This isn’t really a formal review; it’s more of a rambling appreciation—perhaps that suits better, because the film has a rambling, hard-to-identify quality of its own. The basic premise is simple: after the murder of his youngest brother, Wyatt Earp (Henry Fonda) takes a job as marshal of Tombstone, with his brothers Morgan (Ward Bond) and Virgil (Tim Holt) as his deputies. They form an unlikely alliance with melancholy, alcoholic gambler “Doc” Holliday (Victor Mature), and eventually evidence about the murder leads them into the famous showdown with the Clanton family, led by sinister Old Man Clanton (Walter Brennan) at the OK Corral.
If you’ve done any amount of reading about the historical OK Corral shootout, which I haven’t, you’ll know right away that the characters and events presented in this version are largely fictional. And I didn’t mind that. Taking it as fiction frees you to simply enjoy it as such.
Yet in spite of its understatedness, or perhaps because of it, the film can still hit hard when necessary. There’s perhaps one of the most shocking murders you’ll ever see on film—not shocking in a graphic sense but simply in its jump-out-of-your-seat unexpectedness and cold-bloodedness (and I even knew that that particular character was going to die; I just didn’t know how and when). The two most tragic moments are silent, framing striking, wordless shots that convey the stunned grief of the characters involved.
This post is a contribution to Legends of Western Cinema Week, hosted at A Lantern in Her Hand and Meanwhile in Rivendell, so be sure to hop over there and see what movies other participants are talking about!