Monday, 6 January 2025

The Searchers review

 Number 307 on the top 1000 films of all time is John Ford's 1956 Western 'The Searchers.'

Ethan Edwards (John Wayne) is a civil-war veteran living during the Texan-Indian wars. When his niece Debbie (Natalie Wood) is abducted by the local Comanche tribe, he and his nephew Martin Pawley (Jeffrey Hunter) mount a years-long expedition to find her again.

Time for one of my least-favourite film genres: Westerns. I've never been a fan of cowboy films - not for any egregious reason. They're just not for me at all. The Searchers didn't really do much to shift the needle.

Perhaps that's because of John Wayne. Wayne was well-known for his cowboy films, but, after a while, they all kind of blend into one. From Ethan Edwards to Tom Doniphan to Rooster Cogburn, they all featured the hulking Wayne always playing the same role in the same way.

Edwards has strong anti Native-American sentiments, bringing him into conflict with his nephew Martin who is an eighth Comanche. Jeffrey Hunter was more convincing as the more straight-forward, as cut-and-dry hero. In contrast, Edwards was more of a not-so-lovable rogue.

His bigotry also rears its ugly head when he realises that Debbie has voluntarily assimilated into the local Comanche group who abducted her. Wood is a decent-enough actress. She was Oscar-nominated for Rebel without a Cause, as well as Splendor in the Grass and Love with the Proper Stranger. But she never had the proper time to shine here.

Yes, the Searchers had the stunning cinematography that depicted the old American-West, but it didn't do anything to make me become a fan of cowboy films.

No comments:

Post a Comment