How The West Was
Won-Johnny Too Bad’s “Johnny Guitar” (1954)-A Film Review
DVD Review
By Sarah Lemoyne
Johnny Guitar, starring
Joan Crawford, Sterling Hayden, Scott Brady and whoever else they could round
up who played any cowboy roles before 1954, 1954
I am not, never was, a
fan of Westerns in any of its transmissions to the screen from iconic Tom Mix
mash to High Noon to The Wild Bunch the latter which began to
chip away at the angelic white cowboy legend that sustained my late grandfather
on many a Saturday morning on television and many a Saturday afternoon movie
matinee according to my grandmother. And that seems to me to be exactly the
point. My grandparents born respectively
in 1946 and 1948 were probably the remnants, the holy goof remnants according
to fellow baby-boomer and thus contemporary Sam Lowell, who allegedly would
have given his eye teeth for this assignment since he shared that same
commitment to the Western white cowboy legends as my late grandfather did. In
any case the assignment fell to me and that was that. (That “white cowboy”
reference hot off the heels of reading a review of a new Smithsonian/Folkways compilation
by one of the Carolina Chocolate Drops paying homage to the not inconsiderable
role of the black cowboy in taming the West, so white in the days when the
black contribution was conveniently written out of the picture in everything
from dime store novels to “oaters.”)
But I am still befuddled
as to why I grabbed the assignment, this review of the classic iconic Johnny
Too Bad Western, Johnny Guitar other
than some office politics thing to keep it from Sam and keep him in line. Or as
officially came to me in a reply memo when I asked why somebody who could care
less about cowboys, and a genre which had zero influence on me growing up was
given such an assignment that it would “broaden my horizons.” I accepted that
answer until I saw the film and found out the real answer which is that this
film breaks the mold, breaks the white male hero cowboy angel ride mold and
pays a certain oblique homage to the pioneer women who one way or the other
influenced the taming of the West once the gunplay subsided a little. A little
startling for a 1954 film if you ask me.
Vienna, the role played
by Joan Crawford who I only know a little, the name mostly, because Jack
Kerouac whose book Big Sur I did my
master’s thesis on did a short piece for some magazine about Joan Crawford
working on some film in San Francisco and had her as some fogged up dame who
jammed up the works and gave the very obliging director seven kinds of hell. I
don’t know if she was considered some kind of femme earlier in her career but
she looked like she had been through the mill by 1954. Which is good because
the role of Vienna calls for a woman who has been through the mill, has seen
and done it all from saloon bar girl to some Madame La Rue (that courtesy of
Seth Garth from the table of Allan Jackson) whorehouse denizen to what knows
what else but as the scenes open she is running, she, her, Vienna is running a
nice little casino and jip join outside of some dusty town in the real, meaning
not the Left Coast, if still mostly untamed West. She might have worn out a few
beds in her time and maybe was running her own unseen whorehouse but she was on
the high side now. Even better she was laying plans for the railroad to build a
depot near her place and extend a line and a new born town bringing plenty of
gringos and sad sack immigrants who washed out in the East and think they will
find the mother lode before the frontier ends and their dreams go up in opium
smoke like Mrs. Miller in McCabe and Mrs.
Miller. All you have to say in railroad in 19th century America,
East or West and that meant money, money for those savvy and hungry enough to
grab it and pay a little graft for the right to make a fortune. And our Vienna
was ready to grab whatever fell to her with all hands.
Of course an independent
woman out West running a saloon and gambling den and whatever else she was
running was sure to raise the hackles of the good and prosperous town folk who
money was made through banking and cattle so the tension would fly through the
night especially when some vengeful woman Emma, played by Mercedes McCambridge,
has it in for her for reasons from repressed sexuality to class snobbishness
and prudery. (I like the sexual repression theory one townie ran by us
revolving around one Dancing Kid whom she love/hated and would shoot right
through the head in the end but that was much later. Of course, as well, a
woman, hell, anybody running a gin mill and clip joint will also have
partisans, partisans like the just mentioned Dancing Kid and his gang of
cutthroats who will gladly relieve stagecoaches and banks of their precious
possessions. (This nickname stuff and we will see with Johnny Guitar in a
minute reminded Seth Garth when I told him about the film to get a little
advice on a “hook” of when he and the North Adamsville corner boys he grew up
with went to California in the Summer of Love in 1967 and all took up monikers
to what he called “reinvent” themselves maybe like these earlier travelers and
denizens of the low spots.) The Dancing Kid not only a partisan of Vienna’s
dreams but with knowledge of her in the Biblical sense which will cause no end
of problems and not just with bitch Emma.
Now the scene in set so
enter one Johnny Guitar, played by ruggedly handsome Sterling Hayden who Seth
said did a great job bleeding himself to death as the heavy lifter in the
classic film noir The Asphalt Jungle
which he reviewed, with nothing but a guitar on his back (caseless by the way)
and tombstones in his eyes. Those tombstones via the cardinal error of trekking
West without manly guns and plenty of them like some fool Eastern city slicker.
He is in Vienna’s joint to sing troubadour style for his supper and entertain
the hooligans while they lose their dough. But that Johnny Guitar front is just
baloney because behind that moniker and those easy-going whiskey sot ways is
the gun simple killer one Johnny Logan, a name once revealed that even got the
Dancing Kid’s attention. Vienna and Johnny were lovers some time and place back
and while Vienna played the ice queen and tough hombre bit for a while she only
has eyes for Johnny when the deal went down. By the way let’s get this straight
now this Johnny Guitar troubadour stuff is strictly lame since he neither sings
one damn song nor does he do more than strum that guitar and not very well at
that. So unless Johnny is better in bed than he looks he would be hard put to
make dimes for donuts today on the mean streets of the city or in the
subways.
That interestingly
enough though is all side door Johnny stuff. The real war is on, the war
between the two vixens Vienna and Emma with Vienna two to one in my book to win
this duel to the death with the guys looking on here taking direction from
womenfolk. Yes you heard that right all of these cowboys cum civilized town
folk are lining up to take sides this this big step off. (Seth Garth also mentioned
that in this film virtually every actor who had donned a cowboy hat more than
once in films was part of the back-up cast including Scott Brady and Ward Bond.)
The Dancing Kid set the whole shooting match up when he and the boyos robbed
Ms. Emma’s bank and that gave her the last straw she needed to send Vienna to
the gallows by associating her with the Dancer’s action maybe even the brains behind
the heist.
The chase was on, big
time, because it might be a cliché but it works here-watch out for a woman scorned
as twisted sister Emma aint no feminist and wants Vienna’s pretty little neck around
some fresh hemp. And she almost has her way but Johnny boy who was on the outs
with Vienna for a while came by to save Ms. Vienna’s bacon. Save it and leave
the situation fluid enough for the gals to have a final draw-down to see who
was queen of the hill. Needless to say I won my bet. Johnny did too taking the
ice queen to better surroundings. But please, please, please no more of these fake
Westerns which still leave me cold.
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