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The Big Country (1958)
In William Wyler's spectacular widescreen, beautifully-photographed,
Technicolored Western epic, based upon Donald Hamilton's originally
serialized Saturday
Evening Post magazine novel "Ambush at Blanco Canyon"
that was published in 1958:
- the film opened with a memorable Saul Bass credits
sequence, and Jerome Moross' sweeping and robust thematic score
- the arrival in the cattle town of San Rafael, TX
of transplanted Maryland ex-sea captain James McKay (Gregory Peck)
- a thoughtful, smart, and basically pacifist 'tenderfoot' who
was there to claim his fiancee-bride Patricia Terrill (Carroll
Baker) (an only child, who had met McKay back East when she was
in school); instead, he became caught up in her father's civil
war feud over water rights at an adjoining ranch known as "The
Big Muddy" (where
a vital water source was located) - owned but no longer operated
by the Maragon family
- various other characters were introduced: patriarchal
cattle-baron landowner "The Major" Henry Terrill (Charles Bickford),
his main rancher-rival and reprobate Rufus Hannassey (Oscar-winning
Burl Ives), Terrill's cocky and rough-hewn foreman Steve Leech
(Charlton Heston), Rufus' no-good drunken son Buck (Chuck Connors),
and Patricia's schoolteacher friend Julie Maragon (Jean Simmons)
who had inherited "The Big Muddy" from her grandfather, but no
longer operated the Maragon ranch
- the cumulative scenes of the highly-disciplined
McKay's taming of a wild bronco stallion named "Old Thunder"
- to meet the challenge given to him by Terrill's foreman Steve
Leech
- a confrontational scene occurred
over access rights to water at "The Big Muddy" between Rufus Hannassey
and his rich rival enemy Major Henry Terrill, when Rufus burst
into Terrill's house (during a gala party to celebrate Patricia's
engagement), berated Terrill, and delivered a major ultimatum -
as well as calling him a hypocrite for harrassing his wild clan
of women and children: ("This is a mighty fine house,
Major Terrill: a gentleman's house. Those
are mighty fine clothes you are wearin'. Well, maybe you've got
some of these folks fooled, but you ain't got me fooled, not by
a damn sight! The Hannasseys know and admire a real gentleman when
they see one, and they recognize a high tone skunk when they smell
one. Now, I'm not here complainin' about twenty of your brave men
who beat three of my boys 'til they couldn't stand. Maybe they
had it comin'. Anyways, they're full-growed and can take their
lickin's. And I'm not here complainin' because I know that you're
tryin' to buy the Big Muddy to keep my cows from water. Though
it galls me sore to see the granddaughter of a genuine gentleman
like Glenn Maragon under this roof. I'll tell you why I'm here,
Major Terrill! When you come a-ridin' roughshod over my land scarin'
the kids and the women folks, when you invade my home, like you
was the law or God Almighty, then I say to you, I've seen every
kind of critter God ever made, and I ain't never seen a meaner,
lower, more stinkin', yellow, hyprocrite than you! Now you can
swallow up a lot of folks and make 'em like it, but you ain't swallowin'
me. I'm stuck in your craw, Henry Terrill, and you can't spit me
out! You hear me now! You rode into my place and beat my men for
the last time and I give you warnin'. You set foot in Blanco Canyon
once more and this country's gonna run red with blood 'til there
ain't one of us left! Now I don't hold mine so precious, so if
you want to start, here, start now! What's the matter? Can't you
shoot a man a-facin' ya? I'll make it easy fer ya. Here's my back")
- McKay made private efforts to intervene and bring
peace between the Hannasseys and the McKays by offering to buy
the Maragon ranch land from Julie Maragon (as a wedding present
for Patricia) where "The Big Muddy" was located - to continue to
keep the river free and accessible for both ranchers; Patricia
separated and essentially broke up with McKay by the film's conclusion
due to her disenchantment with his perceived cowardice and peace-making
efforts
- at the end of a marathon pre-dawn, memorable outdoor
fist-fight ("not with horses or guns") without witnesses (sometimes
filmed in long-shot) between non-violent McKay and the dislikeable
Steve Leech, McKay ultimately questioned the futility of their
fight when it ended in a draw: "Tell
me Leech. What did we prove? Huh?"
- the film concluded with Rufus Hannassey's planned
ambush of Major Terrill in Blanco Canyon, by taking Julie Maragon
hostage (not knowing that she had already sold her land to McKay); a
gentlemen's duel (with dueling pistols) was instigated between Hannassey's
hot-headed son Buck and McKay - with Rufus officiating;
Buck fired early (and just grazed McKay's forehead) and was reprimanded
by his father - ending with cowardly Buck's death by his own honorable
father when Buck unfairly stole another man's gun and was about to
kill the unarmed McKay
- Rufus agonized over the death of his own disreputable
son: "I warned you, you dirty little...I told ya! I told ya I'd do it. I
told you, but you wouldn't believe me! Damn your soul, I told you!"
Gun Duel Face-Off Between McKay and Hannassey's
No-Good Son Buck
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- another final stalking and deadly showdown occurred
in Blanco Canyon between the two sole warlord protagonists: Terrill
and Hannassey; it ended with both unyielding men squaring off against
each other and killing each other with rifles - one lying on top
of the other (filmed from a high-angle long shot)
- the ending brought peace after a violent confrontation between
the two families that eliminated the two old-men protagonists; McKay
rode off with Julie to start their new life together
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An Ultimatum Between Hannassey (Burl Ives) and Terrill
(Charles Bickford) Regarding Big Muddy Water Rights
Pre-Dawn Fist-Fight Between James McKay (Gregory Peck)
and Terrill's Foreman Steve Leech (Charlton Heston)
Final Stalking Scene in Blanco Canyon Between Terrill
and Hannassey
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