- Johnny Guitar
Infobox_Film
name = Johnny Guitar
caption = Original theatrical poster
imdb_id = 0047136
director =Nicholas Ray
producer =Herbert J. Yates
writer = Novel:
Roy Chanslor
Screenplay:Philip Yordan
starring =Joan Crawford Sterling Hayden Mercedes McCambridge Scott Brady
music = Title Song:Peggy Lee Victor Young
cinematography =Harry Stradling Sr.
distributor =Republic Pictures
released = flagicon|USA27 May 1954
runtime = 110 min.
country = USA
language = English"Johnny Guitar" (1954) is a
Republic Pictures feature film starringJoan Crawford ,Sterling Hayden ,Mercedes McCambridge , andScott Brady in anOld West tale about an Arizona cattle community facing unwanted social and economic changes and a newcomer who challenges the community's dictatorial leaders. The screenplay byPhilip Yordan was based upon a novel byRoy Chanslor . The film was directed byNicholas Ray and produced byHerbert J. Yates . "Johnny Guitar" was the last feature film produced by Republic Pictures in itsTrucolor process. The film has been broadcast on American television, released to VHS and DVD formats, and adapted to musical theater.Plot and cast
On the outskirts of a wind-swept Arizona cattletown, a saloonkeeper named Vienna (
Joan Crawford ) maintains a volatile relationship with the local cattlemen and townsfolk. Not only does she support the railroad being laid nearby (the cattlemen oppose it) but she permits a suspected stage robber called The Dancin' Kid (Scott Brady ) to share her bed, and his confederates (Ernest Borgnine ,Royal Dano , andBen Cooper ) to frequent her saloon. Vienna's ex-lover Johnny Guitar (Sterling Hayden ), a reformed gunslinger, arrives at the saloon, renews his love for Vienna, and offers her needed protection. Life is cozy for the two until one day The Dancin' Kid and his gang rob the town bank. The townsfolk suspect Vienna has played a part. Led by Emma Small (Mercedes McCambridge ), a cattle rancher who has long hated Vienna, the posse descends on Vienna's saloon and burns it to the ground. Vienna and Johnny escape the posse and find refuge in The Dancin' Kid's secret hideaway. The posse tracks them. The Dancin' Kid and his men are killed. Emma Small challenges Vienna to a show-down. Though Vienna is wounded in the duel, she manages to kill Emma. A halt is called to the bloodbath by the posse leader (Ward Bond ). Vienna and Johnny depart, hopeful that better days lie ahead. Cast includesJohn Carradine ,Paul Fix , Rhys Williams,Frank Ferguson andDennis Hopper in his motion picture debut.Production notes
Jealous of a much younger
Mercedes McCambridge , Crawford fought but failed to haveClaire Trevor cast in the Emma Small role. After filming, McCambridge and Hayden publicly declared their dislike of Crawford, with McCambridge labeling Crawford, "a bad egg."Reception
"Variety" commented, "It proves [Crawford] should leave saddles and Levis to someone else and stick to city lights for a background. [The film] is only a fair piece of entertainment. [The scriptwriter] becomes so involved with character nuances and neuroses, all wrapped up in dialogue, that [the picture] never has a chance to rear up in the saddle...The people in the story never achieve much depth, this character shallowness being at odds with the pretentious attempt at analysis to which the script and direction devotes so much time." [Quirk, Lawrence J.. "The Films of Joan Crawford". The Citadel Press, 1968.]
The film is beloved of French critics and filmmakers, such as
François Truffaut , who described it as the "Beauty and the Beast of Westerns, a Western dream". [Truffaut, "The Films in My Life" ] Truffaut was especially impressed by the film's extravagance: the bold colors, the poetry of the dialogue in certain scenes, and the theatricality which results in cowboys vanishing and dying "with the grace ofballerina s".Commentary
The style of "Johnny Guitar" is very different from the realism that dominates the work of classical Western directors such as
John Ford andHoward Hawks , and this expressive boldness can be looked at as a form of allegory. In particular, many critics have pointed out that the film is a hidden commentary on the McCarthy witch-hunts. [For example, Geoff Andrew, "The Films of Nicholas Ray" (1991, 2004)] The film is certainly more than just a Western — Truffaut called it "a phony Western". It is a sexual drama with obsessive personalities bordering on madness: the character played by Mercedes McCambridge is obviously the chief villain, but Joan Crawford's character is not entirely likable and Ray shows that Crawford's own psycho-sexual obsession affects her in equally bizarre turns, for example, she dresses entirely in white in a crucial scene where she must confront McCambridge.The strong will and personalities of these two women effectively sideline the men. Sterling Hayden as the eponymous hero is something less of a hero as a result of Crawford's obsession (the fact that he plays a guitar and travels without a gun gives a clue to the downgrading of the Western hero stereotype that is implicit in the title). He is a secondary character, given to indecisiveness. He mostly functions as a passive observer: his tag line is "I am a stranger here myself", which can also describe Nicholas Ray himself (indeed, the line was used as the title of a 1975 documentary about the director).
The other male principals also take a secondary role to the women; none of the posse, not even Sheriff McIvers, its purported leader, can bring himself to veto McCambridge's Emma, even when lives are at stake. The Dancin' Kid bases many important decisions (especially whether to rob the bank) on whether Vienna will continue to return his affections instead of leaving him for Johnny. Johnny and the Kid are both unusually sensitive cowboys compared to the icons of the time, including the fact that each has an artistic skill (dancing, guitar playing) which is a part of his name, and that both generally let the female characters make the decisions and are willing to abide by them.
Adaptations
"Johnny Guitar" was adapted into a stage musical, which debuted
Off-Broadway in 2004, with a book by Nicholas van Hoogstraten, lyrics byJoel Higgins , and music by Martin Silvestri andJoel Higgins . It starredAnn Crumb ,Steve Blanchard , andRobert Evan , and was the recipient of the Outer Critics Circle Award for Best Musical, as well as a nominee for the Lucille Lortel Awards and the Drama Desk Awards. The musical adaptation favored a more "camp" approach toward the material, which seemed to work in its favor, at least among the critics. The musical version is now being staged in regional theaters across the United States.ee also
*
Joan Crawford filmography References
External links
* [http://www.johnnyguitarthemusical.com/ Johnny Guitar Musical official website]
* [http://ww.jacknilan.com/senatorjoe/ McCarthyism and the Movies]
* [http://www.imagesjournal.com/issue10/infocus/johnnyguitar Grant Tracey in images journal]
* [http://www.pifmagazine.com/SID/637/Nick Burton in pif magazine]
* [http://www.angelfire.com/oh2/writer/johnnyguitar.html Brian W. Fairbanks in angelfire]Navbox
name = Joan Crawford
title = The 1940-1970 Films of Miss Joan Crawford
group1 = 1940-1949
list1 = nowrap| "Strange Cargo" (1940) • nowrap| "Susan and God " (1940) • nowrap| "A Woman's Face " (1941) • nowrap| "When Ladies Meet" (1941) • nowrap| "They All Kissed the Bride " (1942) • nowrap| "Reunion in France " (1942) • nowrap| "Above Suspicion" (1943) • nowrap| "Hollywood Canteen" (1944) • nowrap| "Mildred Pierce" (1945) • nowrap| "Humoresque" (1946) • nowrap| "Possessed" (1947) • nowrap| "Daisy Kenyon " (1947) • nowrap| "Flamingo Road" (1949) • nowrap| "It's a Great Feeling " (1949)
name = Joan Crawford
title = The 1940-1970 Films of Miss Joan Crawford
group2 = 1950-1959
list2 = nowrap| "The Damned Don't Cry! " (1950) • nowrap| "Harriet Craig " (1950) • nowrap| "Goodbye, My Fancy " (1951) • nowrap| "This Woman is Dangerous " (1952) • nowrap| "Sudden Fear " (1952) • nowrap| "Torch Song" (1953) • nowrap| "Johnny Guitar " (1954) • nowrap| "Female on the Beach " (1955) • nowrap| "Queen Bee" (1955) • nowrap| "Autumn Leaves" (1956) • nowrap| "The Story of Esther Costello " (1957) • nowrap| "The Best of Everything" (1959)
name = Joan Crawford
title = The 1940-1970 Films of Miss Joan Crawford
group3 = 1960-1969
list3 = nowrap| "What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?" (1962) • nowrap| "The Caretakers " (1963) • nowrap| "Strait-Jacket " (1964) • nowrap| "I Saw What You Did " (1965) • nowrap| "Berserk! " (1967)
group4 = 1970
list4 = nowrap| "Trog " (1970)
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