Dodge City is a
Technicolor Western
film starring
Errol Flynn and
Olivia de Havilland.
Directed
by Hungarian-turned-Hollywood
filmmaker Michael
Curtiz and based on a story by Robert
Buckner, it was filmed in early Technicolor. As a classic western,
Dodge City contains — with the possible exception of an
attack by hostile
Red Indian — all the
stock ingredients and clichés the
genre
has usually been associated with.
It chronicles the rise, after the end of
the Civil War, of the small
frontier post of Dodge City,
Kansas
to civilized and respectable town and trading place
for cattle. In the process, Dodge City
has to get rid of the baddies terrorizing the citizens, and it
takes a new
sheriff and his deputy to clean
up the town and introduce law and order.
Plot
The action of the film starts with Colonel Dodge (
Henry O'Neill) arriving on the first train and
subsequently opening the new
railroad line
that links Dodge City with the rest of the world. A few years
later, Dodge City has turned into the "
longhorn cattle center of the world
and wide-open Babylon of the American frontier, packed with
settlers, thieves and gunmen — the town that knew no ethics but
cash and killing". In particular, it is Jeff Surrett (
Bruce Cabot) and his gang who kill, steal, cheat
and, generally, control life in Dodge City without ever being
brought to justice. As Surrett has installed one of his puppets as
sheriff, the other citizens' hands are tied when it comes to
arresting any of the evildoers.
Dodge's friend Wade Hatton (
Errol
Flynn), a lone
cowboy who was
instrumental in bringing the railroad to Dodge City, is now on his
way to the town leading a trek of settlers from the East coast. At
Hatton's side is his old companion Rusty (
Alan Hale), who is prepared to stay with him
through thick and thin. Among the settlers are beautiful Abbie
Irving (
Olivia de Havilland) and
her irresponsible brother Lee (
William
Lundigan), who, drunk, causes a
stampede (which eventually kills him) and is shot
by Hatton in
self-defense. When the
group arrive in Dodge City, Hatton is confronted with the full
extent of the anarchy which is dictating everyday life there. Asked
by anxious citizens — Abbie's uncle, Dr. Irving (
Henry Travers) among them — to be the new
sheriff, Hatton politely declines, saying he is not cut out for
this kind of job.
Hatton changes his mind when, during a school outing, a young boy
is inadvertently killed by Surrett and his men. The new sheriff and
his deputy — Rusty of course — have a hard time not just fighting
the criminals but also convincing all the farmers who have been
wronged by Surrett that
mob rule ("Come on,
boys, let's take 'em out to the plaza") is out of the question:
When Yancey, one of Surrett's thugs, is in jail, Hatton has to
protect him against the furious men outside who, not caring for
Yancey's right to a fair trial, want to take the law into their own
hands and
lynch him right then and
there.
In the end, Hatton succeeds in both overwhelming and catching the
baddies and winning Abbie's heart. Everything has been prepared for
a quiet family life in newly civilized Dodge City, but Hatton is
asked by Colonel Dodge to clean up Virginia City, Nevada, another
railroad town more dangerous than Dodge City had ever been.
Understanding how much Wade is needed to settle the West, a loving
Abbie heartily suggests she and her new husband join the next wagon
train for their new life together.
Memorable scenes
- The railroad as a symbol of progress: a
race between the Iron Horse and the old stagecoach which has served Dodge City for
decades but whose time is now over
- Rusty attending a meeting of the "Pure Prairie League of Dodge
City", a gathering of elderly women strongly associated with the
temperance movement. (The
organization may have been the source of the name for the 1970s and
80s band of the same name).
- A saloon brawl, triggered by a party of Confederate veterans Dixie") — the North
against the South, a decade after the end of the Civil War. Actress
Ann Sheridan loses the top of her dress while falling off a chair
in the scene.
- The editor of the Dodge City Star, trying to be brave
and publishing an exposé about Surrett and his evil machinations,
being murdered by Yancy — investigative journalism and its
bitter consequences
- A speeding train on fire — the final shoot-out.
- Wade, Abby, and Rusty's daring escape out of the burning box
car.
- Errol Flynn as Wade taking a fall and having a gate bounce off
the back of his head in the newspaper office.
Cast
External links