The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1962) *****

A mighty cast headed by John Wayne (True Grit, 1969), James Stewart (Shenandoah, 1965), Lee Marvin (The Dirty Dozen, 1967) and Vera Miles (Pyscho, 1960) with support from Edmond O’Brien (Seven Days in May, 1964) Woody Strode (The Professionals, 1966), Strother Martin (Cool Hand Luke, 1967) and Lee Van Cleef (The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, 1967) do justice to John Ford’s tightly-structured hymn to liberty and equality and reflection on the end of the Wild West. So tight is the picture that despite a love triangle there are no love scenes and no verbal protestations of love.

The thematic depth is astonishing: civilization’s erosion of lawlessness, big business vs. ordinary people and a democracy where “people are the boss.” Throw in a villain with a penchant for whipping and a lack of the standard brawls that often marred the director’s work and you have a western that snaps at the heels of Stagecoach (1939), Fort Apache (1948) and The Searchers (1956).

The story is told in flashback after Senator Ransom Stoddard (James Stewart) and wife Hallie (Vera Miles) turn up unexpectedly in the town of Shinbone for the funeral of a nobody, Tom Donovan (John Wayne), so poor the undertaker has filched his boots and gun belt to pay for  the barest of bare coffins. Intrigued by his arrival, newspapermen descend, and Stoddard explains why he has returned.

Now we are in flashback as, arriving on stagecoach, novice lawyer Ransom is attacked, beaten and whipped by outlaw Liberty Valance (Lee Marvin). He is found by horse-trader Donovan (John Wayne) and taken to a local boarding- house-cum-restaurant where Hallie (Vera Miles) tends his wounds. With a young man’s full quotient of principle, Stoddard is astonished to discover that local marshal Link Appleyard (Andy Devine) has ducked out of responsibility for apprehending Valance on the dubious grounds that it is outside his jurisdiction and that Valance has so mean a reputation he has the town scared witless. When Valance turns up, he humiliates Stoddard and only Donovan stands up to him, rescuing an ungrateful Ransom, who detests violence and any threat of it.

Stoddard soon turns principle into action, setting up his shingle in the local newspaper office run by Dutton Peabody (Edmond O’Brien) and on learning that Hallie is illiterate establishing a school for all ages. In the background is politics, but the push for statehood is inhibited by big ranchers who employ Valance to intimidate. Despite his aversion to violence and insistence that due legal process will eliminate the law of the gun, Stoddard practices shooting. When Donovan gives him a lesson and, to point out his unsuitability to confront such a mean character as Valance, covers him in paint, Stoddard floors him with a punch. 

That principle I mentioned has something in common with Rio Bravo (1959) – Howard Hawks’ riposte to High Noon (1952) – in that Stoddard, determined to fight his own battles, refuses to ask for help when targeted by Valance. The inevitable showdown is extraordinary, not least because it takes place at night and Ford, a la Rashomon (1951), tells it twice from different points of view.  

Precisely because it retains focus throughout with no extraneous scenes, as was occasionally John Ford’s wont, the direction is superb. As in The Searchers, to suggest emotional state-of-mind, the director uses imagery relating to doors. This time the humor is not so broad and limited primarily to one incident. Both main male characters suffer reversals, in the case of Stoddard it is physical but in the instance of Donovan it is emotional. Either way, action is character. In the romantic stakes, they are equals, dancing around their true feelings.

Upfront there is one storyline, the upholding of law and order whether against an individual such as Valance or against the attempts of big business to thwart democracy. But underneath is a subtly told romance. Donovan and Stoddard are allies but in terms of Hallie they are rivals. Neither has an ounce of sense when it comes to women. Neither actually protests their love for Hallie. Although Donovan brings her cactus roses and is, unknown to her, building an extension to his house to accommodate what he hopes is his future bride, his idea of romance is to mutter, in patronizing manner, the old saw of “you look pretty when you’re angry.”  He would have been wiser to have taken note of her spunk, because she can more than direct if need be.

Stoddard isn’t much better. Despite her growing feelings towards him being obvious to the audience, he assumes she prefers Donovan. Action drives the love element, the need to save or destroy.

All three principals are superb. This may seem like a typical Wayne performance, a dominant figure, comfortable with a gun and his abilities, but awkward in matters of the heart. But he shows as great depth as in The Searchers and the despair etched on his face at the possibility of losing Hallie eats into his soul. Stewart combines the man-of-the-people he essayed for Frank Capra with some of the toughness he showed in the Anthony Mann series of westerns. Vera Miles tempers genuine anger with tenderness and practicality. Unlike many Ford heroines she is not a trophy wife, but a worker, mostly seen running a kitchen. Lee Marvin cuts a sadistic figure, with an arrogance that sets him above the law, his tongue as sharp as his whip.

As well as Woody Strode, Strother Martin, Edmond O’Brien and Lee Van Cleef, you will spot various members of the John Ford stock company including Andy Devine (Two Rode Together, 1961) as the cowardly gluttonous marshal, John Carradine (Stagecoach), John Qualen (The Searchers) as the restaurant owner and Jeanette Nolan (Two Rode Together) as his wife.

Written by James Warner Bellah (X-15, 1961), Willis Goldbeck (Sergeant Rutledge, 1960) and Dorothy M. Johnson (A Man Called Horse, 1970).

SPOILER ALERT

Despite its five-star status, I am dubious about the famous “print the legend” conclusion and for two reasons. You could subtitle this picture The Good, the Bad and the Politician. In the first place, what Stoddart tells the newspapermen in the flashbacks is in fact a confession. He did not kill Liberty Valance. Donovan did. By this point in his life Stoddart has served two terms as a Senator, three terms as a governor and been the American Ambassador to Britain. And yet his career is based on bare-faced fraud. He took the glory for an action he did not commit. That is a huge scoop in anybody’s book. And I just can’t imagine a newspaperman turning a blind eye to it.

The second element is that Stoddart does not show the slightest sign of remorse. He built his entire career on this violent action, the antithesis of his supposed stance on the process of law.  He takes all the plaudits and fails to acknowledge Donovan, except when it’s too late, and Donovan has died a pauper, his rootless life perhaps engendered as a result of losing Hallie. Hallie’s character, too, is besmirched. She chose Stoddart precisely because he was a man of principle who risked his life to tackle – and kill – Donovan. Those two elements are indistinguishable. Had she known Stoddart had failed and was only saved by the action of Donovan it is questionable whether she would have chosen the lawyer.  

There are a couple of other quibbles, not so much about the picture itself, but about other quibblers, commonly known as critics.  Alfred Hitchcock famously came under fire for the use of back projection, not just in Marnie (1964) but other later films. That spotlight never appeared to be turned on the at-the-time more famous John Ford. The train sequence at the end of the film uses back projection and the ambush at the beginning is so obviously a set.

Don’t let these put you off, however, this is one very fine western indeed.

Unknown's avatar

Author: Brian Hannan

I am a published author of books about film - over a dozen to my name, the latest being "When Women Ruled Hollywood." As the title of the blog suggests, this is a site devoted to movies of the 1960s but since I go to the movies twice a week - an old-fashioned double-bill of my own choosing - I might occasionally slip in a review of a contemporary picture.

7 thoughts on “The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1962) *****”

  1. Brian, I enjoyed reading your good write-up of THE MAN WHO SHOT LIBERTY VALANCE(filmed 1961, released 1962). I first viewed this movie on THE CBS THURSDAY NIGHT MOVIE in 1968. I thought it was a great Western Movie then and I still do. Fact is, it’s my personal second favorite John Ford directed Western following THE SEARCHERS(filmed 1955, released 1956).

    SPOILER ALERT! I think that your two elements of thought concerning being dubious about the famous “print the legend” conclusion are thought provoking and interesting. I think that your thoughts are very relevant today in our times that we live in.

    Valor and valor stolen as well as being informed and misinformed. Although, in this story Tom Doniphon(John Wayne) gives his valor, or as Doniphon calls it “Murder, cold-blooded,” away to Ransom Stoddard(James Stewart), who can’t tell the truth about what really happened because then Doniphon would be put on trial for being a murdering bushwhacker. Stoddard didn’t want to initially build his life on the killing of another man and when he still thought that he had killed Liberty Valance(Lee Marvin) he showed remorse and made up his mind to go home, back East. After Doniphon told him what really happened, he told Stoddard to go back into the Capitol City convention hall and to make History so that Hallie Ericson(Vera Miles) would have something to read about, now that Stoddard had taught her to read. So, we have legendary folklore syncing into the realm of History. Just some thoughts.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Apologies for the late reply. I’ve been on holiday. I can post reviews in advance so it looks like I’m not on holiday. But then when I don’t respond to comments I’m caught out. Thanks for your comments. It’s also my favourite Ford after The Searchers.

      Like

  2. Found this:

    “In early spring 1961, writer Dorothy M. Johnson sold the screen rights to her short story “The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance” to director John Ford. The story originally appeared in the June 1949 issue of Cosmopolitan and was later published in Johnson’s 1953 collection Indian Country, as announced in the 7 Apr 1961 [Great Falls, MT] Great Falls Tribune. At the time, Johnson was known for providing the literary source to The Hanging Tree (1959, see entry) starring Gary Cooper, and several reviews remarked on her status as a woman writer in the male-dominated western genre. On 10 Apr 1961, LAT reported the casting of James Stewart and John Wayne, and noted that James Warner Bellah and Willis Goldbeck had started the screen adaptation of Johnson’s story. Filming was scheduled to begin 5 Sep 1961, as first listed in DV production charts on 4 Aug 1961. Early casting reports in the 29 Apr 1961 LAT announced Carolyn Jones as the leading lady, and an 18 Aug 1961 DV news item stated that a deal was underway to add Tige Andrews, but neither actor remained with the project.       By 14 Sep 1961, filming on the $3.5 million production was underway at the Paramount Studio lot on Marathon Street in Los Angeles, CA, with no plans for location shooting, according to that day’s DV which stated that a large portion of the budget went to covering the salaries of its stars. Ford reportedly described the film as a “close-up type picture.” Although Ford had previously filmed westerns in color, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance was black-and-white. The use of soundstages and black-and-white photography led to speculation that Paramount was working on a tight budget. For the soundtrack, Ford also reused Alfred Newman’s musical theme from a previous film, the 1938 drama Young Mr. Lincoln (see entry).       As mentioned in the 20 Sep 1961 Var, The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance marked Ken Murray’s first feature film in many years. Ford had reportedly been impressed by the comedic actor’s dramatic role on the television series “Death Valley Days” (Syndicated, 1952-1970) and had the part of “Doc Willoughby” written specifically for Murray’s movie comeback. The 22 Sep 1961 DV added Charles Morton to the cast, but he was not credited onscreen and may not have remained in the film. Similarly, the 26 Sep 1961 DV announced the casting of Ed Jauregui, who was also not credited in the final picture. Tom Hennessy’s casting was mentioned in DV on 20 Oct 1961, and Bob Morgan was added on 10 Nov 1961, but their involvement may not have continued.       Filming was still underway as of 23 Oct 1961, when DV announced that assistant director William Poole had been recalled to active duty at Fort Bragg, where he served in the psychological warfare unit. Poole had reportedly been at Paramount since 1938, though much of his work in the casting department was uncredited. He was replaced by Wingate Smith.       The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance made its last appearance on DV production charts on 8 Nov 1961, though final casting announcements were made in the trades through mid-Nov 1961. A titular theme song, composed by Burt Bacharach and Hal David, did not appear in the film. However, it was vastly successful on the radio, remaining on Billboard charts for thirteen weeks and ranking #36 in the list of the best Western songs of all time by the Western Writers of America.       An early preview of The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance was screened at the Paramount Theatre in Los Angeles on 23 Mar 1962, and on the weekend of 24-25 Mar 1962 at the Golden Gate Theatre in San Francisco, CA. The 28 Mar 1962 DV announced that the film was set for wide release in Apr 1962, with actor Lee Marvin supporting events with a promotional tour. The film began playing the at nine theaters nationwide the weekend of 13 Apr 1962, as the 17 Apr 1962 DV reported that the limited engagement grossed $76,180 in three days. Paramount was optimistic by the early returns, noting that a newspaper strike in Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN, and heavy snowfall in Buffalo, NY, prevented audiences from attending. The film opened in Los Angeles on 18 Apr 1962, as stated in the 20 Apr 1962 LAT review, and several weeks later in New York City on 23 May 1962. A NYT review published the next day generally reflected the mixed critical response and cited what was to become the film’s most iconic quote: “When the legend becomes fact, print the legend.”       The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Costume Design. It marked Edith Head’s 21st Oscar nomination.”

    Liked by 1 person

Leave a comment

Discover WordPress

A daily selection of the best content published on WordPress, collected for you by humans who love to read.

The Atavist Magazine

by Brian Hannan

WordPress.com News

The latest news on WordPress.com and the WordPress community.