Fri 29 Sep 2023
A Western Movie Review: THE TALL T (1957).
Posted by Steve under Reviews , Western movies[15] Comments
INTRO. Jon and I went to see this as the first film of a Randolph Scott double feature last night. It was showing at the New Beverly Theater in Hollywood, the one owned by Quentin Tarantino. While tempting we didn’t stay for the second feature, but I think a large number of the audience did. The theater wasn’t jam-packed, but as a rough estimate, it was filled to sixty percent capacity, maybe more.
It was good to see the film on the big screen in an actual theater, with an audience that came to see the movie, not to have a party. It also made me wonder if anyone involved in making the film back in 1957 had any idea that here and now, some 65 years later, the movie would still be around to keep fans watching an enjoying.
The review below was first posted on this blog on 19 January 2015.
THE TALL T. Columbia Pictures, 1957. Randolph Scott, Richard Boone, Maureen O’Sullivan, Arthur Hunnicutt, Skip Homeier, Henry Silva, John Hubbard, Robert Burton. Screenplay by Burt Kennedy, based on the story “The Captives,” by Elmore Leonard, published in Argosy, February 1955. Director: Budd Boetticher.
To start off with, let me tell you that this is one of my favorite Western films of all time. I won’t tell you that it’s number one, because I’ll be honest with you as well as myself and say that it isn’t, but it’s in the top five.
In part it’s the actors. Randolph Scott isn’t a lawman doing his job with professional dignity and humor, a common role he had in westerns. In The Tall T he’s a struggling former cowhand, no more than that, but he was good at his job. But now he’s living alone and struggling to make a go of his own small ranch, as honest with himself and others as the day is long.
Richard Boone is the villain of the piece, who along with a pair of low-life outlaws he rides with (Skip Homeier and Henry Silva) holds up a stage only to find that it’s not the regularly scheduled one, but one chartered by the man who married the plain-looking daughter of the richest man in the territory, a rabbit of a man who gives up his wife as part of a ransom scheme to save his own hide. Scott, who just happens to be on the stagecoach, is caught up in the plan and as chance would have it, is made a captive too.
As their captors, Richard Boone and his two cohorts are as murderous and vicious as they come. For some reason, though, Boone lets the yahoos he associates with do all the shooting, and as he confesses to Scott over an open fire, he has a wish to have a piece of land himself. Only Richard Boone could have played the part. A killer who aches with the need for someone intelligent to talk to.
I don’t know how they managed to make Maureen O’Sullivan so plain looking, but she is, and at length she admits that she her knows exactly why her new husband married her. But it’s Randolph Scott who makes the movie work. Rugged, steely-eyed and quiet-talking, but with little ambition more than to make a living on his own, he’s also more than OK with a gun, a fact that in the end turns out to be rather important.
Other than the actors, though, it is the storytelling, the combination of script and directing, that simply shines. The budget probably wasn’t all that large, but the story simply flows, with no wasted moments, every scene essential to the story. This is a movie that’s down to earth and real, and made by professionals on both sides of the camera.
As for Elmore Leonard’s story, the one the movie is based on, you don’t have to read more than two or three pages before you know where the timing and the pacing of the movie came from.
Most of the movie is taken straight from the story, at most only a long novelette, with only a couple of substantial changes. The campfire scene between Scott and Boone referred to above was added, and the way Scott and the woman defeat their captors was re-orchestrated, both changes for the better.
Everyone agrees that Elmore Leonard’s crime fiction was always the best around, but to my mind, his western fiction, which came along earlier, is even better. That includes “The Captives,” beyond a doubt, and the movie is even better yet. To my mind, near perfect.
January 19th, 2015 at 10:58 pm
Here are my comments on the book and the movie: http://billcrider.blogspot.com/2013/08/forgotten-books-tall-t-elmore-leonard.html
We pretty much agree.
January 19th, 2015 at 11:08 pm
Thanks for the link, Bill, but surely you jest. We never disagree, do we? Well, hardly ever. I don’t have a copy of the book, I just found the cover image I used online, and I couldn’t figure out who wrote it. Now I know. Elmore Leonard himself, plus some padding.
January 19th, 2015 at 11:45 pm
I read somewhere that Elmore Leonard loved writing westerns and didn’t want to stop writing them at all. But he said the market changed and he was forced to switch to the writing of crime novels. We went from plenty of western original paperbacks to practically zero.
There also is the question of what does The Tall T stand for? What does it mean? I’ve read it was the name of the ranch in the beginning of the movie. Maybe they once intended to make this clear but the scene must have ended up on the cutting room floor.
January 19th, 2015 at 11:51 pm
I have always assumed that The Tall T stood for The Tall Texan (Randolph Scott), but Walker, you’re right, there’s nothing on the Internet that I can find to confirm it.
But of course I couldn’t find anything that says I’m wrong either.
January 20th, 2015 at 4:45 am
Here’s a quote from my long Budd Boetticher article:
http://mikegrost.com/boettich.htm
“Despite careful watching of this film, I can’t figure out why it is called The Tall T. It’s a good name, but it doesn’t seem to have anything to do with the plot. (I’ve since learned this title was reportedly slapped on the film after it was finished by a producer – and that Boetticher and Burt Kennedy were just as bewildered as I was!)”
January 20th, 2015 at 7:29 am
After the incredibly banal first 20 minutes, this is one of the finest westerns ever. I was struck (SPOILER ALERT!) by the geometric precision of the piece; the bad guys are first introduced hiding in the shadows of a swing station, like goblins lurking in the dark. Then, at the end, Scott flushes them one by one back into the darkness of the mineshaft. Boone, the one seeking redemption, tries to flee it but ends up back in there. (END OF SPOILER!)
And “The Tall T” is a sexual maneuver I learned years ago in the Orient.
January 20th, 2015 at 1:20 pm
Dan
I don’t remember the first 20 minutes being so bad, but I wrote this review back and October and forgot to post it until now, so what do I know. What I do know (and confirmed by Bill Crider’s review) is that the first 20 minutes of back story do not appear in Elmore Leonard’s story. I have a feeling that that might have something to do with it.
PS. Your theory on where the title of THE TALL T came from is rather far-fetched, I should imagine, unless you saw a different movie than I did.
January 20th, 2015 at 1:55 pm
The Tall T is a film I’ve seen and enjoyed multiple times. The first twenty minutes serve as both a preface to the main action and introduction to Pat Brennan establishing both his character and place in the world, without which, the relationships between the O’Sullivan character and Boone’s, would have much less resonance. I thought too that the final line, ‘It’s going to be a nice day’ ties up the film, and Brennan’s character and goes to his vicissitudes so beautifully realized in that disparaged twenty minutes. A great film by any standard or budget.
January 20th, 2015 at 4:31 pm
For my money this simple film is one of the great westerns of the era and maybe of all time. What always amazes me when I watch it is how vulnerable Scott’s character can seem even though we know at some point the Scott we are more familiar with will emerge.
Until O’Sullivan becomes a bit steadier he’s the only wholly sane, capable, human in the story, but just non threatening enough I can believe the others don’t just kill him to keep him from becoming a threat.
And no small part of the film’s success is due to Boone whose villainy is always on a higher level than the standard western bad guy of the period. In a good film (even great perhaps) like this it’s easy to overlook how much he contributes. Without him this would be a fairly straightforward film, but with him there is a psychological complexity that is always threatening to reach the surface.
Barry,
I understand why that first twenty minutes might bore some, but like you I have always felt it is key to how the story unfolds later. Without it this would be pretty standard stuff because we would not have the insight provided in it.
At the time it was recognized as a good film even a bit more, but still just a western where now in hindsight I think we can see it was one of the highpoints when all the factors, stars, story, director, locale fell into perfect alignment and produced a whole greater than the sum of its parts.
September 7th, 2015 at 7:32 pm
I’ve always assumed the “The Tall T” stands for both the name of the ranch where Randolph Scott used to work and the last name of the rancher who he visits during those first all important 20 minutes–that’s where he loses his horse and thus needs to catch a ride on the stage. Randolph Scott keeps calling the rancher by name as they talk and make the wager where he loses his horse: Ten-vor-dee .
Just happens to be my maiden name–Tenvorde– so of course I noticed it right away the first time I saw the movie decades ago.
September 7th, 2015 at 8:05 pm
It’s a good theory and I’d say there’s a good chance you’re right. Thanks for sending it along. The next time I watch the movie, I’ll see how well it fits for me, but the moment it’s as good as anything I’ve come up with.
The first time I watched the movie, I thought he kept saying Ten-Forty and I couldn’t figure out why!
September 29th, 2023 at 6:55 pm
Steve,
The other film, the one you and Jon did not stay for?
September 29th, 2023 at 7:46 pm
It’s on the marquee, RIDE LONESOME. I reviewed it here:
https://mysteryfile.com/blog/?p=905
Quite a few of James Best’s family was on hand to watch and introduce the film. I wish we could have stayed.
September 29th, 2023 at 8:35 pm
I missed that, sorry. Ride Lonesome is also a favorite in my house. My wife loved both of these, she renamed Ride Lonesome andcalled it Lonesome Cowboy.
February 22nd, 2024 at 12:01 pm
I love this movie! I every time I catch it on cable. I thought he was saying Ten-Forty too! I like seeing Maureen O’Sullivan in this movie. I love her portrayal of Doretta Mims.