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By Public Domain, Link
Rio Bravo | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Howard Hawks |
Screenplay by | Jules FurthmanLeigh Brackett |
Based on | “Rio Bravo” by B. H. McCampbell |
Produced by | Howard Hawks |
Starring | John WayneDean MartinRicky NelsonAngie DickinsonWalter BrennanWard BondJohn RussellPedro Gonzalez GonzalezEstelita Rodriguez |
Cinematography | Russell Harlan |
Edited by | Folmar Blangsted |
Music by | Dimitri Tiomkin |
Production company | Armada Productions |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. |
Release date | April 4, 1959 (USA) |
Running time | 141 minutes |
Country | United States |
Languages | EnglishSpanish |
Budget | $1,214,899 |
Box office | $5.75 million (US and Canada rentals) |
Rio Bravo is a 1959 American Western film produced and directed by Howard Hawks and starring John Wayne, Dean Martin, Ricky Nelson, Angie Dickinson, Walter Brennan, and Ward Bond. Written by Jules Furthman and Leigh Brackett, based on the short story “Rio Bravo” by B. H. McCampbell, the film stars Wayne as a Texan sheriff who arrests the brother of a powerful local rancher for murder and then has to hold the man in jail until a U.S. Marshal can arrive. With the help of a “cripple”, a drunk and a young gunfighter, they hold off the rancher’s gang. Rio Bravo was filmed on location at Old Tucson Studios outside Tucson, Arizona, in Technicolor.
In 2014, Rio Bravo was deemed “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant” by the Library of Congress and selected for preservation in the National Film Registry.
Contents
Cast
By Trailer screenshot – Public Domain, Link, John Wayne and Angie Dickinson in Rio Bravo
- John Wayne as John T. Chance
- Dean Martin as Dude
- Ricky Nelson as Colorado/Ryan
- Angie Dickinson as Feathers
- Walter Brennan as Stumpy
- Ward Bond as Pat Wheeler
- John Russell as Nathan Burdette
- Pedro Gonzalez Gonzalez as Carlos Robante
- Estelita Rodriguez as Consuelo Robante
- Claude Akins as Joe Burdette
Malcolm Atterbury and Harry Carey Jr. also receive screen credits in the film’s opening, but their scenes were deleted from the final film.
Production
By Public Domain, Link, Ricky Nelson performing the song “Get Along Home, Cindy” in Rio Bravo
Exteriors for the film were shot at Old Tucson Studios, just outside Tucson. Filming took place in the summer of 1958, and the movie’s credits gave 1958 for the copyright; the film was released in March 1959.
Rio Bravo is generally regarded as one of Hawks’ best, and is known for its long opening scene which contains no dialogue. The film received favorable reviews, and was successful, taking in over US$5.5 million.
A brief clip from Rio Bravo was among the archive footage later incorporated into the opening sequence of Wayne’s last film, The Shootist, to illustrate the backstory of Wayne’s character.
As was often the case in a John Wayne Western, Wayne wore his “Red River D” belt buckle in the movie. It can be clearly seen in the scene where Nathan Burdette comes to visit his brother Joe in the jail where he is being held for the U.S. Marshal about 60 minutes into the film.
The story was credited to “B.H. McCampbell.” According to Todd McCarthy‘s 1997 biography, “Howard Hawks: The Grey Fox of Hollywood,” this was actually Hawks’ eldest daughter, Barbara Hawks McCampbell (McCampbell being her married name). Her contribution was the idea of using dynamite in the final shootout.
Soundtrack
“El Deguello” by Dimitri Tiomkin | Arik Davidov
The musical score was composed by Dimitri Tiomkin. His score includes the hauntingly ominous “El Degüello” theme, which is heard several times. The Colorado character identifies the tune as “The Cutthroat Song”. He relates that the song was played on the orders of General Antonio López de Santa Anna to the Texans holed up in the Alamo, to signify that no quarter would be given to them. The tune was used in Wayne’s film The Alamo (1960). Composer Ennio Morricone recalled that director Sergio Leone asked him to write “Dimitri Tiomkin music” for A Fistful of Dollars. The trumpet theme is similar to Tiomkin’s “Degüello” (the Italian title of Rio Bravo was Un dollaro d’onore, A Dollar of Honor).
Because the film starred a crooner, Martin, and a teen idol, Nelson, Hawks included three songs in the soundtrack. Before the big showdown, in the jail house, Martin sings “My Rifle, My Pony, and Me” (which contains new lyrics to a Tiomkin tune that appeared in Red River), accompanied by Nelson, after which Nelson sings a brief version of “Get Along Home, Cindy“, accompanied by Martin and Brennan. Over the closing credits, Martin, backed by the Nelson Riddle Orchestra, sings a specially composed song, “Rio Bravo”, written by Tiomkin with lyrics by Paul Francis Webster. Nelson later paid homage to both the film and his character, Colorado, by including the song “Restless Kid” on his 1959 LP, Ricky Sings Again.
Members of the Western Writers of America chose “My Rifle, My Pony, and Me” as one of the Top 100 Western songs of all time.
Music
- “My Rifle, My Pony and Me”—sung by Dean Martin and Ricky Nelson
- “Cindy“—sung by Ricky Nelson, Dean Martin and Walter Brennan
- “Rio Bravo”—sung by Dean Martin (end credits)
High Noon debate
The film was made as a response to High Noon, which is sometimes thought to be an allegory for blacklisting in Hollywood, as well as a critique of McCarthyism. Wayne would later call High Noon “un-American” and say he did not regret helping run the writer, Carl Foreman, out of the country. Director Howard Hawks went on the record to criticize High Noon by saying, “I didn’t think a good sheriff was going to go running around town like a chicken with his head cut off asking for help, and finally his Quaker wife had to save him.” According to film historian Emanuel Levy, Wayne and Hawks teamed up deliberately to rebut High Noon by telling a somewhat similar story their own way: portraying a hero who does not show fear or inner conflict and who never repudiates his commitment to public duty, while only allying himself with capable people, despite offers of help from many other characters. In Rio Bravo, Chance is surrounded by allies—a deputy who is brave and good with a gun, despite recovering from alcoholism (Dude), a young untried but self-assured gunfighter (Colorado), a limping “crippled” old man who is doggedly loyal (Stumpy), a Mexican innkeeper (Carlos), his wife (Consuelo), and an attractive young woman (Feathers)—and repeatedly turns down aid from anyone he does not think is capable of helping him, though in the final shootout they come to help him anyway. “Who’ll turn up next?” Wayne asks amid the gunfire, to which Colorado replies: “Maybe the girl with another flower pot.”
Reception
In the United Kingdom, Rio Bravo was not originally even reviewed for Sight & Sound; Leslie Halliwell gave the film two out of four stars in his Film Guide, describing it as a “cheerfully overlong and slow-moving Western” that was nevertheless “very watchable for those with time to spare”. The film was taken more seriously by British critics such as Robin Wood, who rated it as his top film of all time and wrote a book on it in 2003 for the British Film Institute, publishers of Sight & Sound. Pauline Kael called the film “silly, but with zest; there are some fine action sequences, and the performers seem to be enjoying their roles.”
Rio Bravo has a 98% Rotten Tomatoes rating and was the second highest-ranking Western (63rd overall) in the 2012 Sight & Sound critics’ poll of the greatest films ever made.
In 2008, the American Film Institute nominated this film for its Top 10 Western Films list.
Remakes and inspirations
Remakes
Howard Hawks went on to make two loose variations of Rio Bravo, on both occasions under a different title. Both of these remakes were directed by Hawks, both starred John Wayne, and in each case, the script was written by Leigh Brackett. All involve lawmen working against an entrenched criminal element, partially by “holing up” in their jailhouses.
- The first remake, El Dorado, was filmed in 1966, but it was not released in the United States (by Paramount) until the summer of 1967. In this film, Robert Mitchum played the Dean Martin role, Arthur Hunnicutt the Walter Brennan character, and James Caan the Ricky Nelson role. Hawks again named the Nelson/Caan character after a state (in this case, Mississippi) and in a wry, humorous twist on the original film, Hawks made him inept with firearms, but skilled with a knife.
- The second remake, Rio Lobo, was made in 1970 with a plot much further off the original mold, starting with the absence of a lawman-turned-drunkard character. This began with a Confederate train robbery of a Union gold shipment during the American Civil War, then moved to a postwar Texas county thoroughly controlled by a rich, arrogant rancher. The heroes, with the exception of an old man similar to Brennan and Hunnicutt’s characters in the previous pictures (Jack Elam here), were complete outsiders. Along with Wayne and Elam, this movie starred Mexican film star Jorge Rivero (as Frenchie), Christopher Mitchum (Robert Mitchum’s son), and Jennifer O’Neill.
Inspirations
- Feathers’ dialogue was occasionally inspired by the character of “Slim” (Lauren Bacall) in the 1944 To Have and Have Not, as when, after the first kiss, she says: “It’s better when two people do it,” recalling the phrase “It’s even better when you help;” and again later when she says, “I’m hard to get—you’re going to have to say you want me,” recalling Slim’s “I’m hard to get, Steve—all you have to do is ask me.”
- L’homme à l’étoile d’argent (The Man with the Silver Star), a 1969 album from the French comics series Blueberry, was directly inspired by Rio Bravo. The plot is virtually the same. Blueberry plays the role of sheriff John T. Chance; McClure, a whiskey-adoring old man, combines the roles of Dude and Stumpy; Dusty plays the role of Colorado; Miss March, the teacher, plays the role of a less morally challenged Feathers; and instead of the Burdettes, it has the Bass brothers.
- John Carpenter‘s 1976 film Assault on Precinct 13, though not a remake of Rio Bravo, was inspired by the film. Carpenter borrowed some elements from the earlier film’s plot, but set it in 1970s Los Angeles. He also paid homage to the original film by using the pseudonym “John T. Chance”, the name of Wayne’s character, for his editing credit. This film was also remade in 2005 by Jean-Francois Richet, moving the film’s setting to Detroit.
- Ghosts of Mars, a 2001 film also by Carpenter, retains many of the elements that were developed in Rio Bravo and Assault on Precinct 13, but takes place in a science-fiction setting.
- The Nest, a 2002 film by Florent Emilio Siri, starring Samy Naceri, Benoît Magimel, Nadia Farès, Pascal Greggory, and Sami Bouajila, is a quasi-remake of Assault on Precinct 13.
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