This past Tuesday (September 20), Olive Films officially introduced its “Olive Signature” series on Blu-ray and DVD. “Highlighting cult favorites, time-honored classics, and under-appreciated gems,” the company states in a press release, “each Olive Signature edition boasts a pristine audio and video transfer, newly designed cover art, and an abundance of exciting bonus material.” (Think of it as a second Criterion for the classic movie fan.)
The inaugural Olive Signature release is High Noon (1952), the Oscar-winning
Western (including a second Best Actor trophy for star Gary Cooper and Best
Original Song for High Noon [Do Not
Forsake Me, Oh My Darlin’]) that
has been a longtime favorite here at Thrilling
Days of Yesteryear (Noon was my
contribution to The Chaney Blogathon back
in 2013, celebrating the cinematic achievements of Lon, Sr. and Lon, Jr.). Why, I hear you ask? (At least…I hope that’s you, and not the little
voices returning to cavort inside my head…)
Well, I’ve long had an affinity for those oaters that turn what is an
admittedly conservative film genre (rugged individualism, strict adherence to a
strong moral code, etc.) on its head with a bit of subversive tongue-in-cheek. Carl Foreman, who penned Noon’s screenplay, never made any bones about the fact that the
movie served as an allegory about Hollywood and the motion picture industry
(Foreman would later fall victim to the blacklist) and the result so
infuriated director Howard Hawks that he purportedly made Rio Bravo (1959) in response to Fred Zinnemann’s film. (Bravo’s
star, John Wayne, stated in his infamous 1971 interview with Playboy that Noon was “the most un-American thing I’ve ever seen in my whole
life.”)
You know the story by heart: on the day of his wedding to
Quaker Amy Fowler (Grace Kelly), ex-Hadleyville marshal Will Kane (Cooper)
receives word that convict Frank Miller (Ian MacDonald) has been paroled and is
headed his way…and he’s not bringing a fondue set. No, Will sent Miller up on a murder charge
five years earlier, but apparently Frank has slipped through the cracks of the
justice system and is returning to Hadleyville to settle the score.
As his gang (Sheb Wooley, Lee Van Cleef, Robert J. Wilke)
wait at the depot for the train to arrive at noon, Will attempts to round up a
posse to help him take care of Miller upon his return. Kane doesn’t have to do this—and he’s told that by several townspeople,
including judge Percy Mettrick (Otto Kruger), who’s already high-tailing it out
of town, and mayor Jonas Henderson (Thomas Mitchell). But Will Kane is a man bound by his sense of
duty…and besides, what’s the point of running away? Miller has all the time in the world to track
him down in whatever town he and Mrs. Kane decide to settle. Deputy Harvey Pell (Lloyd Bridges) is of no use—he’s
upset that Kane didn’t recommend him for Will’s job—and one by one, the
townspeople reveal their true colors: they’re either deathly afraid of Miller
(and more than a few are worried that the confrontation will give the town a
bad name) or welcoming him back (many Hadleyville businesses enjoyed having
Frank and Company around—it was good for the economy).
The underlying plot of High
Noon—there’s a psychotic killer headed for town and its inhabitants can’t
or won’t do anything to stop him—has been one that has fascinated me since the
first time I sat down and watched the movie with my father. (I’ve logged any number of visits with the
movie since.) No one expresses this
inaction in the film better than the character of Martin Howe (Lon Chaney, Jr.),
the man who was marshal of Hadleyville before Will, and who recommended him for
the job. Howe wants nothing more to help
Will in his time of crisis, but reasons that Will would be so worried about
protecting him in the fight (Howe’s lawman career has left him with “busted
knuckles” and arthritis) that Will would wind up getting killed. As for the rest of the town? “It’s all happenin’ too sudden,” observes
Martin. “People gotta talk themselves
into law and order before they do anything about it. Maybe
because down deep…they don’t care…they
just don’t care.” It’s a powerful
political message that is still frighteningly relevant today.
The Olive Signature transfer of High Noon (mastered from a new 4K restoration) looks razor-sharp
and positively pristine—it’s the best I’ve seen this film looking in
years. The bonus materials are abundant
and most entertaining; I never noticed that cinematographer Floyd Crosby paid
homage to a shot of a swinging clock pendulum from Noon in his later work on Roger Corman’s Pit and the Pendulum (1961)—a feature with a considerably larger pendulum—until film editor Mark
Goldblatt (The Terminator) pointed
it out in “The Ticking Clock.” “Oscars
and Ulcers: The Production History of High Noon” is a nice overall look at the
making of the film narrated by Anton Yelchin, and I particularly enjoyed “Imitation
of Life: The Blacklist History of High
Noon,” which features historian Larry Ceplair and Walter Bernstein, the
blacklisted scribe who wrote one of my favorite films on the subject, The Front (1976).
I’ll admit a little bias and confess that my favorite
feature on the Noon Signature
Blu-ray is “A Stanley Kramer Production,” because my good friend (and Facebook
amigo) Michael Schlesinger holds forth on the career of the
producer-director. Because I was
watching this with my mother, I said to her: “Mike is going to proclaim It’s a Mad Mad Mad Mad World the greatest movie of all time at some point
during this.” (He did not disappoint.) There's also an accompanying original essay, "Uncitizened Kane," contributed by Sight and Sound editor Nick James.
Something else that will not disappoint: a purchase of this
Blu-ray for your classic film library. I
know it’s been released several times before, but the transfer in this edition
is worth the price of admission; it’s that breathtakingly beautiful. Tomorrow in this space: I’ll look at the
other Olive Signature release from this week—and not coincidentally, another one of my very favorite Westerns.
Many thanks to Bradley Powell at Olive Films for providing Thrilling Days of Yesteryear with the High Noon screener.
Many thanks to Bradley Powell at Olive Films for providing Thrilling Days of Yesteryear with the High Noon screener.
3 comments:
A great film that I did not appreciate until I watched it and then wrote about it a few years ago. Interesting enough both liberals and conservatives has used it as political fodder interpretating it in various ways.
John mused:
Interesting enough both liberals and conservatives has used it as political fodder interpretating it in various ways.
I must reluctantly confess my view of High Noon veers toward the former, in so much as I first read about the film in that great book by Peter Biskind, Seeing Is Believing: How Hollywood Taught Us to Stop Worrying and Love the Fifties.
My late dad saw High Noon in the 50s while stationed in Germany (Canadian Army). He was broke and had to walk the long walk to the cheap seats in front. He loved the movie. He passed it on to his daughters in his ongoing classic movie legacy. Recently, I finally shared it with my daughter Janet. What impressed her most on this viewing, you ask? The character of Helen Ramirez stood out for her as atypical in the era. She (Janet) will be visiting that movie again.
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