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Blood on the Moon

United States

1948

88 Min
Black and White
1.37:1
English
  • Currently 3.6/5 Stars.
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DIR Robert Wise

EXEC Sid Rogell

PROD Lillie Hayward

SCR Lillie Hayward

DP Nicholas Musuraca

CAST Robert Mitchum, Barbara Bel Geddes, Robert Preston, Walter Brennan, Phyllis Thaxter, Frank Faylen

ED Samuel E. Beetley

MUSIC Roy Webb

Berlinale (Retrospective)

Synopsis

Wise’s critically acclaimed Western predicted by two decades the darkly existential swing the genre would take in the late 1960s. Wise used his Val Lewton sensibilities to create the closest thing to film noir the Western had seen yet: terse, realistic, moody, and moonlit. (Cinematography is by the great noir cameraman Nicholas Musuraca.) Robert Mitchum stars as a taciturn would-be cattleman who wanders into a struggle between homesteaders and ranchers, a battle manipulated by ruthless cattle rustler Robert Preston. Barbara Bel Geddes is the wildcat defender of the range (and not the kitchen kind), who steers cowpoke Mitchum toward his conscience. Mitchum gives one of his better if little known performances, and Wise creates an action film that, like its hero, is deceptively laconic. Memorable scenes include a long chase across snow-covered mountains, and a climactic barroom confrontation that outdoes itself for menacing effect. —BAM/PFA

Director

Original

Robert Wise

One of the most successful directors of the 1960s, when he became an efficient maker of epic-length pictures, Robert Wise is one of Hollywood’s few popularly recognized filmmakers. He joined RKO in the 1930s as a cutter and eventually became one of the studio’s top editors, working in this capacity on classics such as The Devil and Daniel Webster (1941), Citizen Kane (1941), and The Magnificent Ambersons (1942). He became a director with help from producer Val Lewton, who assigned Wise to finish Curse of the Cat People (1944), a B-movie that had fallen behind schedule, and the resulting picture proved extremely haunting and enduring. Wise later directed The Body Snatcher (1945) for Lewton, but after the producer left RKO, he found himself locked into B-movies. His 1948 psychological Western Blood on The Moon, starring Robert Mitchum, and the acclaimed boxing drama The Set-Up (1949) were the only two important pictures that Wise got to do during his last four years at the studio. Wise… read more

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