For Conservative Movie Lovers: John Ford, John Wayne, and ‘They Were Expendable’ Part 4
by Leo Grin
YouTube -- click here to watch in full-screen HD
“Close-ups, affectionate or noble, are held at leisure; long shots are sustained long after their narrative role has been performed. A marginal figure is suddenly dwelt on, lovingly enlarged to fill the center of the screen. Informed with heightened emotion, a single shot, unexpectedly interposed — a ragged line of men marching into nowhere, one of them playing a bugle-call on his harmonica — assumes a deeper significance than is given by its function in the story. This is one of the properties of poetry. They Were Expendable is a heroic poem.” – Lindsay Anderson
The wondrous shots about which Mr. Anderson writes were masterminded by John Ford, but they were brought to life on film by Joseph H. August (1890-1947), one of the great cinematographers of the age. It was August who memorably crafted the hauntingly beautiful images of night-fog and shadows for Ford’s The Informer (1935), which won Oscars for both Best Picture and Best Director. He also lensed now-classic movies like Gunga Din and The Hunchback of Notre Dame (both 1939), and during the war served as a Lieutenant Commander in the U.S. Naval Reserves.
Joe August was a twenty-one-year-old wayward cowpuncher from Colorado when he migrated west to work as a ranch hand at Inceville, the vast silent-era movie studio created by film pioneer Thomas Ince on what is now modern-day Santa Monica. But it wasn’t long before he drifted away from horses and lariats and lost himself in the shiny, futuristic world of cameras, lenses, and light. August’s cinematographic mentor was the director Ray Smallwood (1887-1964), who not only taught him the intricacies of camerawork but impressed upon him the need to become an instinctive artist, one capable of using light and chemicals and film emulsion to emotionally transform a film composition the same way a symphonic conductor can transform a well-known piece of music with different orchestrations and the wave of a baton.
Even something as innocuous and seemingly necessary as a light meter (a handheld instrument that allows you to measure the intensity of light at various points in a composition, so that you can be sure you are not over- or under-exposing — and hence potentially ruining — a shot) was verboten on a Smallwood set. Decades later, and now a veteran cinematographer in his own right, Joe August had not forgotten the hard lessons of his apprenticeship. “I am not against meters by any means,” he said in a 1939 interview. “They just don’t fit into my plan of taking pictures. The meters I lean on are my eyes. When I first started in this business twenty-eight years ago, I had a preceptor I then thought sort of tough because he was insistent on my learning what could be accomplished by a pair of eyes, and a man with scant patience for any devices that aimed to make those organs secondary to any human intervention.”
This sort of approach to cinematography often results in images that are, by strict measurable standards, too dark, too light, too grainy, too blurry — in a word, not perfect in the way we’ve come to expect from Hollywood fare. But in August’s determination, rigid standards of slick perfection were beside the point. He felt that the emotional spectrum of a cinematographer’s image counted as much as the physical, just as a painter hardly feels the need to portray everything with strict photographic realism. “Frequently,” he said, “I choose to make an exposure that — well, we will call it an unorthodox exposure, one aimed to produce a certain effect that may be desirable. For instance, the negative might be overexposed and underdeveloped — or the procedure might be reversed.”
The video I posted above is filled with examples of these “unorthodox exposures”: haggard faces swathed in shadow and smoke, men and planes reduced to silhouettes against dim panoramas of swaying palms and setting suns, two figures dancing together in an almost total darkness which serves to enhance the intimacy of the moment. There were no video screens back then to give guys like August instant feedback on their lighting setups. With every shot they guessed, they experimented, they checked the camera’s film gate for stray hairs. And if they were very skilled and a bit lucky, a few days later the film would come back from the lab with something magical burned into it.
There are two recurring visual motifs in They Were Expendable: the long-shot goodbye and the luminous close-up. Throughout the film we see faces swathed in shadow, almost lovingly, with only their eyes aglow in the gloom, like feral ghosts. The quality of light mirrors the content of their souls, flickering and guttering like fragile candles amidst the harsh winds of war. Water, too, is used to great effect. Fearsome waves and bomb-created geysers batter men as they struggle to keep afloat, their tattered battle flag fluttering madly. At one point, the destruction of John Wayne’s beloved boat casts up a mournful veil of artificial rain that falls down upon him like heavenly tears.
August was in his mid-fifties when he shot Expendable, but he frequently pushed himself to the limits of endurance in his efforts to capture the shots Ford wanted:
When Ford and I did They Were Expendable for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and the United States Navy, the keynote of the picture was realism. We used regular PT Boats manned by Navy crews off the Florida Coast. Equipped with a handheld 35mm Mitchell camera that weighed fourteen pounds, I reverted to old-time photographic technique, shooting the scenes myself. I was cushioned against a slack service belt attached to a boat by two lines as the craft hit speeds of 42 knots, sometimes taking drops of five feet while speeding across the water. For other action shots, I lay on the bow of a PT Boat shooting backward into the vessel. As in Ford’s The Battle of Midway, the camera often shook while photographing real explosions.
It’s interesting that he stresses realism. M-G-M tried forcing Ford to film a silly ending that would have shown MacArthur’s 1945 invasion force triumphantly returning to the Philippines, topped by Wayne’s character finding Donna Reed in a guerrilla hospital and giving her a glorious Hollywood kiss! To Ford’s everlasting credit, he doggedly fought for his original bittersweet denouement until the studio capitulated. The filmmakers were also hampered by the harsh dictates of the Breen Office, which strictly regulated what could and could not be displayed on screen. “In all of the scenes of wounded men and of men taking machine gun slugs,” one December 1944 letter from Breen warned, “restraint should be exercised to avoid any excessive gruesomeness, which might not be acceptable in the finished picture.” Numerous instances of words like “damn,” “hell,” and even “nuts” were ruthlessly excised from the script again and again, despite Ford’s multiple attempts to sneak them past the censors. We must allow for this artistic meddling before thoughtlessly damning our forefathers for the crime of papering over the true horrors of war.
Today we regularly are treated to heads exploding, blood splattering across the lens, and glistening intestines strewn in full color across the widescreen frame, all accompanied by explosions and screams delivered in ear-splitting surround sound. And yet realism is not the be-all, end-all of art, and oftentimes loses more than it gains. Contrary to popular belief, modern audiences needn’t be subjected to raw butchery and carnage for a war movie to have an impact, any more than they demand pornographic portrayals of sex scenes in romantic films. The relatively sanitary images created by Golden Age Hollywood are no different than a Shakespearean stage actor gamely taking a sword-thrust under the armpit and stiffening up in over-dramatic death-throes capable of being seen by the schlubs in the cheap seats. It’s a simplistic, unimaginative mind that routinely sanctifies realism at the expense of poetic impressionism. The next time you are watching an old movie and find yourself snickering at men reacting painfully to non-existent bullets, consider the possibility that it’s a blessing that your nervous system isn’t being overwhelmed with gore, that you are left with enough emotional distance to think and feel, not just recoil.
Like all of Ford’s best films, Expendable is filled to the brim not with visual horror but with what he called his “grace notes” — shots of spare simplicity and honest emotion that, while not absolutely necessary to the plot, served to powerfully convey his deepest feelings and themes. The cutaway we saw in the opening clip of this series — of a boy toasting his elder with a glass of milk — is a Fordian grace note. In the video above, the shot of the two young seamen praying at their friends’ graves is one, too. I would suggest to you that such images, then and now, are far more important to a movie than seeing yet another man’s guts spilling out.
If I had to pick a favorite grace note among the embarrassment of riches to be found in Expendable, I would chose the one that appears toward the very end. It ranks as perhaps the most subtle in Ford’s entire canon, one that comes and goes so fast you sense it more than see it. Throughout the film, Wayne’s impulsive character has been openly seething at having to retreat rather than take the fight to the enemy. Only now, at the end, does he realize that this brashness and anger has been a luxury denied to his commander, who is ever forced to stoically suppress his own agony so that others can draw strength from his leadership. In most modern films (and, to be sure, many older ones as well), Wayne would have had a good cry and made a pretentious speech about how he’s “changed” and “grown” as a human being. Ford, by contrast, has the Duke convey an entire universe of feeling with a single gesture, one so quiet and understated that most viewers miss it entirely:
YouTube -- click here to watch in full-screen HD
One look, one touch. Says It All. Pure visual poetry. That was the genius of men like John Ford and Joseph August. Modern-day Hollywood could learn a lot from their legacy.
Next Saturday in For Conservative Movie Lovers, we delve into the controversial war years of John Wayne, examine the foundations of his irreplaceable acting talent, and learn of the history and significance of a special song featured in They Were Expendable.
Previous posts in the series “John Ford, John Wayne, and They Were Expendable”:
FURTHER READING AND VIEWING
“The Founding Fathers” by Robert S. Birchard: A fine article on the fifteen cameramen who started the American Society of Cinematographers, including They Were Expendable’s Joe August. Includes a picture of August taken during the very early years of Hollywood silents.
Big Hollywood’s own Schizoid Man wrote a great post a few months back about another movie lensed by cinematographer Joe August, Gunga Din (1939). If you missed it the first time, click here to check it out.
About John Ford by Lindsay Anderson: In an earlier post I mentioned that Joseph McBride’s Searching for John Ford is the bible among Ford fans. Well, About John Ford is the bible for Ford critics — simply the best book about Ford’s artistry ever written, or likely to be written. Anderson was a British magazine critic in the 1950s when he first met Ford, and later became a revered director in his own right (it was he who jump-started the career of actor Malcolm McDowell, who credits Anderson with much of his growth as an actor). But I feel Anderson deserves to be primarily remembered for this wonderful volume, wherein he absolutely nails the essentials of John Ford’s genius, his patriotism, and his love of family and country. In the key chapter, “Ford and His Critics: Auteur or Poet?”, he thoroughly dismantles the gaggle of clueless academics and pretentious critics that ever hover around Fordian cinema missing the forest for the trees. In the process, the ostensibly liberal Anderson also mounts the most convincing defense of classical (read: conservative) cinematic styles against post-modernism that I’ve ever read. Anderson’s sole blind spot was The Searchers (he found it a stylistically forced and emotionally bitter film, one at odds with Ford at his best), but even there his arguments are fascinating to ponder.
Illustrated with dozens of rare photographs and screenshots, and including interviews and correspondence with key people who worked with Ford (including They Were Expendable’s Robert Montgomery), About John Ford is all tied together with a relaxed erudition that is sheer poetry to read, an emotionally evocative mirroring of Ford’s films themselves. The praise he heaps on the great director — “such smiles, such tears, such restorative energy” — could just as easily apply to his own marvelous book. I can’t recommend it highly enough to conservatives — a masterwork.






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32 Comments
John Ford is the greatest film director in the history of cinema then, now and in the future. He knew who to use the best talent like Joe August to get the look he was conveying to the audience. No one today can make these types of films the they have hundreds of millions of more dollars, unlimited resources to make films but none of the directors can make one sliver of any of John Ford's films.
Never saw the film, but read the book as a teenager. It made a deep impression.
I finished reading the book last night. I would recommend it to anyone interested in WW 2 history.
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I try to watch this film every veterans day, and I remember for several years it was almost impossible to find. No other war film has been made that carries the impact of this movie. Unfortunately the modern viewer is rarely aware that every man in that squadron knew they were condemned to die, the horrors faced by the prisoners of the Japanese military is not taught to American students (nor Japanese students either) so they have no basis of knowing what these men and women knew to be in their short, agony filled futures.
http://library.thinkquest.org/26074/japanese.htm
I've probably watched this movie 25 or 30 times. Each time I see something new that amazes me in a scene, or as a still picture. Of course all of Ford's pictures were approached as art, rather than CGI enhanced "action". God Bless John Ford and where are his equals today?
Thanks for another fascinating post. I'm guessing you're going to end up with fewer responses after each post on the same subject, just because people will run out of things to say, but that doesn't mean they've stopped reading it.
Hey, it's the original warrior filmmaker hisself! A man who — like Nolte and a couple others — shames the rest of us do-nothing conservative filmmaking wannabes by his very presence. Jack Marino, director of FORGOTTEN HEROES, I salute you.
Everyone needs to head over to http://www.forgottenheroesthemovie.com/ and pick up a copy of Marino's DVD. It's got a B-movie budget but a grade-A heart and soul. And it's even got William "Conan the Barbarian/Red Dawn" Smith, peace be upon him.
Jack, is your boy still in eye-rack? Give us an update.
PKAmmoTroop,
Thanks for the comments. All true, but I would add that one of the modern charms of THEY WERE EXPENDABLE is how it utterly refrains from demonizing the Japanese in that way that so many propagandist war films of the era felt obliged to. (and to be fair, we owe some of that to Joseph Breen as well. In one letter of script changes for the film, he wrote: "please eliminate the word 'yellow' in Ryan's speech, referring to the Japs. It has been agreed that such a word should not be used in this connection, inasmuch as it is highly resented by our Chinese friends, and some others among our allies in the present war.")
Throughout the entire picture we don't see the enemy at all, just long shots of their planes and ships. What we do see Asians in EXPENDABLE, their appearances are given all of the care and distinction with which Ford has gifted the rest of the film. A shocked, frightened lounge singer in a fancy restaurant singing "My Country ’Tis of Thee," wiping away tears, as soldiers stream out after news of the Pearl Harbor attack. An elderly Filipino woman watching her injured husband loaded onto a boat, the smoke and destruction of war curdling behind her in toxic waves. A terrified bar owner forced to waste precious evacuation time keeping his doors open for one last drink before the last ragged troops head off into the jungle never to return. The frequent accusations of racism and jingoism leveled at John Ford by PC lib-crits have never looked so sloppy and stupid as they do in the wake of THEY WERE EXPENDABLE.
JRH,
That question you pose — "Where are his equals today?" — has haunted me for years. But then I look at my own lifelong failure to step up and try to fill that unmanned breach, and I know a part of the answer. Perhaps every generation gets the filmmakers, and thus the films, it deserves. If so, God help us all.
But the first part of turning that around is remembering what was, and what can be again. Ford still has an awful lot to teach us. Whether anyone is left to understand his wisdom, much less recapitulate it for our generation, remains frightfully open to debate.
Mom, is that you?
WOW Leo, I don't know what to say? Thank you for the kind words of support about FORGOTTEN HEROES the film that refuses to die. It's 4-am now and I just got in from a party with the 'republican party animals" it was a incredible night, Your comments are cherished more they you know. I hope and pray that all the readers on Big Hollywood will go to my site and buy the DVD to support the only 35-mm narrative film that honors and pays tribute to our Vietnam Veterans. This was such a pleasant surprise I will be up until the crack of dawn.
My son John Marino III is a specialist and he came home from Iraq in Feb 09. He is now in the reserves and as of this writing he in in Fort Knox Kentucky training for convoy duty in Afghanistan My 22 year old son is a combat infantry veteran with a striker force. When he got out he went into transportation. Whatever he saw over there and experience he wants to go back. When he sees firefights on TV he'll tell me how much he misses that. I remember talking to Vietnam vets in the mid 70s telling me of a rush one gets in combat that you can't quench. He reminds me of how reckless I was at his age. As a Dad I have to allow him to follow his genie as I did mine.
Leo, I would love to talk to you, please feel free to drop me a line at jackmarino@warriorfilmmakers.com
Hi Leo,
Thanks for the post on the great cinematographer Joseph August. I was also impressed by the music as well. Is this part of Herbert Stothart's score or from somewhere else? Could you let us know. Thanks!
I just want to thank you for this series — I discovered Ford this past year while looking into John Wayne's earlier work, and after seeing "Hangman's House" and "The Informer," well, I just am thoroughly immersed in this great man's work. Yes, and "The Long Voyage Home," too, which in many places appears to have been Ford rewriting O'Neill's plays into something really heroic (and rumor has it O'Neill loved it!). And the Cavalry series. Now, this: thank you again for all the references and clips. I have never seen most of this before, and it is so wonderful.
The Greatest Generation never talked about the war. I know it as meme but I wonder if they recognized movies, like "They Were Expendable," doing it for them? You may know your guy did not have the exact experience of John Wayne but he volunteered and went too so when I sit in this darkened movie theater next to him watching, I am Donna Reed? There is nothing more to say. We can talk about the war in the abstract through this movie and he wont have to relive his personal horrors nor my own. He is my hero just like John Wayne, and my neighbor, and in the house on the corner, and the baker, etc. Heroes are everywhere in America so it is natural to see them on the silver screen. No?
There were many movies made prior, during, and after the war that shared and conveyed the agony, boredom, senselessness, righteousness, etc. of WWII all while extolling the virtue of the American soldier. Not like the anti-American and anti-military junk from Hollywood for years now. Plus, back in the golden era, going to the movies were a family outing, date night, and community bonding experience with one new movie a week. Movies now are more a matter of getting your freak on with friends it seems.
Were the movies of yester year a collective experience akin to a psychiatrist's couch for the millions of American's who served WWII in battle or at home? Are the anti-American anti-military Hollywood movies of today in relation to America's blood and treasure to free 50 million muslims in Iraq and Afghanistan contributing to the increase in military suicides and homegrown jihad or treasonous murder like Ft. Hood? Thoughts Big Hollywood contributors?
It's good to see cinematographer Joseph August getting recognition for his fine work.
The 1939 version of The Hunchback of Notre Dame is a marvelous film, deserving far more appreciation than it apparently gets these days. It deserves to be remembered on the level of the best old Hollywood classics, like Casablanca, It's A Wonderful LIfe, and two others from 1939, Gone With the Wind and The Wizard of Oz .
Do yourself a favor and see it.
This is the best blog describing Hollywood and John Ford's rich history that I have viewed. Great job Leo. Anyone know the name of the background music for the Joseph August You Tube piece?
"Are the anti-American anti-military Hollywood movies of today … contributing to the increase in military suicides and homegrown jihad or treasonous murder like Ft. Hood?"
I think they do. Some of them certainly create an atmosphere in which a fanatic might feel justified and safe to do what he does. But even if they have no effect whatsoever, these movies are an insult to every sane American, an insult to my intelligence and really bad art. How bad? 30 years from now, they will be as relevant as "The Trip" or "Beach Blanket Bingo" are today.
"There were no video screens back then to give guys like August instant feedback on their lighting setups."
I remember reading something about the making of "Lawrence of Arabia". They spent over 100 days filming in the Jordanian desert . They didn´t have a lab. Everything was sent to London, but the developed film wasn´t sent back to Jordan. They had to phone to ask how it had turned out. Imagine making a movie that way.
These are what you call Real Actors. The kind of people you would welcome in your front door and be proud to call them friends. As I grew up, they made me smile, caused a tear and reinforced my morals. I miss them. A great piece of film.
Mike,
The music in the video above isn't Stothart — unfortunately, as far as I know his EXPENDABLE score isn't available on CD, bootleg or otherwise. It a cut from the soundtrack of FAREWELL TO THE KING, composed by the late, great Basil Poledouris (1945-2006), a guy who consistently delivered amazing scores even to b-list material (FLESH AND BLOOD, CHERRY 2000, CONAN THE BARBARIAN, THE BLUE LAGOON, ROBOCOP, LONESOME DOVE, QUIGLEY DOWN UNDER, so many others).
bjdeming,
You've succinctly summed up the vibe I want this series to evoke: "I have never seen most of this before, and it is so wonderful." Have fun with your Ford explorations — I envy you your initial viewings of many of those films.
Fefe:
Your questions are things I've thought about for many years. It's far too complicated a subject for easy and pat answers. For instance, today's wars don't have nearly the popular support and approval that WWII enjoyed among Americans. The stakes were clearer then, the sacrifices numerically more daunting, the end goals achieved in only five years.
That era also had a draconian production code put into place by a strong and vital religious movement, one ready to inflict dire consequences on any studio who dared release something blatantly anti-American, anti-military, or anti-religion. Today's ratings board is a joke, the Hollywood version of the UN. Back then, it had teeth.
There was a pro-America blacklist back then — first unspoken, then increasingly official — put into place by monolithic studios that had not yet been forced to sell their theaters and dismantle their cradle-to-grave star systems of grooming and control. These studios were run by iconoclastic businessmen with deep patriotic streaks, who kept a wary eye on their bottom line, and on their product's reputation with the American (not International) public.
TV and the Internet hadn't yet eroded the preeminence of movies and radio, both of which had many millions more customers than today, making them correspondingly more important (and hence more controlled and regulated).
Even with all of these things in place supporting a unified cultural worldview back then, Hollywood was still full of Lefties ever striving to further their toxic causes of socialism and liberal fascism. Sex, drugs, and obscene behavior of every sort was as prevalent then behind-the-scenes as it is now, even among many stars you probably remember fondly as being wholesome exemplars of traits you admire. Ever read the tabloids of yesteryear? Nothing's changed, they were as full of gossip and innuendo as today, just a bit more decorous about it all. The big difference is that stars were tightly controlled by their employers the studios, whereas today they run the asylum.
And, of course, it wasn't just movies that experienced a loosening of standards over the decades. Schools have become pathetic shadows of their former selves, horrendously indecent things now occur right on main street with police standing idly by with arms folded, and key pillars of family and society and civic pride have been dismantled and destroyed. All of these failures to maintain cultural integrity inevitably filter down into movies as well.
Of course movies serve as a psychiatrist's couch, for both their makers and the people who think like them. These days, the people who make the movies (and maintain the Hollywood blacklist) are Lefties, and so the movies cater to their psychological needs. To change this, conservatives are going to have to man-up and fight their way back into Hollywood, tooth and nail, talon and claw, until they once again are represented in numbers. When that happens, you'll see a sea change in the type of movies getting made. Pro-war movies will do battle with anti-war movies in the marketplace, and the public will decide the winner by voting with their dollars. In any such long-term match-up, I like our chances. Modern Hollywood increasingly reminds me of the later years of the USSR — mighty on the outside, rusty and rotten and ideologically bankrupt on the inside.
Terry,
To quickly repeat what I explained in more detail to Mike above: the music in the video is from FAREWELL TO THE KING by Basil Poledouris.
Leo,
This film "THEY WERE EXPENDABLE" is one of my favorite films, from one of my favorite directors. One of the above post about "Where are his equals today?" I could have not said it better! The montage from the film showing the work of the great Joseph August was beautifuly edited. And to use the old phrase " they don not make them like that any more" fits. I have read most of the books on Ford and he may have been a tyrant, but he was a artist with story, and camera. BTW if you can find it, Harry Carey Jr. has a book called "In the Company of Heroes" about Ford and the films he did with him. It is very insightful. Thanks for your great work.
James,
Yes, COMPANY OF HEROES is a great book, probably the one book people should buy if they want to see Ford up close and personal on set.
I do think that the image of Ford as a tyrant is overdone. There's a reason people stuck with him for decades, there's a reason why John Wayne and Ward Bond treated him with the utmost fatherly deference even after their careers had reached the point where they no longer needed him and could have told the Old Man to go to hell. They genuinely loved the guy — for every story of Ford terrorizing them, there were years and years of great movies, card games, drinking binges, military ceremonies, kind behind-the-scenes gestures, family outings, caring advice, and familial camaraderie. He was their father figure, their drill sergeant, their acting coach, their prison warden. They admired his brilliance, his toughness, his touching sentimentality, his incredible sweep of history and drama. He not only made them squirm and cry but he made them laugh and whoop with joy. And at the end of the day they would look up on the screen and realize that he had granted them a sort of immortality — he had mythologized them on film with all of the power and poetry of a Homer.
Another silly meme is that Ford despised Ward Bond, he thought him a dumb ox and terrorized him mercilessly. The truth is Ford and Wayne both adored Bond, he was by far their best friend, and when he died it was the beginning of the end for the both of them, neither were ever the same. All of their teasing was merely an expression of that love, and the only reason it was so relentless if because Bond could take it, he had an adamantine skin and a college-jock personality that let any amount of hazing roll harmlessly off his back and simply reinforce his notions of how handsome and sophisticated and winning he was.
Little anecdotes and incidents (we'll be discussing one regarding THEY WERE EXPENDABLE next Saturday) are too often blown up into monstrous events that are used to color decades-long relationships negatively. Whereas in truth, such things were merely the occasional spats that crop up in loving families. Ford was a tough cookie to work with and be around, no question, and he had a temper and a thin skin and a mean streak. But he had more raw humanity and caring for his fellow man in his pinky finger than most of his critics do in their whole godforsaken souls.
Well said. I forgot to mention that last year for my 50th b-day my wife took us to Monument Valley for a few days. Just to be there where Ford, Wayne, Bond, and the rest of the "Stock Company" work was the greatest thrill of my life. I shot video and put together a montage of the trip intercut with shots from the films that he did there. My young co-workers at the production studio that I manage still do not understand what a artist John Ford was. All they see is shots they say are to long, not enough camera movement, and to many wide shots. Really sad. I saw again, " Where are his equals today?"
James,
If you've got an online link to your Monument Valley montage, let us know. I'd like to see that. A personal trip to Monument Valley has eluded me so far, but one day. . . .
The best of those young co-workers will come around someday. Age has a habit of doing that to you. It usually happens about the same time you begin perceiving that your own generation is no longer the newest, hippest thing on the block, that all the movies, music, and literature you liked as a teen has quietly become a bit rusty around the edges. Once you've accepted that, it opens up the possibility that what your parents and grandparents loved might be similarly worth knowing and appreciating. Add to that the increased sense of nostalgia one gets for one's family as the older members begin dying off, and you have the secret appeal of old movies.
The people who "discover" John Ford come to him with a deep thirst, like parched men crawling out of the desert. They're on a search for "the freshness of the early world," for the power and succor of the untamed American Myth. It's a quest for all the meaning and hope that was burned out of them by a lifetime of post-modernism at school. If they're smart, they begin to really see and understand what Ford is trying to tell them from beyond the grave. And eventually, like a lightning bolt striking — perhaps while they are standing at John Ford Point in Monument Valley! — comes the tearful realization that there's no such thing as "too many wide shots," and the reason Ford kept them on the screen for so long is the same reason a mother gives her soldier son an extra large slice of cake at the "Welcome Home" party.
Part 1
I have a comment about another John Ford movie and hope it's okay to put it here, because that comment has extensions into politics and war and movies.
I don't think conservatives are really going to make a sea change in America until we manage to counter how the Left leveraged their way into power using the American involvement in Viet Nam. To do that, we're going to have to face up to the Vietnam war–hardly an easy thing to do, but it does have the advantage of depersonalizing the "culture war" for us; thus, we don't have to worry about "becoming the enemy." The harder part will be bringing America along with us.
Part 2
We have to respectfully and completely turn away from The Wall and start looking with the same absorption and depth at the battlefield in Viet Nam. The Left can't do that, because they ran from it in the Sixties and Seventies (when they got the rest of the country to run from it, too). We *can* do that, if we want to; and in addition, there now is a demographic in America who, regardless of its politics, will come with us: the Vietnamese-Americans. Thus the greater movement can also begin now.
Where to start, though?
In World War II, of course, or rather, right after it.
After World War II, Ford made "She Wore A Yellow Ribbon," which IMO is a top contender (among a few) for this genius's masterpiece, but in the present context it is mentioned because it defines several military ideals. Well, a lot of that all went smash in the Vietnam War, or so it seemed. Actually, I was reminded of "Ribbon" when thinking about something in "We Were Soldiers Once…And Young."
Part 3 (final)
Sam Elliott has this piece of business where a young, idealistic officer keeps wishing him a good day when they meet on the base, and Elliott viciously lashes out at him; then, in the midst of the battle in the Ia Drang, Elliott tells the officer that *this* is what it means for a soldier to have a "good day." The officer then cries, having realized a hard truth about his profession. None of this is 'pretty' the way "Ribbon" is 'pretty' about the military it idealizes, but the raw honesty about a basic fact of military life is still there, for Gibson idealizes the military in his own, lesser way just as Ford did.
Something in that particular point is the leverage *we* can use. I can't articulate it just yet, but I can see it and wanted to pass it along for anyone else who might also be able to see it but be better able to take it and run with it.
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