, schoolteacher by the name of Molly Wood (Barbara Britton) is restless. She simply doesn’t want to get married and stay put in that small New England town. So she decides to take a train to Wyoming, where she plans to work as a teacher.
Soon upon arriving out West, Molly encounters two cowhands, the overly enthusiastic Steve Andrews (Sonny Tufts) and The Virginian (McCrea). In a plot device not unusual for Westerns, the story’s primary male and female protagonists, Molly Wood and The Virginian, don’t exactly start their relationship off on the best foot. But it’s the palpable tension between the characters that allows the story to move forward.
The Virginian is also a story about friendship in a society where law and order have yet to be firmly established. The Virginian and Steve Andrews have seemingly known each other for a long time. They have worked and gone drinking together. When Steve falls in with a cattle rustler named Trampas (a well cast Brian Donlevy), the two men’s friendship comes under great strain. The Virginian may be a bit of a prankster, but he won’t abide cattle rustling.
The Virginian repeatedly warns Steve against allying himself with the devious Trampas, but his protests are repeatedly ignored. It’s a fatal mistake for Steve, whose hanging at the hands of The Virginian, although it occurs off screen, is nevertheless poignant. There’s a beautifully sad bird song that accompanies the hanging. It’s a truly haunting moment.
Although The Virginian doesn’t have much in the way of particularly unique cinematography, it does make very good use of color to convey meaning. Early on in the film, Molly sports a bonnet with lavender feathers on top. These blend seamlessly with the couches and curtains of a saloon front room, demonstrating that she fits in more with the domestic, more sedate part of the saloon, than with the rowdy bar area.
There’s also a scene in which the conflict between The Virginian and Steve is foreshadowed. Both men are standing at the bar, drinks in hand. They are discussing Steve’s plan to get to New York City and to leave the cowhand life behind him. The Virginian bets his friend that he’ll never make it to the Eastern metropolis. In the background during this whole scene, although visible only briefly at the beginning, is a decanter of an unknown bright red liquid. It’s noticeably out of place, even at a bar. The symbolism is clear. There will be blood between these two friends.
Trampas is also a study in color. He has a dark heart and he wears it on his sleeve. Literally. He’s one color from head to toe, including a black hat and a black gun belt. The contrast between The Virginian and Trampas is best seen in the famous scene in which The Virginian presses his gun into Trampas’s gut and says, “When you call me that, smile.†In every way, The Virginian is of a lighter hue than the villainous cattle thief.
In conclusion, The Virginian, even if not worthy of critical acclaim, remains worth a look. In some ways, it’s a somewhat mature Western for its time. There are no goofy sidekicks or saloon girls. It’s as much a study of human nature as it is a frontier tale. Best of all, McCrea demonstrates that he is a natural in the saddle. No wonder why his career flourished as he went on to make so many fine Westerns.
October 7th, 2014 at 8:04 pm
The Virginian was the first film I ever watched, followed immediately, same afternoon, by Johnny Mack Brown, Lynne Carver and Raymond Hatton in Drifting Along. The McCrea film was a major hit, with the public if not the reviewers. He was well on his way, after an already successful career in contemporary film projects, including Foreign Correspondent, available in a fine Blu Ray from Criterion, with a lot of useless special features, but worth the price anyway, The Palm Beach Story, Sullivan’s Travels, but he was already well established as a western star, Barbary Coast, Wells Fargo, Union Pacific, The Great Man’s Lady and Buffalo Bill. More to come from McCrea, but after Four Faces West, noting I thought indelible until Ride The High Country.
October 7th, 2014 at 8:32 pm
Further thought:
Sonny Tufts, for reasons; without foundation, is often thought of as a terrible actor. He is wonderful as Steve.
October 7th, 2014 at 9:14 pm
I can’t fault this version of the film and certainly not McCrea’s performance however ironic it is he stars in the role and not Scott who was Gary Cooper’s dialogue coach on the 1929 version because he was a Virginian.
I do prefer the ’29 because Cooper is the right age and it is hard to top Walter Huston for villainy, but this has gorgeous Technicolor, a fine cast, and it is certainly a great version of the familiar story.
I did feel the Cooper version allowed him to play with the humorous side of the character and story a bit more than McCrea who was a bit old for the fun loving cowboy part of the novel and forced to play him much older and mature than the character in the book.
I saw the McCrea first though, and I don’t flaw it on any level. Like the book it has a simple power and story that doesn’t need much in the way of enhancement. If Donlevy is no Huston, he’s no slouch as Trampas either.
The famous scene where the Virginian talks to Steve before he is hanged is well done in both films and worth comparing. Cooper was rightly praised for the way he played the scene, especially how he keeps looking down between his feet unable to look Steve in the eye. Of course the real reason for that was that new to talkies (like everyone else) Cooper was having trouble remembering his lines and the script was on the ground between his boots. At least that’s the story, if it isn’t true its a pity, its a great tale and easy to believe watching the film.
This isn’t a great western, it isn’t a perfect adaptation, and McCrea is too old for the part, but none of that matters really because the result is a handsome entertaining effort and helped cement McCrea’s career path in westerns. His earlier westerns tended to be epic in nature, the civilization builder type, later ones were more along the classical western lines of this.
And I agree in your assessment of FOUR FACES WEST, which I might even rank above RIDE THE HIGH COUNTRY. It’s remarkably faithful to Eugene Manlove Rhodes novel PASO POR AQUI and a truly offbeat character western. Only the addition of Scott and Peckinpah’s direction and script in the latter would edge it ahead possibly.
Agree too about Tufts though later in life he perpetuated the myth himself to some degree.
October 8th, 2014 at 12:54 am
When I was watching THE VIRGINIAN, it did dawn on me that Randolph Scott had about the most perfect accent for the role. (Although, perhaps a bit too patrician). Still, the Southern Californian McCrea was quite good in the role, even if he was a bit old for the part. Speaking of age, though, it could have been a lot worse. Like Robert Taylor as Billy the Kid
October 8th, 2014 at 3:07 am
I prefer the near-documentary look of the ’29 version, but I have to agree this one is fun to watch, and Tufts is very good at hanging around.
October 8th, 2014 at 2:28 pm
Jonathan
I agree McCrea was great, and Scott was too old then too, but there is quite a bit of rowdy humor in the novel it is hard to imagine the mature McCrea taking part in. Normally the age problem doesn’t bother me, and here it really didn’t, but the whole thing with Steve actually makes a lot more sense when you realize the two are still very young men and the Virginian is forced to become very mature very fast.
Dan,
The ’29 version was only 25 years off the books publication, it was close to actually being documentary.
October 8th, 2014 at 2:42 pm
I believe more time has elapsed between now and 1929 than had passed between the making of THE VIRGINIAN and the period described in the novel.