Film Snail

Broken Lance
Broken Lance

6.4

Broken Lance

NR·1954·96m

Summary

Cattle baron Matt Devereaux raids a copper smelter that is polluting his water, then divides his property among his sons. Son Joe takes responsibility for the raid and gets three years in prison. Matt dies from a stroke partly caused by his rebellious sons and when Joe gets out he plans revenge.

Cast

Spencer Tracy

Spencer Tracy

Matt Devereaux

Robert Wagner

Robert Wagner

Joe Devereaux

Jean Peters

Jean Peters

Barbara

Richard Widmark

Richard Widmark

Ben Devereaux

Katy Jurado

Katy Jurado

Señora Devereaux

Hugh O'Brian

Hugh O'Brian

Mike Devereaux

Eduard Franz

Eduard Franz

Two Moons

Earl Holliman

Earl Holliman

Denny Devereaux

E.G. Marshall

E.G. Marshall

Horace (The Governor)

Carl Benton Reid

Carl Benton Reid

Clem Lawton

Philip Ober

Philip Ober

Van Cleve

Robert Burton

Robert Burton

Mac Andrews

Robert Adler

Robert Adler

O'Reilly (uncredited)

Richard Alexander

Richard Alexander

Man Outside Courtroom (uncredited)

George Bell

Cowboy (uncredited)

Rudy Bowman

Rudy Bowman

Courtroom Spectator (uncredited)

Paul Bradley

Paul Bradley

Juror (uncredited)

John Breen

Townsman (uncredited)

Arthur Q. Bryan

Arthur Q. Bryan

Bit Part (uncredited)

Roy Bucko

Cowboy (uncredited)

Bob Burrows

Cowboy (uncredited)

Harry Carter

Harry Carter

Prison Guard (uncredited)

Edmund Cobb

Edmund Cobb

Court Clerk (uncredited)

Heinie Conklin

Heinie Conklin

Man in Courtroom Hall (uncredited)

Ben Corbett

Ben Corbett

Trial Spectator (uncredited)

King Donovan

King Donovan

Clerk (uncredited)

Tex Driscoll

Tex Driscoll

Miner (uncredited)

John Epper

Ranger (uncredited)

Franklyn Farnum

Franklyn Farnum

Juror (uncredited)

Art Felix

Trial Spectator (uncredited)

Fritz Ford

Miner (uncredited)

Nacho Galindo

Nacho Galindo

Francisco the Cook (uncredited)

Joe Gilbert

Juror (uncredited)

Robert Grandin

Capitol Clerk (uncredited)

Lars Hensen

Miner (uncredited)

Al Hill

Al Hill

Miner (uncredited)

George Huggins

Miner (uncredited)

Robert Ivers

Robert Ivers

Cowboy Working Cattle (uncredited)

Roy Jenson

Roy Jenson

Bailiff (uncredited)

Jack Kenny

Jack Kenny

Miner (uncredited)

Paul Kruger

Paul Kruger

Bailiff (uncredited)

Ethan Laidlaw

Ethan Laidlaw

Mac Andrews Henchman (uncredited)

Chief Gernonimo Kuth Le

Chief (uncredited)

Marco López

Indian (uncredited)

Jack Low

Minor Role (uncredited)

Anthony Marsh

Miner (uncredited)

Jack Mather

Jack Mather

Prison Gateman (uncredited)

Frank Mills

Frank Mills

Miner (uncredited)

Kansas Moehring

Kansas Moehring

Man in Courtroom Hall (uncredited)

Forbes Murray

Forbes Murray

Lawyer (uncredited)

Artie Ortego

Artie Ortego

Trial Spectator (uncredited)

Steve Raines

Steve Raines

Cowboy (uncredited)

Ford Raymond

Miner (uncredited)

Julian Rivero

Julian Rivero

Manuel (uncredited)

George Robotham

Miner (uncredited)

John Roy

Miner (uncredited)

Frosty Royce

Cowboy (uncredited)

Sam Savitsky

Miner (uncredited)

Clint Sharp

Ranger (uncredited)

Russell Simpson

Russell Simpson

Judge (uncredited)

O.A. Smith

Preacher (uncredited)

George Sowards

George Sowards

Trial Spectator (uncredited)

Norman Stevans

Lawyer (uncredited)

George E. Stone

George E. Stone

Paymaster (uncredited)

James Stone

Stable Owner (uncredited)

Robert Strong

Miner (uncredited)

Bill Wallace

Minor Role (uncredited)

Bob Whitney

Trial Spectator (uncredited)

Crew

Director

Edward Dmytryk

Screenplay

Richard Murphy

Story

Philip Yordan

Reviews

John Chard

John Chard

February 18, 2017

8

Edward Dmytryk Crafts The Western King Lear.

With both it being based on Shakespeare's King Lear and being a Western remake of Joseph L. Mankiewicz's tasty film noir, House of Strangers, Broken Lance had fine sources from which to work from. Throw in to the mixer that it stars Spencer Tracy, Richard Widmark, Katy Jurado, Robert Wagner and Earl Holliman, and that Joseph MacDonald was director Edward Dmytryk's cinematographer of choice, well it's all set up to be a highly accomplished piece.

And it is!

Dmytryk's film tells the story of how the Devereaux family came to implode. Father Matt {Tracy}, is a tough no nonsense pioneer who after finding a copper smelter has polluted his water, illegally raids the copper mine with destructive vengeance. Matt has four sons, his three eldest are a disappointment to him, but his youngest, Joe, from his latest marriage to a Commanche woman {Jurado}, is untainted by his own bitterness. But it's Joe who takes the rap for the copper mine raid and gets sentenced to three years jail. When Joe comes out he finds that his brothers have driven his mother away and all but destroyed the family empire, including his father. Joe {Wagner} has scores to settle, especially with the oldest, and nastiest brother, Ben {Widmark}.

The screenplay comes from Richard Murphy, who, reworked Philip Yordan's House Of Strangers screenplay, bagging Yordan the Best Writing Oscar at the 1955 Academy Awards in the process. And it's not hard to see why. Murphy and Dmytryk have fused together a number of intelligent strands in their picture. Not merely a tale of vengeance that dallies with black sheep of the family like thematics, it also serves up racial prejudice issues, and those of greed and corruption. It's for sure what one would term a talky piece, tho the copper mine raid itself is a pulse raiser, but it's with the talk and how it's put together that makes Broken Lance worthy of its place on any "Adult Western" list. For its court room sequences and a memorable scene involving Tracy and Widmark alone it deserves praise from the genre faithful.

Acting wise there are very few disappointments. Tracy is terrific, as is Widmark, while the youthful Wagner gets away with the obvious problem of him playing a half Indian, by bringing an emotionally honest integrity to the role of Joe. Katy Jurado, who was Oscar nominated for supporting actress, is sweet and showing deft sadness in the thankless role of wife and mother, Señora Devereaux. The itches are with the others, thru no fault of their own really. Both Holliman and Hugh O'Brian as the other two brothers are practically observers in proceedings, both men never really getting to add some weight into the family drama. Jean Peters as Joe's love interest, Barbara, is an important character in the story, yet she's never fully formed. Minor problems aside tho, this is an engrossing and gorgeous picture. So with Leigh Harline's lyrical score complimenting MacDonald's sumptuous Arizona photography {the film was shot in Technicolor CinemaScope and sound mixed in 4-Track Stereo} try and see this on the best system you possibly can, because it's worth it. 8/10

Media

Status:

Released

Original Language:

English

Budget:

$0.00

Revenue:

$0.00

Keywords

prison
sibling relationship
ranch
patriarch
cattle