August 7, 2021

"Most filmgoers under the age of sixty are puzzled by the scene in Mel Brooks’ Blazing Saddles in which Black Bart attempts to persuade the craven townspeople of Rock Ridge..."

"... to stand up to the evil Hedley Lamarr by telling them, 'You’d do it for Randolph Scott.' To this they respond in unison, 'Randolph Scott!' then doff their hats reverently—an accurate indication of how closely identified Scott was with the Western genre. He always played the same character, a lanky, dryly amusing cowboy with a Virginia accent who spoke only when spoken to and shot only when shot at, and you could take it for granted that he’d do the right thing in any given situation. If he’d been younger and prettier, he would have been too good to be true, but Scott was no dresser’s dummy: he had a thin-lipped mouth and a hawk-like profile, and wasn’t afraid to act his age on screen. Nobody in Hollywood, not even John Wayne, looked more believable in a Stetson."

I'm reading "What Randolph Scott Knew/It was in a string of westerns late in his career that the actor came to embody an ethic that was the essence of the genre" — a Terry Teachout essay published in American Cowboy in 2005. 

 

I'm reading the old Teachout essay because — as I mentioned a couple days ago — Meade and I are watching that "string of westerns" — the "Ranown Westerns" at my favorite streaming service, The Criterion Channel. These are all directed by Budd Boetticher and written — or in the case of "Decision at Sundown," doctored — by Burt Kennedy.

These are low-budget films that are short — about 70 minutes — and — except for "Decision at Sundown" — shot almost entirely — or in the case of "Ride Lonesome," entirely — outdoors amongst the rock formations of Lone Pine, California. The plots are alike. As Teachout puts it:

More often than not, Scott plays the part of a solitary, vengeful drifter who is searching for a man has wronged him, usually by murdering his wife. In the course of his travels, he meets an unhappily married woman, to whom he is powerfully and illicitly attracted, and a villain who is charming and courageous—a hero gone bad, in other words. The villain proves to be looking for the same man as Scott, but their interests are in conflict, forcing them into a climactic showdown.

The bad guys get the best lines, as Scott is endlessly, entertainingly laconic. There's...

... Lee Marvin in Seven Men from Now, Richard Boone in The Tall T, Pernell Roberts in Ride Lonesome, Claude Akins in Comanche Station—and it is Roberts, not Scott, who gets the line that could stand as the motto of all six films, “There are some things a man just can’t ride around.”

26 comments:

Wilbur said...

"whatever Happened to Randolph Scott", an otherwise insipid effort by The Statler Brothers, notable for its listing of many old Western stars: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h30MPb62eXE

It seems to me Gary Cooper played his roles the same as you described Randolph Scott: laconic and upright.

Unknown said...

One of the surgeons at the Endo practice I use is a very black man named Randolph Scott. He told me people ask him about Blazing Saddles and the other Randolph Scott all the time. I was amused.

Lloyd W. Robertson said...

I don't know the Ranown westerns. I have seen Scott's last film, "Ride the High Country," more than once. Lots to enjoy there, including some
quotes.

The great and even not-so-great Westerns are somehow always political. Recently the left has attacked them. I've seen a John Wayne movie with a campus crowd which kept booing and hissing (especially women) at Wayne. Is there a glorification of the process of "settling," taking the land from the indigenous people? Yes. An assumption that civilization deserves to win over something less advanced, and if civilization has some toughness, it will win? Yes.

With my political philosophy background, I see Locke: in a very competitive and violent world, truly good and admirable men and women can rise to positions of some responsibility--but again, they have to be tough. Locke agrees with Hobbes that it is rational to get out of the state of nature and accept a government (majority rule, legislature, constitution and laws), but he spends time suggesting the lawless times are precisely when things are clear, and great men (and women) can rise to the challenge. The American Revolution arguably began as a rebellion by smugglers who didn't really want to pay taxes to anyone, but it was entirely taken over by great statesmen including, yes, some slave owners. Lots to think about, a rich national conversation and art form, very American, and the woke basically say "stop, it hurts too much."

Temujin said...

I hadn't read through your posts yet and was about to comment on the post below about the Black man and his son arrested with their real estate agent for viewing a house. I was going to say it sounded like something out of a 'Blazing Saddles' script it sounded so ridiculous. (I did not end up writing that.)

And here is 'Blazing Saddles' making an appearance. I recently watched 'Blazing Saddles' again, uncut, for the first time in two decades. It was still great. A gem. And a film I think every college student should be made to sit through, using the "Ludovico Technique"much like Alex in 'A Clockwork Orange'. It would be enlightening.



Ann Althouse said...

""Whatever Happened to Randolph Scott""

Yeah, I ran across that yesterday. It's about as square as you can get. Is there any singing group less sexy than the Statler Brothers?

Ann Althouse said...

"I have seen Scott's last film, "Ride the High Country," more than once."

Yes, we plan to watch that. It is Scott's last film and the second film directed by Sam Peckinpah.

Ann Althouse said...

Here's a 9-minute montage of the best of Pernell Roberts in "Ride Lonesome." It gives away just about everything, but completely conveys what's compelling about these movies — the importance of the other guy, the guy that is not Randolph Scott, and of the woman.

There's also another man. He's mostly there to listen to Pernell Roberts, but look closely, and you'll see it's James Coburn. His first movie. I was going to say he's just a kid there, because that's what he looks like, but he was at least 30.

MikeD said...

As a Saturday Morning Matinee addict in the late 40's Randolph Scott was second only to Roy Rogers in my pantheon of heroes.

Wilbur said...

James Coburn was good, too. Memorable with very few lines in "The Magnificent 7", you noticed and remembered when he talked.

Tall and laconic is a good formula for Westerns, Ah reckon. Tries to avoid trouble, but it's thrust upon him. Often avenging a wrong, sometimes preventing one.

So many revenge Westerns - it brings to mind "Nevada Smith", a particularly violent movie for it's time (1966), a Steve McQueen vehicle as a so-called "halfbreed" who hunts down finds the men who attempted to rob and then tortured his parents to death.

John henry said...

The link to the what randolf Scott Knew doesn't work for me.

Did Scott ever play a sheep herder or was he always a cowboy?

John Henry

Mal said...

Well, if you're already subscribed to the glorious Criterion Channel, I recommend the beautiful and touching film "Yi Yi"

https://www.criterionchannel.com/yi-yi

Not a western, but a wonderful break from the west.

Ann Althouse said...

"The link to the what randolf Scott Knew doesn't work for me."

Thanks. I'd screwed it up. Fixed now.

loudogblog said...

My dad, who is almost 90, mostly watches westerns on TV. Back in the 1960s, westerns were the most popular dramas on network TV. Gunsmoke, Have Gun Will Travel, The Rifleman, Rawhide, The Virginian, ect, ect. When Gene Roddenberry did Star Trek, he promised the CBS executives a "Wagon Train" to the stars and a lot of the CBS executives were unhappy that he gave them Star Trek and not Wagon Train. (And Gene Roddenberry knew westerns; he was one of the writers for Have Gun Will Travel. Ironically, Battlestar Galactia was actually a sci-fi wagon train show.) The thing about westerns is that they have simple, but important themes. The most common one is the struggle between good and evil, and that usually pairs with the theme of how difficult it sometimes is for people to choose to do the right thing. That still resonates with people and explains the spontaneous popularity of the sci-fi series, Firefly, almost 20 years ago.

tcrosse said...

Back in the day, until about 1944, Randolph Scott and Cary Grant shared a beach house at Malibu, widely known as Bachelor Hall. They were close friends the rest of their lives.

Paul Snively said...

Speaking of madcap comedies of yore and westerns, I had recently read online about the last Cannonball Run winner, and that reminded me of "Cannonball Run," which I would have sworn came out in the 1970s, but was produced in 1980. It's billed as an "action/comedy," and I wouldn't say it actually has much of either by today's standards. But a few things did strike me, one of which ties into this thread:

1. Roger Moore playing a Jewish British actor playing the Roger Moore character. Sir Roger plays playing himself up as a self-absorbed international movie star pitch-perfectly—so well I now intend to look for him in other comedic roles. I also greatly respect that, on my James Bond box set, only Sir Roger sat in for commentaries on every film he was in.

2. The essential sweetness of Dom DeLuise and Farrah Fawcett is unmistakable.

3. Yes, Farrah Fawcett really was that impossibly beautiful.

4. But who really caught my eye was "Dr. Van Helsing," the doctor of questionable ethics and sobriety Burt Reynolds' and Dom DeLuise's characters bribe into lending "legitimacy" to the ambulance they're racing across the country in. His facility with his expressions, his just-slightly-off drunken delivery, his tightrope-walk between medical mastery and creepiness are all brilliant. And I had no idea who he was. Turns out it's Jack Elam, who had a long and illustrious career, often in westerns such as "Once Upon a Time in the West" and "High Noon," as well as TV's "Gunsmoke." I feel like a kid who only knew Leslie Nielsen as Lt. Frank Drebbin of the "Naked Gun" movies, and never saw any of his well-delivered dramatic performances.

Anyway, if you're at all concerned about how our recently-censorious culture thinks of "Blazing Saddles," quickly see "Cannonball Run" before they get to it, too. It's a very schlocky, not-quite-innocent love letter to the American love of driving across the country for no discernible reason.

rcocean said...

I love those late 50s and early 60s movies with Randolph Scott. However, the crack about John wayne is somewhat ironic given that Wayne was slated to do "Seven Men from Now" and gave the role to Scott. The Tall T and Buchanan rides alone don't have similar plots but the other 3 Boetticher westerns do Comanche Station, Seven Men from Now, and Ride Lonesome all have charismatic villians (Pernell, Akins,and Lee Marvin) and Scott as the tight lipped avenger. Typical Scott Dialogue:

Now you listen to me, Mrs. Mims. Your husband married you for money. You know it, and I know it. But you're alive, and he's dead, and that makes a difference.

You can cry and moon about being a fool until they shoot us tomorrow, or you can start thinkin' about savin' your skin, but I'll tell you this - It'll take both of us working together to stay alive.


My favorite is Seven men from now because Gail Russell and Lee Marvin are so good in the supporting roles.

rcocean said...

The westerns are "poltical" only because the Left makes everything political.

gilbar said...

Our beloved Professor Althouse asked...
> Is there any singing group less sexy than the Statler Brothers?

Why, yes; Yes there IS! The Roches

Walter said...

I’m a huge fan of the area of the eastern Sierra surrounding US 395. If you get a chance, I would suggest the self guided tour sponsored by the Lone Pine Chamber of Commerce:

https://www.lonepinechamber.org/wp-content/uploads/pdfs/movie_road_tour_brochure.pdf

Sadly, my family has no western movie fans, but part of galaxy quest was filmed there, so our visit was still edifying.

gpm said...

Wilbur beat me by a mile to the Statler Brothers song from 1973 or 1974, which I knew from the past, so I'll shift gears to Someone to Watch over Me:

Although he [might] not [have been] the man some
Girls think of as handsome

Scott was fairly tall (6'2") and had a pretty impressive physique in his younger days. That point is perhaps most evident from his appearance in My Favorite Wife from the early 40s, where he played a guy who was stranded on a desert isle for seven years with Cary Grant's missing wife, played by Irene Dunne. After they're finally rescued, Irene hires a schlubby, nerdy nebbish to play the role to allay any suspicions on Cary's part. Cary finds out, however, and takes Irene to lunch at the hotel where Scott is staying. Scott proceeds to perform some gymnastic moves on a trapeze high over the swimming pool before he swims over and, as "Adam," greets Irene as "Eve," the nicknames they supposedly used on the island.

Chuck Connors played the Scott role in the early 60's remake Move over Darling, starring Doris Day and James Garner (with Don Knotts as the nebbish). The remake was originally supposed to star Dean Martin and Marilyn Monroe (with Wally Cox as the nebbish) under the title Something's Got to Give, until the studio got fed up with Marilyn's delinquencies and fired her. I was not aware until I saw a documentary on PBS some years ago that they had actually completed a good portion of the footage (about half or more), with Marily appearing spectacular in the footage. According to the IMDB writeup of the documentary (OK, I had to look some of this stuff up, though I was aware of the basics), the studio had given in to Dean Martin's demand and agreed to rehire Marilyn a couple of days before her death.

Scott lived with Grant off and on for about ten years back in the 30s and 40s.

A bit long, but a lot to cover.

--gpm

Leora said...

I always think of Randolph Scott as Cary Grant's roommate. "My Favorite Wife" is the only title of his movies that I can easily recall.

rcocean said...

Randolph Scott and Grant were considered "health nuts" in their day. they watched what they ate, worked out, and either didn't drink or did so in moderation. As a result they lived to ripe old age while their fellow leading men died quite early. Gable and Cooper at age 60 or so. Bogart at 57, Flynn at 50, Tracy at 67 after years with a bad heart. The mortality of Hollywood leading men in the 30s and 40s - as a group - wasn't too good.

MountainMan said...

"Scott was fairly tall (6'2") and had a pretty impressive physique in his younger days"

After service in WW1 in France, Scott came home and enrolled at Georgia Tech to play football for John Heisman. He had the makings of an All-American but a back injury ended his career. He returned home to NC and after dropping out of UNC worked for a while at the textile company were his father was employed. Bored, he later decided to move to LA and try to get into acting.

Earth2PowerGirl said...

Terry Teachout once openly suggested to me that my brother in law is a child molester by virtue of his being being a Catholic priest. I'm really not up for hearing anything Terry Teachout has to say.

gadfly said...

From Randolph Scott's highest-rated western movie, "7 Men from Now" (released in 1956) comes this B-movie dialog about "riding around."

Jed: [John Phillips]: You must've rode a long way.
Ben Stride: [Randolph Scott] I walked.
Jed: Ain't you got no horse?
Ben Stride: Did have. Chiricahua jumped me about ten mile back.
Jed: They stole 'em?
Ben Stride: They ate him.

Us old folks will never forget the pre-pub days when ten-cent western movie Saturday matinees dominated social gatherings and how we carried in snacks to avoid the high cost of nickel candy and dime popcorn in order to make it through both showings of the matinee. There were unending previews and cartoons and shorts but the really big attraction was the feature film which most of the time would be a western with characters names like Lash Larue, Whip Wilson, Sunset Carson, Hopalong Cassidy, Red Rider, The Cisco Kid, The Durango Kid, The Lone Ranger, Wild Bill Elliott, and the singing cowboys, Gene Autry and Roy Rogers. Sometimes there was a Zane-Gray-based western starring Randolph Scott.

Don B. said...

"Some things a man can't ride around" says Scott at 1:17 of The Tall T.