Ride Lonesome is a 1959 American CinemaScope Western film directed by Budd Boetticher and starring Randolph Scott, Karen Steele, Pernell Roberts, Lee Van Cleef, and James Coburn in his film debut.[1] This Eastmancolor film is one of Boetticher's so-called "Ranown cycle" of westerns, made with Randolph Scott, executive producer Harry Joe Brown and screenwriter Burt Kennedy, beginning with Seven Men from Now.[2][3]
Ride Lonesome | |
---|---|
Directed by | Budd Boetticher |
Written by | Burt Kennedy |
Produced by | Budd Boetticher |
Starring | |
Cinematography | Charles Lawton Jr. |
Edited by | Jerome Thoms |
Music by | Heinz Roemheld |
Color process | Eastman Color |
Production company | Ranown Pictures Corp. |
Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
Release date |
|
Running time | 73 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Plot
editBounty hunter Ben Brigade catches up with Billy John, who is wanted for murder. When he tries to take Billy to Santa Cruz, one of Billy's associates, hiding in the rocks nearby, fires a warning shot at Ben's feet. Brigade says anyone shoots him, he will kill Billy, so Billy calls off his gang, calling out to Charlie to tell Billy's brother Frank what has happened. When Ben and Billy arrive at a stagecoach swing station, they are greeted by Sam Boone and his partner Whit. Carrie Lane, the absent station master's wife, emerges holding a rifle and orders the men to leave. As a stagecoach approaches in the distance, Boone tells Brigade he knows what he is thinking, that Boone and Whit have been waiting to rob the stage, but that he is wrong. The stage crashes into the corral, with the driver and passengers massacred by Mescalero Indians.
After burying the dead, Brigade and the others hole up at the station, waiting for the Indians to attack. When Carrie, whose husband left to round up some horses scattered by the Indians, voices her concern about him, Brigade says he was a fool to have left her alone. Boone tells Brigade that he and Whit intended to capture Billy and earn an amnesty for all their past crimes by turning him. In the morning, as Brigade is preparing to take Carrie to the next way station, where he expects to find her husband, a band of Indians approaches and one indicates he wants to talk. Brigade rides out to meet the chief, and returns to tell Carrie that the chief has offered to trade a horse for her. Insisting that they play along, Brigade takes Carrie to the chief, but she recognizes the horse offered in exchange as belonging to her husband and screams, prompting the Indians to ride off.
The group leaves for the next way station, but when Brigade spots some Indians take cover at a nearby adobe shack. They shoot several Indians and when Carrie kills the chief with her rifle, the remaining Indians leave. That night, Boone tells Whit that he thinks Brigade is making it easy for Frank to follow them, but doesn't know why. The next morning, Billy holds a stolen rifle on Brigade, but Boone says it's his rifle and it's not loaded. Eventually Billy drops the rifle, but when Boone picks it up he pulls the trigger to show that he has tricked Billy. As they continue on, Boone offers to pay Brigade the price on Billy's head if he will hand him, but Brigade refuses. Frank and his gang arrive at the shack half a day behind the others. Frank is puzzled Brigade has not bothered to conceal his tracks; he realizes Brigade wants him to catch up so Brigade can avenge a past 'hurt' from so long ago Frank had near forgotten.
Less than a day before they reach Santa Cruz, Brigade and the others pass a hanging tree. Brigade becomes irritable and orders them to camp. Whit tells Billy about the amnesty. Billy says that Frank will kill all the others when he comes for Billy, but Boone arrives and tells Whit to shoot Billy if he tries to get them to let him go. Boone tells Carrie that he will look out for her and warns her that Brigade will never reach town alive. Carrie voices her disgust over killing for money, and Brigade confides that his real target is Frank. When Brigade was sheriff of Santa Cruz, he arrested Frank, who after being released from jail kidnapped Brigade's wife and hung her from the tree.
Having overheard the story of his wife's murder, Boone offers to cover Brigade in his confrontation. Brigade orders Billy to mount his horse, slips a noose around Billy's neck and leads him to the hanging tree. When Frank and his gang arrive, Brigade challenges Frank to stop the hanging. Frank opens fire, causing Billy's horse to bolt and leave Billy swinging from the tree. Brigade kills Frank and shoots the rope hanging Billy from the tree, while Boone and Whit chase off the rest of the gang. Brigade turns Billy over to Boone and warns him to keep his promise about going straight. After the others ride off toward Santa Cruz, Brigade sets the tree on fire.
Cast
edit- Randolph Scott as Ben Brigade
- Karen Steele as Mrs. Carrie Lane
- Pernell Roberts as Sam Boone
- James Best as Billy John
- Lee Van Cleef as Frank
- James Coburn as Whit
- Bennie Dobbins as Outlaw (uncredited)
- Roy Jenson as Outlaw (uncredited)
- Dyke Johnson as Charlie (uncredited)
- Boyd "Red" Morgan as Outlaw (uncredited)
- Boyd Stockman as Indian Chief (uncredited)
Production
editThe film was shot at Lone Pine starting 14 August 1958.[4]
Boetticher recalled the movie "is one of the few stories we could end on the screen. Before, we always let Randy “ride off into the sunset.” We always gave you the feeling that there was a tomorrow. I never knew what the tomorrow was in Ride Lonesome. I could write fourteen original scripts starting with the burning of that cross."[5]
In the original script, the characters played by James Coburn and Pernell Roberts were meant to die. However Boetticher felt the actors were too charming to kill off and claims that during filming he contacted the studio executive, Sam Briskin, asking that they be allowed to live. Boetticher told Briskin he would shoot two endings, one where they died and another where they did not, be he only filmed the latter. However he said the studio "liked what we did so much that they didn’t argue about it."[6] Boetticher also claims that Randolph Scott was so impressed with Coburn's performance that the star suggested Coburn be given more lines of dialogue.[7]
Reception
editVariety called it "another good Western from the Ranown Production team" which was "above the general run. Budd Boetticher... had a tough, honest screenplay by Burt Kennedy, and he has given it perception and tension."[8]
Home media
editIn 2008, a DVD box set of five Budd Boetticher films starring Randolph Scott was released by Sony Columbia. Along with Ride Lonesome the set includes Buchanan Rides Alone, Decision at Sundown, Comanche Station, and The Tall T.[citation needed]In 2018, a Region Free Blu-ray set of the same films, many of them restored, was released by Powerhouse films, on the 'Indicator' label. The title was 'Five Tall Tales: Budd Boetticher & Randolph Scott At Columbia, 1957-1960'. In 2021, the Scott/Boetticher films, along with other Randolph Scott features, were also released on Blu Ray by Mill Creek Entertainment.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Miller, Ron (1995-01-22). "Coburn's Comfort Zone at Home in Western with Heston and Berenger Supporting". San Jose Mercury News: p. 6.
- ^ Wilmington, Michael (November 29, 1992). "Tall in the Director's Chair Budd Boetticher made some of the best-remembered Westerns of '50s and '60s; they don't make 'em like that (or him) anymore". Los Angeles Times. p. 4.
- ^ "Randolph Scott is dead at 89; Laconic cowboy-film actor". The New York Times. March 3, 1987.
- ^ "Hollywood production pulse". Variety. August 20, 1958. p. 19.
- ^ Sherman, Eric (1970). The director's event; interviews with five American film-makers: Budd Boetticher, Peter Bogdanovich, Samuel Fuller, Arthur Penn, Abraham Polonsky. p. 46.
- ^ Axmaker, Sean (November 2, 2008). "Budd Boetticher and the Ranown Cycle: "What a director is supposed to do"". Paralllax View. Retrieved September 15, 2024.
- ^ "A Pinewood Dialogue with Budd Boetticher". Moving Image Source. October 1, 2000. Retrieved September 15, 2024.
- ^ "Ride Lonesome". Variety. February 18, 1959. p. 6.
External links
edit- Ride Lonesome at IMDb
- Ride Lonesome at the TCM Movie Database
- Ride Lonesome at AllMovie
- Ride Lonesome at the AFI Catalog of Feature Films
- Ride Lonesome at BFI
- Article on film at Images Journal