Hey Y’all! Welcome
back for Day 4 of the Western Week. Well we have tackled revenge, bank heists,
train heists and even some good old fashioned land grabbing… so why not some
more of that? So tighten up your spurs
and make that jingle jangle jingle. This
is Invitation to a Gunfighter.
Scruffy fella, ain't he? |
Spoiler’s deceitful and
downright no good!!
Our story following disgraced Southern man, Matt Weaver (George
Segal of Ship of Fools, King Rat, Death of a Salesman, Who’s Afraid of Virginia
Woolf?, The Southern Star, Fun with Dick and Jane, Murphy’s Law and Just Shoot
Me) who had the audacity to sign for the Union cause that after the war
he returns home on foot to find his house has been ceased, bought and sold and
his fiancée has married another man. After
a heated argument with John Medford, the now new owner of his home he finds out
that town official Sam Brewster (Pat Hingle from Hang ‘Em High, Bloody Mama,
If Tomorrow Comes, Gunsmoke, The Super Cops, Elvis, Batman and the The Quick
and the Dead) stole his family land and home, grabs his shooting iron
and proceeds to raise holy hell at Brewster’s. Gets winged by the man that stole his girl
and slapped in the pokey and the sawbones of the town fixes his arm and heck
even the sheriff cuts him some slack and tells him to just leave town. Off camera Weaver drops John Medford and the
town is in uproar.
I tells ya the Batman ain't to be trusted!! |
But enough of all that saddening history and worldly
nonsense, let’s talk about Yul Brynner’s character. Jules Gaspard d’Estaing(Yul
Brynner of The King and I, The Ten Commandments, The Magnificent Seven, Westworld,
The Ultimate Warrior and Death Rage), a well-mannered, cultured dandy
that also happens to be have the reflexes of a rattler and willingness to blow
a man’s head off. The town’s “savior”
gunfighter bails after seeing d’Estaing, jumps on the very coach he came it to
town and hightails it. Hope they didn’t
agree on half up front.
Ruth now Ruth Adams (Janice Rule of Starlift, Gun for a Coward,
Bell Book and Candle, The Subterraneans and The Chase) conflicted on
her former feelings of Weaver but her convictions to her husband Crane Adams (Clifford
David of The Last Mile, Hamlet, The Party’s Over, A Woman Called Moses, Blind
Ambition and Ebony, Ivory and Jade), a one armed man that is a drunk
and apparently lousy shot makes for a difficult path for Ruth.
Brewster is typically the wrong man in at the right
time. A coward and a rabble rouser that
keeps his town in check by pointing out the horrors of the Civil War and how
they must remain united in their upstanding ways. He calls out for blood and demands the town
put cash together for a gunfighter. God
forbid they take pity on another battered soldier even if he was on the other
side. So poor Matt Weaver is truly on
his own, scared and armed.
Face it, this is a cool cat. |
I would like
to take this time to point out a few things about the film. One thing I noticed was Sam Brewster’s house
is unmistakably the Bates house above the Bates Motel via Psycho. Producer Stanley Kramer (High Noon, Judgment at Nuremberg,
Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner and The Defiant Ones) apparently loves
films of a message of racism, sexism and realism if you will. The fiction is better represented with a touch
of reality. Frankly this has to be the
filthiest town on the US soil. Gritty living conditions, battered and beaten
men from the war and the war widows, this town wouldn’t know hope if it bit
them in the keister. Love the crane
work, low pans and killer dolly track work.
This is a much underrated film and deserves much more credit than it
got, the characters are complex and could go any direction. A forgotten gem of a movie.
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