Two men with questionable pasts, Glyn McLyntock and his friend Cole, lead a wagon-train load of homesteaders from Missouri to the Oregon territory...
James Stewart
Glyn McLyntock
Arthur Kennedy
Emerson Cole
Julie Adams
Laura Baile
Rock Hudson
Trey Wilson
Jay C. Flippen
Jeremy Baile
Lori Nelson
Marjie Baile
Chubby Johnson
Cap'n Mello
Stepin Fetchit
Adam
Harry Morgan
Shorty
Howard Petrie
Tom Hendricks
Frances Bavier
Mrs. Prentiss
Jack Lambert
Red
Royal Dano
Long Tom
Frank Chase
Wasco
Cliff Lyons
Willie
Frank Ferguson
Tom Grundy
Victor Adamson
Barfly (uncredited)
Harry Arnie
Barker (uncredited)
Gregg Barton
Miner (uncredited)
Charles Bennett
Young Man (uncredited)
Clem Fuller
Wagon Driver (uncredited)
Manuel Thomas Golemis
Miner (uncredited)
Jack Kenny
Barfly (uncredited)
Donald Kerr
Barker (uncredited)
Al Kunde
Townsman (uncredited)
Ethan Laidlaw
Barfly (uncredited)
Philo McCullough
Prospector (uncredited)
Dal McKennon
Miner (uncredited)
Jennings Miles
Lock (uncredited)
Ron Myron
Man at Settlement Camp (uncredited)
George North
Trapper (uncredited)
Tex Parker
Townsman (uncredited)
Joe Phillips
Townsman (uncredited)
Joe Ploski
Barfly (uncredited)
Hugh Prosser
Johnson (uncredited)
Richard Randlett
Man at Settlement Camp (uncredited)
Lillian Randolph
Aunt Tildy (uncredited)
Cap Somers
Townsman (uncredited)
George Sowards
Townsman (uncredited)
George Taylor
Prospector (uncredited)
Albertine V. West
Woman at Settlement Camp (uncredited)
Britt Wood
Roustabout (uncredited)
Director
Anthony Mann
Novel
William Gulick
Screenplay
Borden Chase
July 21, 2015
7
Biscuits, apples and the troubled past.
The second of five genre defining Westerns that director Anthony Mann made with James Stewart, Bend Of The River was the first one to be made in colour. The slick screenplay is written by Borden Chase, adapted from William Gulick's novel "Bend Of The Snake," with support for Stewart coming from Arthur Kennedy, Julie Adams, Rock Hudson & Jay C. Flippen.
Stewart plays guide Glyn McLyntock who in 1847 is leading a wagon - train of homesteaders from troubled Missouri to the Oregon Territory. What the group are hoping for is a new start, a paradise, with McLyntock himself hoping for a new identity to escape his own troubled past. Unfortunately, after rescuing Emerson Cole (Kennedy) from a lynching, it's an act that once McLyntock and the group get to Portland turns out to have far reaching consequences.
In typical Anthony Mann style, McLyntock is a man tested to the maximum as he seeks to throw off his shackles and find a new redemption within a peaceful community. Cloaked in what would be become Mann's trademark stunning vistas (cinematography courtesy of Irving Glassberg), Bend Of The River is often thought of as the lighter tale from the Stewart/Mann partnership. This is most likely because it has more action and no little amount of comedy in the mix, yet although it's a simple story in essence, it is however given a hard boiled and psychological edge by the makers. An edge that asks searching questions of the "hero" in waiting. Can "McLyntock" indeed escape his past? And as a "hero" is it OK to use violence when he is wronged? This is potent stuff that is acted with tremendous gravitas by Stewart.
One of the main plus points on offer is that of having a strong cast operating within. It's thrilling for a Western fan to see Stewart and Kenendy side by side, particularly as the screenplay provides them much opportunities for machismo play. There's also a surprise in store, further allowing two fine actors of their era to solidify the film's credentials. Flippen is a reassuring presence, overseeing things like a genre uncle, Hudson rocks up for some dandy dude duties who joins in the gun play, and Adams (here billed as Julia Adams) is beautifully vivid under Glassberg's colour lenses.
Bend of the River is very much a recommended picture, as in fact are the other four films on the Mann/Stewart CV. 7.5/10
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$0.00
Revenue:
$3,000,000.00