Universal Home Entertainment's Classic Western Roundup
Vol. 2 DVD box set is of interest mainly for two movies from
director Budd Boetticher: The Man From the Alamo
(1953) and The Cimarron Kid (1952).
Before Boetticher directed his famous series of westerns
starring Randolph Scott, most of them for Columbia Pictures,
he was under contract to Universal, where he churned out nine
not-bad movies over two years. None became a true classic,
but most have appealing casts and are engaging enough;
The Man From the Alamo is one of the two or three
best of the bunch. (The Audie Murphy-starring Cimarron
Kid is a minor film.)
After a brief prologue, the story opens at the Alamo, where a
messenger (Hugh O'Brian) arrives with the bad news that no
reinforcements are to come. A few of the men privately draw
lots to determine who will leave the Alamo to return home and
look after all of these men's families. John Stroud (Glenn Ford)
wins, if that is right word. "Johnny always was unlucky," says
one of his friends. Sure enough, Stroud makes it out, finds his
family and all the other families dead, and is promptly branded
a coward by townspeople for running away from the Alamo
where everyone else died. Only a Mexican boy who worked on
Stroud's land with his father believes him. Stroud, meanwhile,
has discovered the gang of bad guys who killed the families and
sets about infiltrating their organization. Pretty Julie Adams
plays a townswoman, and we know it's only a matter of time
before she comes to believe the truth of the situation. In a
series of fast-moving plot turns, Stroud eventually finds himself
leading a wagon train of women (and a few old men) a la
Westward the Women, as the bad guys close in
fast.
Boetticher's directing of Ford outwitting and out-strategizing the
villains is most impressive and no-nonsense. Ford always was
superb at playing seething, revenge-seeking characters, and
this one's no different. Adding to the fun are some mightily
impressive stunts and horseplay - especially so because they
are shown in uninterrupted takes, proving that they were really
achieved and not just edited together to give the illusion of the
stunt, as in so many movies today.
In his memoir When in Disgrace, Boetticher for the most
part shrugged off this period of his career: "The producers at
Universal, with one shining exception - Aaron Rosenberg - beat
their brains out trying to teach me that motion pictures were not
an art form, but a business venture. Still, I never believed them.
For 104 weeks of the first two years [of my contract], with only
Sundays off, I directed nine major Universal films. Katy Jurado
complained that I was 'making pictures like tortillas,' and she
was correct. I worked with a lot of young actors who,
eventually, became stars, but the only good thing I seem to
remember was the opportunity to become friends with Robert
Ryan, Julie Adams, Sidney Poitier, Glenn Ford and Van Heflin.
They were pros, who believed as I did that every picture
demanded 100% effort."
The Man From the Alamo, which incidentally was
produced by the afore-mentioned Aaron Rosenberg, was one of
the Universal pictures that Boetticher felt stood a bit above the
rest. He was right. It holds up today as an absorbing,
well-acted, satisfying western, clocking in at an equally
satisfying 80 minutes.
In addition to the two Boetticher films, this box set also comes
with The Texans (1938), starring Randolph Scott, and
California (1946), with Ray Milland and Barbara
Stanwyck. Aside from some trailers, no extras.
For more information about Man From the Alamo, visit
Universal Home Entertainment. To order Man
From the Alamo, go to
TCM Shopping.
by Jeremy Arnold
Man From the Alamo - Glenn Ford in MAN FROM THE ALAMO on DVD
by Jeremy Arnold | May 01, 2007
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