Wednesday, August 18, 2021

Western Wednesdays: Buchanan Rides Alone (1958)

     Released on August 6th, 1958, Buchanan Rides Alone is directed by Budd Boetticher and prodcued by Harry Joe Brown. Written by Charles Lang, it is an adaptation of the 1956 novel, The Name's Buchanan by Jonas Ward. In it Randolph Scott plays Tom Buchanan, a gun-for-hire who is embroiled in an internal conflict in the town of Agry, California.

     The fourth of a six film collaboration between Brown, Boetticher and star Randolph Scott, Buchanan Rides Alone was the second written by Charles Lang, however, Boetticher was unsatisfied with Lang's screenplay and asked his regular writer, Burt Kennedy (who had scripted Seven Men from Now and The Tall T), to touch it up a bit. It definitely bears the mark of Kennedy's writing, with witty lines like "This sure is a $10 town." Scott's character here is almost the antithesis of Bart Allison who he played in the previous film, Decision at Sundown (1957).  While Allison was a broken, ragged man, on the edge of sanity, Buchanan is perfectly cool and at ease, seemingly unperturbed by the predicaments he finds himself in throughout the film. 


      The cast are all around excellent. Barry Kelley, Tol Avery Peter Whitney and William Leslie play a group of brothers who have come to rule the town which bears their name through corruption and subterfuge. Avery's Judge Simon Agry is the leader of the bunch, a manipulative  and unscrupulous politician, willing to do whatever it takes to get ahead. Kelley plays his more ruthless and cruel brother, town sheriff Lew Agry while Whitney is the groveling third wheel, Amos, dissatisfied with his lowly position as clerk at the hotel, is constantly scheming to get his piece of the pie. Finally, Leslie is the hot headed younger brother Roy, whose murder sets the plot in motion. Manuel Rojas is the murderer, Juan de la Vega, whose determination to avenge the honor of his sister, raped by Roy, borders on fatalism. Craig Stevens plays the shrewd Abe Carbo, the judge's right hand man and, in many ways, the real brains of the organization. A young L. Q. Jones is the honorable thug, Pecos Hill whose affinity for Buchannan as a fellow west Texan leads to his reform (and eventual demise). Of course Randolph Scott is supremely confident as the unflappable Tom Buchanan, going through the film with the swagger of a matador (the subject was an ongoing obsession of Boetticher who got his big break with Bullfighter and the Lady (1951) and closed out his career with the bullfighting documentary Arruza in 1971).

     Boetticher cited Buchanan Rides Alone as his personal favorite among his collaborations with Scott. It is the lightest in tone and, compared to the other films in the cycle, is a little sparse both with the action and the romance. While the action could almost be said to revolve around women in the other films of the Ranown cycle, the only women in this has fairly minor, inconsequential roles. Cinematographer Lucien Ballard, who was a frequent collaborator with Boetticher and would go on to shoot some of Sam Peckinpah's best films, does some solid work here and is especially adept at blocking, with characters artfully arranged in the foreground and background. 

     Though probably the weakest of the Ranown cycle Buchanan Rides Alone is still a solid western, with a clever script, a terrific cast and sturdy direction from Boetticher.

Score: 8/10


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