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Northwest Rangers (1942)  James Craig again!

1/17/2016

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Relatively hot on the tail of the shockingly fantastic 1953 James Craig 'North-Western' FORT VENGEANCE (got from the Warner Archive),  I wanted to both see and review another of his Mountie movies, NORTHWEST RANGERS (one of the many not in my already sizable collection).  No luck.  I looked for it wildly, even with some of the grey market bootleggers on line,  but I couldn't find it. It was a tad depressing. So, having heard a fellow film scribbler's call of distress, fab fellow movie bloggist and all-around interesting gal-type lady Kristina Dijan, who is one of the stalwarts responsible for this very blogathon, came to my rescue.  Having received it in the mail,  I watched it quite pronto-ish.

What a fantastic picture.

The plot is a fusion of a few different themes,  one particularly Mountie oriented,  and a couple familiar from many a lovely classic western...in this case I'm thinking back to the spotless and inarguably wonderful 1954 Audie Murphy western,  DESTRY.  It begins with two young boys,  Frank "Blackie" Marshall,  and James "Jim" Gardiner;  good pals across the board (like brothers, in their own words),  but in nature and temperament entirely different.  Blackie is the wild one.  The defiant one.  Jim is calm and measured.  

It begins with an arrow embedded into a tree,  transfixing a notice about illegal whiskey.  There are many empty liquor bottles on the ground...the boys suspect them to have been left by a group of "drunken Indians" (which is, in spite of a bit of soft racism here, a very real and tragic problem,  even to this day).  A very short time later they find this to be a prophetic observation;  when they arrive at their homestead,  they see that those same Indians have raided the houses, have killed their parents, and have set things ablaze.  

Their lives will never be the same.  

They are taken in by a kind Mountie Sergeant named Duncan Frazier (played with a calmly paternal grace by Jack Holt,  star of one of my favourite serials, HOLT OF THE SECRET SERVICE).  Skip ahead to adulthood,  and Blackie (played charismatically by James Craig) and Jim (given a cheerfully confident vibe by William Lundigan) have followed their natural inclinations in very likely fashion.  Blackie has become  a bit of a dapper cardsharp with an eye for the ladies and the main chance,  and Jim has become the very pride of the Royal Canadian Mounted police (at that time called the Northwest Mounted Police).  As adults in a very real world,  those natures are set to collide,  and they do...in spectacular fashion.

Toss in the luminescent Patricia Dane as sparky and intelligent love triangle fodder, with John Carradine as an evil-yet-charming owner of a gambler's saloon, and a great spot for Keenan Wynn for good measure,  and you have the stuff that makes for a supremely fulfilling movie watching session!

NORTHWEST RANGERS, as you may guess,  is a rollickin' good time,  and in that spirit I highly recommend it.  As I mentioned, James Craig,  who I've reviewed previously in FORT VENGEANCE (HERE),  is really one of my 'watch pocket' actors these days;  guys that aren't really famous but should be,  that I keep in a special little category of personal favourites.  Although it's really Craig's movie, William Lundigan is also quite good,  and he brings across the feeling of those Mountie ideals that I admire so much.  The direction, typically tight in true Mountie picture fashion, is well done by Joe Newman,  director of the amazing 1952 Tyrone Power Mountie film PONY SOLDIER and THE BRUTAL 1958 Joel McCrea western FORT MASSACRE,  and the script is the same, written by Gordon Kahn and David Lang, from a story by Arthur Caesar.

This is about as good a film that one could pick for a Canada Blogathon, as it makes me want to go north and breathe the fresh air and hike a mountain!  I'd like to again thank Kristina Dijan of SPEAKEASY for the opportunity to see this great Mountie film.

This is a part of the 2016 O' CANADA blogathon,  put on by SPEAKEASY and SILVER SCREENINGS!  I'm happy to have the opportunity to join in on the fun once again.  Please go visit their pages HERE and HERE to give love to Canadian and Canadian-themed movies!

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Fort Vengeance (1953) ~ James Craig, Reginald Denny

10/4/2014

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Ahh,  the 1950's.  I'm starting to think that that decade earns the western movie crown!  The list of great westerns in that decade boggles the mind:  High Noon,  Shane, Broken Arrow,  The Far Country,  The Gunfighter,  The Naked Spur, Hondo, The Last Wagon...and that's just a few famous ones!  Though the late 1930's and early 1940's were the golden age of the mountie film,  there were some good examples of the Canadian Mountie story in the 1950's, too.  There was Saskatchewan in 1954 (starring Alan Ladd),  Pony Soldier in 1952 (with Tyrone Power),  and a good number of the Kirby Grant films were released in that decade.

Enter the splendid 1953 action epic,  Fort Vengeance,  starring the rugged James Craig,  with Keith Larsen,  Reginald Denny,  and the oddly-cast-but-lovely Rita Moreno.  Craig and Larsen play brothers Dick and Carey Ross,  with Craig as the elder (and wiser) of the two. As the picture starts out, they're on the run from a posse,  headed for the Canadian border.  Larsen's character, Carey,  has shot a man in what is ostensibly self-defense,  and it's up to the older to get him out of the jam.  They do out-distance the sheriff and his men, and they manage to make it to the jurisdictional safety of Canada's lush south.  Immediately Carey's impulsive recklessness comes to play, as he shoots one of a pair Indians on the trail...an act which will come back to haunt the brothers.

Stuck north of the border and lacking work,  Dick decides that he's going to join up with the Northwest Mounted Police, and little brother tags along.  Things move quickly from there;  Dick dives fully into his new life,  taking on his responsibilities with vigour,  while Carey chafes at these new restrictions and begins to engage in behaviours that will cause trouble for everyone around him.

Then there is a murder.

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I was very happy with this film,  both as a 50's western,  and as a solid depiction of the Canadian Mountie ideal.  James Craig was fantastic as a Mountie,  dependable and loyal,  brave,  and always there to do the right thing.  In fact,  he reminded me of one of my favourite motion picture Mounties,  played by Robert Preston in the amazing North West Mounted Police from 1940 (reviewed by me HERE).  I'd really like to see more of Craig as an actor in general;  both charming and stern when required,  and very much the type that you could believe could ride alone into an army of hostiles with not a drop of sweat on his brow.  Keith Larsen was very good as the weak-of-character Carey Ross, in that he was impulsive and selfish, but not mustache-twirlingly evil.  Reginald Denny was great as his usual servant-of-the-empire-type in the Mountie commander role,  and Rita Moreno was luscious as the wild, exotic, eye-candy of the film.  I had no idea that she was so lovely.

The director, Lesley Selander, really did a solid job here.  He was a juggernaut of western film direction,  cranking out dozens of wonderful cowboy movies from the mid-30's into the 1960's,  in which he also directed for television,  including Laramie, The Tall Man,  and even Lassie!  Fort Vengeance goes to the top of my list of his films, with a childhood fave of mine, Quincannon, Frontier Scout (available HERE).

This great example of Mounted Police perfection is a Warner Archive release HERE...get it while you can!


Here's my list of Mountie films!  Please feel free to download, and let me know any that I might be missing!
mountie_films_and_serials_v4.pdf
File Size: 73 kb
File Type: pdf
Download File


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    “Maintiens Le Droit”

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    Below is my  list of Mountie movies and serials!  They span from 1914 to modern times, and cover ever style and format;  silent, talkie, b&w, colour, film, videotape,  & DVD!  Enjoy!
    mountie_films_and_serials_v4.pdf
    File Size: 73 kb
    File Type: pdf
    Download File


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    The List

    All
    3 Need To See
    Arnold Friberg
    Bob Wills
    Caryl Of The Mountains
    Charles M. Russell
    Darth Vader
    Dick Powell
    Errol Flynn
    Evelyn Keyes
    Fabio Testi
    Fort Vengeance
    Frederick Remington
    Gary Cooper
    George Hilton
    James Craig
    James Oliver Curwood
    John Barrymore
    Joseph Cotten
    King Of The Mounted
    Kitosch
    Lon Chaney
    Marilyn Monroe
    Monopoly Piece
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    Mrs. Mike
    Nomads Of The North
    Northern Pursuit
    North West Mounted Police
    Northwest Rangers
    Pulptastic!
    Rin-Tin-Tin
    Robert Preston
    Robert Ryan
    Rudy Valee
    Silent Mountie Films
    Spaghetti Mountie
    Tim McCoy
    Viewmaster


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