Meade's Ball
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- #141
The girlfriend has gone on a glitz and glamour holiday to LA and Hawaii for 10 days, so for that time i thought i would take it upon myself, rather sadly in a way, to watch a shitload of films. Only a couple of new releases have my eye this week, including Sing Street, and they'll be gone to in midweek, but the rest of it will be, apart from a Shellac gig on Tuesday, time spent on old films or on just about watchable pap on Kodi. Today was a trip again back into the psychological western season at the BFI, with a doublebill of B-movie 70-minuters from Budd Boetticher, who i cannot say i'd heard of. He'd have a relatively low budget and Randolph Scott at the end of his career, a tad wizened but quietly determined in both films. The first was The Tall T and it had Scott as a lonesome rancher go to collect cherry-flavoured candy for the son of a station master he holds in warm regard. As he returns on the back of a carriage occupied by 2 wealthy newlyweds, he finds the remote station overtaken by 3 true fiends, who've tossed the bodies of the kid and his father into their well! They're held captive, up in the bleak but beautiful stony desert, and of course it's down to Scott to eventually get them free. It's a brutal and lawless environment, and whilst some of the dialogue brought a laugh or two the feel of it all was of an amoral universe where even our hero is tested to keep his ethical resolve. A good one that.
The second one was Ride Lonesome, set for a spell in the same area of the west, with even the same town name mentioned to flee to nearby. This has a little less occasional gaiety to it as Scott is a bounty hunter, capturing his prisoner early on and having to take him across country to claim his reward, whilst the brother of the murderously captured, played by Lee Van Cleef, chases. Also on their tails are some native Americans a little upset over their wish to exchange a horse for the woman that has been rescued by Scott is rejected. Again some of the dialogue brought laughs, it seeming outdated and just odd in how they address women and even friendship - James Coburn delivered the accidentally funniest line - but this merciless journey had some darkly beautiful shots and arresting moments of when justice is delivered. I might check out some more of his films this Boetticher chap.
The second one was Ride Lonesome, set for a spell in the same area of the west, with even the same town name mentioned to flee to nearby. This has a little less occasional gaiety to it as Scott is a bounty hunter, capturing his prisoner early on and having to take him across country to claim his reward, whilst the brother of the murderously captured, played by Lee Van Cleef, chases. Also on their tails are some native Americans a little upset over their wish to exchange a horse for the woman that has been rescued by Scott is rejected. Again some of the dialogue brought laughs, it seeming outdated and just odd in how they address women and even friendship - James Coburn delivered the accidentally funniest line - but this merciless journey had some darkly beautiful shots and arresting moments of when justice is delivered. I might check out some more of his films this Boetticher chap.