- Two Rode Together
Infobox Film
name = Two Rode Together
caption =
director =John Ford
producer = Stan Shpetner
writer = Will Cook (novel)
Frank Nugent
narrator =
starring = James StewartRichard Widmark
Shirley Jones Linda Cristal
music =George Duning
cinematography = Charles Lawton, Jr.
editing = Jack Murray
distributor =Columbia Pictures
released =26 July 1961
runtime = 109 min.
country = USA
language = English
budget =
preceded_by =
followed_by =
website =
amg_id =
imdb_id = 0055558"Two Rode Together" (1961) is a
western film directed byJohn Ford , and starring James Stewart,Richard Widmark ,Shirley Jones , andLinda Cristal . It was based on the novel "Comanche Captives" by Will Cook.Plot
In the 1880s, Marshal Guthrie McCabe (Jimmy Stewart) is content to be the business and personal partner of attractive saloon owner Belle Aragon (Annelle Hayes), receiving ten percent of the profits. When relatives of
Comanche captives demand that Army Major Fraser (John McIntire ) free them, he uses a combination of army pressure and high pay to get the reluctant McCabe to take on the job of ransoming any he can find. He assigns Lieutenant Jim Gary (Richard Widmark) to accompany McCabe. Marty Purcell (Shirley Jones ) is haunted by the memory of her abducted younger brother Steve. She keeps a music box that belonged to him. McCabe warns her that Steve will not remember her because he was a young boy when he was taken years ago. McCabe is also promised a large reward by the wealthy stepfather of another boy.McCabe bargains with Chief
Quanah Parker (Henry Brandon) and finds four white captives. Two refuse to go back with him. One is a young woman who is married to a Comanche and has children. The other is an old woman who is believed to be dead and regards herself as being as good as dead. There is also a young man named Running Wolf, who McCabe hopes is the lost son of the wealthy family. The fourth is a Mexican woman, Elena de la Madriaga (Linda Cristal ). However, she is the wife of Stone Calf (Woody Strode ), a militant rival of Parker. As they leave the camp, Stone Calf tries to take back his woman and is killed by McCabe, much to Quanah Parker's satisfaction.Running Wolf makes it very clear that he hates white people and the rich man refuses to accept him. However, a woman is convinced that Running Wolf is her lost son and claims him. Later, when she tries to cut his hair, he kills her. The settlers decide to lynch the murderer, despite Lieutenant Gary's attempt to stop them. As they drag him away, Running Wolf knocks over Marty's music box. He hears it play and recognizes the melody. Marty cannot save him and is forced to accept that nothing could have been done to bring back the brother she remembered. She accepts Gary's proposal of marriage.
Meanwhile, Elena finds herself ostracized by white society as a woman who degraded herself by submitting to a savage rather than killing herself. She decides to try her luck in California. When McCabe learns that he was reported dead and has been replaced, he complains "I didn't get a chance to vote for myself - not even once." But he has fallen in love with Elena, and admires the courage she has shown throughout her ordeal. "You know, sometimes it takes a lot more courage to live than it does to die." He decides to go to California with her.
Cast
*James Stewart as Marshal Guthrie McCabe
*Richard Widmark as First Lieutenant Jim Gary
*Shirley Jones as Marty Purcell
*Linda Cristal as Elena de la Madriaga
*Andy Devine as Sergeant Darius P. Posey
*John McIntire as Major Frazer
*Paul Birch as Judge Edward Purcell
*Willis Bouchey as Mr. Harry J. Wringle
*Henry Brandon as Chief Quanah Parker. Brandon also played Chief Scar, the husband of a kidnapped white woman, in the 1956 Ford masterpiece "The Searchers".
*Harry Carey Jr. as Ortho Clegg
*Olive Carey as Mrs. Abby Frazer
*Ken Curtis as Greeley Clegg
*Chet Douglas as Deputy Ward Corby
*Annelle Hayes as Belle Aragon
*David Kent as Running Wolf
*Anna Lee as Mrs. Malaprop
*Jeanette Nolan as Mrs. Mary McCandless
*John Qualen as Ole Knudsen
*Ford Rainey as Reverend Henry Clegg
*Woody Strode as Stone Calf
*O.Z. Whitehead as Lieutenant ChaseProduction
The shoot was far from a happy one. This was not a personal project for Ford but something he did only for the money ($225,000 plus 25% of the net profits) and as a favor to Columbia Pictures head
Harry Cohn , who died in 1958. Ford said he admired Cohn like "a large, brilliant serpent." The director hated the material, believing he had done a far better treatment of the theme in "The Searchers". Even after he brought in his most trusted screenwriterFrank Nugent —the man responsible for "The Searchers" and nine other Ford classics—to fix the script, the director said it was "still crap."Nevertheless, he took the project on and proceeded to take out his frustrations on his cast and crew. Not that this was uncharacteristic. Stewart had been warned about the director's behavior by such longtime Ford stalwarts as
John Wayne andHenry Fonda (who Ford had once socked in the jaw, during the filming of "Mister Roberts"). Stewart came to learn Ford liked to keep his actors in the dark about the direction of the picture and suspicious of each other. In Andrew Sinclair's biography, "John Ford", Stewart revealed that Ford's "direction took the form of asides. Sometimes he'd put his hand across his mouth so that others couldn't hear what he was saying to you. On "Two Rode Together" he told me to watch out for Dick Widmark because he was a good actor and that he would start stealing if I didn't watch him. Later, I learned he'd told Dick the same thing about me. He liked things to be tense."One of the film's most renowned and impressive shots has been credited solely to Ford's mean streak. In the famous five-minute two-shot of Stewart and Widmark bantering on a river bank about money, women, and the Comanche problem, the film's downbeat comedy, misogyny, and careless attitude toward human life are summed up perfectly. Ford justified the take as a simple preference for a wide-screen two-shot over cross-cutting between close-ups of "pock-marked faces." But Stewart and others insisted Ford forced his crew to wade waist-deep into the icy river and stay there all day until the shot was completed.
The film was shot on location in
Brackettville, Texas .Relationship between Ford and Stewart
Although the movie was not a commercial success and Stewart and Ford did not make the best collaborative team, they would work for together three more times, two of those in films that took a radically different and even darker view of the western myth: "
The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance " (1962) and "Cheyenne Autumn " (1964). They might not have been the best of friends on-and-off the set but they had a grudging respect for each other. The closest Ford ever came to praising Stewart was when he said, "He did a whale of a job manufacturing a character the public went for. He studied acting." Stewart wore the same hat in the film that he had worn in all his westerns with directorAnthony Mann , prompting Ford to remark, "Great, now I have actors with hat approval!".External links
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