I have just watched John Ford's Two Rode Together for the first time in many years. One of Ford's later Westerns (only The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance and Cheyenne Autumn came after it), it is not one of his best - but even a sub-standard John Ford western is better than most other people's best.
It starred James Stewart and Richard Widmark and follows a similar theme to Ford's own classic The Searchers - rescuing white captives from Indian tribes. Stewart and Widmark are sent by the army to negotiate the release of a number of white captives from the Comanche.
The film is uneven in pace and style lurching from moments of broad comedy provided by Andy Devine's hugely overweight cavalry seargeant to moments of dark intensity as the families of captives react angrily to the young man and woman rescued from the Indians. It is in the darker moments that the film works best as it questions the difference between the Comanche and the whites and asks who is more civilised. As usual Ford portrays the Indians (particularly the men) as savage brutes but does acknowledge the dignity of Indian women and at times the film is a precursor to his much more forcefully pro-Indian Cheyenne Autumn.
The best performances come from Stewart enjoying his amoral role; Linda Cristal as the white girl rescued from the Comanche and Shirley Jones who blames herself for the abduction of her 8-year old brother by the Indians. The biggest disappointments are Widmark who's role is too strait-laced (he is always better when there is a sense of danger and ruthlessness to his character), Woody Strode is wasted as a Comanche despite having a fantastic Mohawk and there is surprisingly little action for a Ford western - only 1 short gunfight and a brawl which is played more for comedy. This is a shame because the film needed a big dramatic set-piece to lift it up higher and make it live longer in the memory.
Two Rode Together isn't a bad movie - it just isn't as good as it could have been. Maybe Ford's best days were behind him by 1961 -only The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance really stands out of the films ahead of him. The film does have 1 fantastic line in it though. Annelle Hayes playing Stewart's lover at the start of the film says to him: "I can read men's minds (pause) - it's not that hard and it doesn't take too long!"
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