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Thread: Pursued (1947)

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    Night Editor Outfit boss Adam Lounsbery's Avatar
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    Teresa Wright
    as Thor
    Robert Mitchum
    as Jeb
    Judith Anderson
    as Mrs. Callum

    Default Pursued (1947)

    In the territory of New Mexico at the turn of the century, a handsome, sloe-eyed man named Jeb Rand (Robert Mitchum) is hunted across a desolate landscape by gunmen. He returns to the cabin where he was found as a boy and prepares for a showdown. The mountains that surround the cabin are drenched in shadows, and they tower above the tiny human figures below them like skyscrapers. As Jeb waits, he is plagued by nightmares of boots on wooden floors — boots with jangling spurs — but he can't make sense of his strange visions.

    Welcome to the world of Raoul Walsh's Pursued. It's an oneiric film about a man who is haunted by the past. Mitchum narrates the film, sounding like someone who knows he is doomed. ("I always have a feeling something's after me," he says.)

    Pursued is a western, not a film noir, but it has all the hallmarks of noir, including stunning black and white cinematography by the great James Wong Howe, Freudian relationships up the wazoo, the sins of the past coming back to haunt the present, a man on the run, plenty of sinister characters packing heat, and a story mostly told in flashback.

    Young Jeb Rand (played by Ernest Severn) survived the massacre that killed his family and was taken in by Mrs. Callum (Judith Anderson), who has two children about Jeb's age — Thor (short for "Thorley") and Adam. They're played by Peggy Miller and Charles Bates as kids, and by Teresa Wright and John Rodney as adults.

    Jeb often complains that his head hurts. Nothing about his past makes sense, and his present is equally confusing. Thor and Adam don't treat him as a brother. (His separation from them is represented visually as well as thematically. In one scene in which the family gathers, Mrs. Callum stands in the center, with Thor and Adam on one side of her and Jeb on the other.) Adam hates his adopted brother Jeb. Thor loves Jeb, but her love seems more romantic than sisterly.

    One day, someone shoots young Jeb's horse out from under him. Mrs. Callum tells him it was probably just careless deer hunters, but Jeb is convinced that it was Adam.

    We eventually learn that Mrs. Callum's brother-in-law, Grant Callum (Dean Jagger), led the attack on Jeb's family. Grant's brother (Mrs. Callum's husband) was killed in the attack, and Grant was wounded and had to have his arm amputated. Grant vowed not to rest until every last Rand on earth was dead. Mrs. Callum, on the other hand, considers the events of that night Providence — the Lord may have taken her husband, but He delivered unto her a second son.

    Jeb, Thor, and Adam grow to adulthood. When the draft board demands that at least one young man from every family in the territory enlist to fight in the Spanish-American War, Jeb and Adam flip a coin. Jeb loses.

    He returns home from the war to find that little has changed. Adam still hates him, and Thor still has romantic feelings for him. "I want you to come courtin' me," she says. "I know that seems silly when we grew up together, but I want to pretend we didn't."

    Mrs. Callum doesn't have a problem with Jeb and Thor marrying, but she refuses to ever talk with Jeb about the night his family was killed, no matter how much he pushes her. "I'm giving you my daughter for your wife," she says. "Isn't that enough for you? Doesn't that show you that you're loved?"

    Grant Callum dogs Jeb's every move, sending shooters after him even though he clearly just wants to be left alone. After he's forced to kill two men in self-defense, Mrs. Callum and Thor shun Jeb, and tell him that he's dead to them.

    "Right then I knew I had to have you," Jeb says in voiceover as he watches Thor at a funeral. "I'd have to climb across two graves to get to you, but nothing in the world would hold me back."

    Pursued has a happy ending, but that doesn't stop Jeb and Thor's semi-incestuous love from having a doomed quality. "There was a black dog riding my back and yours," Jeb tells Thor as they reminisce about their past while waiting in the burned-out cabin together for Grant Callum and his gunmen to arrive.

    This noirish sense of doom pervades the film. So many scenes take place at night or indoors — in smoky saloons and casinos — that the film has a powerful sense of claustrophobia. And the fact that Jeb is a returning combat veteran plagued by nightmares gives him more in common with many of the protagonists of post-war film noirs than it does with the cowboy heroes of most post-war oaters.

    (Originally published on my blog, OCD Viewer.)

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    Administrator City Editor Steve-O's Avatar
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    Great... thanks. I like this one.

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    Night Editor Outfit boss Adam Lounsbery's Avatar
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    Great poster, Steve-O. (La vallιe de la peur is French for "The Valley of Fear." I assume that "De Angstvallei" means the same thing, but is it Dutch? I think so ... it's not German.)

    I found this on the blog Vanwall Land. It's the Italian poster ("Notte senza fine" means "Night Without End"). As Vanwall says, "Damn, those Italians get right to the point."

    Clearly you don't need a shotgun to have a shotgun wedding:


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    Gumshoe Arthur Bannister's Avatar
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    Great posters, both of 'em, but that looks like a semi-automatic Teresa Wright is holding on Mitchum in the Italian poster. It seems unlikely to me that a gun of that type would have been in use in the American West at the turn of the 20th Century. Semi-automatics were invented in the mid-1890s, but that one looks particularly anachronistic. My guess is the Italian artist wasn't very gun-savvy.

    Or maybe they were just playing up the noir qualities!

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    Night Editor Outfit boss Adam Lounsbery's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Arthur Bannister View Post
    Great posters, both of 'em, but that looks like a semi-automatic Teresa Wright is holding on Mitchum in the Italian poster. It seems unlikely to me that a gun of that type would have been in use in the American West at the turn of the 20th Century. Semi-automatics were invented in the mid-1890s, but that one looks particularly anachronistic. My guess is the Italian artist wasn't very gun-savvy.
    I thought the same thing when I looked at the poster this morning, Arthur. Also, it's not really representative of the film. The French poster that Steve-O posted gives a much better idea of what the movie is like. Maybe being forced to marry at gunpoint just strikes a chord in Italian viewers' hearts.

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    Outfit boss MartinTeller's Avatar
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    (review from 10/25/09)

    Years before taking the title role in Night of the Hunter, Robert Mitchum played the hunted in this movie that's more film noir than Western. While there's nothing truly spectacular about it, it's quite excellent in every regard and thoroughly watchable. A tight script (some of Mitchum's voiceover monologue is a bit overcooked, but no more so than your average noir), good performances, stark cinematography, a fair-to-good Max Steiner score, dark psychology and a lot of tense moments. And now I'm definitely feeling some movie burnout, gonna take a break for a few days. Rating: 8

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