Welcome to MUBI.
Your online cinema. Anytime, anywhere.

Reviews of Johnny Guitar

Displaying all 4 reviews

back to Johnny Guitar

Picture of Benoît

Benoît

12May11

Les quarante premières minutes sont réellement d’un niveau incroyable, avec des faces à faces entre des personnages très tendus et le tout se déroulant uniquement dans le saloon de Vienna. De quoi ravir les fans de western si toute l’oeuvre continue comme ça. Malheureusement non, une fois que certains personnages dévoilent leur réelle personnalité ou la relation qui les liait à d’autres, l’oeuvre perd quelque peu de sa tension et de son fil rouge. Le milieu du film est creux, trop creux, avant de se ressaisir avec la chasse à l’homme organisée par Anna. Il reste aussi un casting impeccable vraiment et une BO soignée. Mise en scène assez banale, offrant toutefois quelques beaux plans.

  • Currently 3.0/5 Stars.
Picture of Brad S.

Brad S.

17Sep10

Johnny Guitar is my favorite Nicholas Ray film for a number of reasons. I love Westerns. I also love strange revisionist Westerns that fuck with the genre. I love the fact that Sterling Hayden is constantly on the verge of self parody and that Mercedes McCambridge has created one of the most bizarre villains of all time. I’ve never loved Joan Crawford, but can’t really picture anyone else in her role.

Then there’s the gender role reversals, which, just works perfectly (and could so easily have backfired.) Finally, Johnny Guitar is a textbook example of how to do political subtext right. Frankly, I find outright politicing in most films boring, but this veiled look at the McCarthy witch hunts makes its point stronger than most other films directly about the subject.

Danny Peary’s essay on Johnny Guitar is one of the best reasons to buy his book, Cult Movies. He lays out this political interpretation (quoting Michael Wilmington) very convincingly. Below is his key passage:

“The characters can be schematized from a purely political angle… The outlaws, who live and work communally, who are blamed for every wrongdoing in town, whose leader is [left handed] become symbolic communists. Johnny, the ex-gun-man, is the ex-communist (now mere entertainers) called before HUAC. Vienna – consort of the outlaws – is a fellow traveler. Emma suggests those vindictive witnesses and politicians who used the investigations to destroy the careers of their hated rivals…” And so on. He goes on to discuss how Vienna wears red once she decides to throw her lot in with the outlaws.

  • Currently 5.0/5 Stars.
Picture of Christopher Smith

Christo​pher Smith

27Aug09

Director Nicholas Ray’s western melodrama is a cut above the usual old-fashioned horse opera due to the psychological depth of its characters and strong performances from Joan Crawford and Sterling Hayden. The themes and subtext explored are years ahead of its time. It gets off to a strong start, and though it isn’t really able to sustain the tension and intensity of the first 20 minutes – at some point it becomes a more conventional western – it’s still a minor classic worth checking out.

  • Currently 3.0/5 Stars.
Picture of moonmaster9000

moonmas​ter9000

3Aug09

Director Nicolas Ray made “Johnny Guitar” at a time when America was least willing to accept it. 1954 marked a high point in the cold war and a low point in artistic and cultural output. Hollywood churned out dancing Fred Astaire’s and swaggering John Wayne’s. A surreal, existentialist drama set in the old west with feminist and anti-McCarthy subtexts didn’t stand a chance in this vapid wasteland.

That’s not to say Johnny Guitar is a political film. On the surface, it’s a dramatic narrative about a town divided between two warring women: Emma Small (played by Mercedes McCambridge), a local cattle baron representing the establishment, and Vienna (played by Joan Crawford), an entrepreneur who builds a casino outside of town and waits for the coming railroad. Johnny Guitar, played by Sterling Hayden, travels from afar to play the guitar in Vienna’s casino. And lastly, the Dancing Kid (Vienna’s occasional flame, suspected bandit, and object of Emma’s desire) directly and indirectly propels the narrative forward.

Despite the old-west setting, it’s not exactly a western. If the revisionist storyline wasn’t enough to turn fickle audiences off, Ray’s slow pacing, surreal settings, and innovative use of color surely doomed this film to commercial failure. It opens with a descent into hell: a lone cowboy, with only a guitar strapped to his back, steers his horse down a mountain past unexplained explosions and a deadly stage-coach robbery, finally arriving in the desolate valley below in the middle of a sand-storm. Suddenly, in the middle of nowhere, he comes across a grand casino, whose cave-like interiors are empty of humans except for black-clad dealers, and silent save a slowly spinning roulette wheel.

Ray constantly toys with our expectations, most effectively through his strong use (and misuse) of color. He introduces the eventual heroes of the story in dark, austere costumes while painting Emma’s gang with a bright pageantry. By the end of the story, the roles reverse; Vienna shines in an angelic white dress, while Emma’s lynch mob menaces in black funeral attire. Throughout the entire film, Ray deliberately suppresses the color blue, further destabilizing the already volatile milieu.

Ray also builds tension through a roundabout narrative arc; in some cases, we never discover exactly what drives these characters to such extremes. Johnny’s devotion and Vienna’s obsession are eventually explained, while Emma’s hysterical blood lust and the Dancing Kid’s self-destructive actions leave us guessing.

The lynch-mob justice and guilt-by-association interrogations (“Just say she’s one of them!”) certainly paralleled the very real McCarthy-led witchhunts of the times. Add to that the obvious feminist subtext and it’s not hard to imagine why American audiences laughed the film into oblivion.

Of course, Ray could only go so far. He worked within the studio system, and ultimately depended on their continued funding for his career. If Nicolas Ray could make this film today, I have no doubt we’d find a thoroughly artistic and startling experience. He would have discarded some of the occasionally hackneyed dialogue from the script as well as the more cartoonish leitmotifs in the score. One for contrast, he probably would have enhanced the few violent points in the film to more effectively release all of the smoldering tension. Also, the simmering sexual undercurrents might have risen to the surface in a less inhibited fashion.

But as much as I’d like to see that version of the film, I’m still just thankful I got to experience this one.

DISCLAIMER: this reviewer takes no responsibility for the frustration you will experience in your attempts to actually find a copy of this film.

CREDIT: Special thanks to my awesome friend and movie buff Ashley H. for burning me an already bootlegged copy of this film!

  • Currently 5.0/5 Stars.