Film Evaluation: Blood On The Moon (1948)


Style: Western  

Director: Robert Clever  

Working Time: 88 minutes  

Synopsis: Drifting cowboy and knowledgeable gunslinger Jim Garry (Robert Mitchum) is recruited by his outdated buddy Tate Riling (Robert Preston) to hitch a bunch of ranchers defending their territory towards encroachment by cattle-baron John Lufton (Tom Tully). After tangling with Lufton’s daughter Amy (Barbara Bel Geddes), Jim learns he could also be on the mistaken aspect of this battle, and that Riling is conspiring with evil authorities agent Pindalest (Frank Faylen) to take advantage of the ranchers and purchase Lufton’s herd on a budget.

What Works Effectively: It is a moody psychological western, enlivened by bursts of motion however specializing in the gradations of gray between proper and mistaken. Robert Mitchum’s stoic and unflappable persona is ideal for a protagonist bruised by life, establishing an undesirable fame as a gun for rent, however nonetheless able to being the supply of sunshine within the darkness of competing greed. He’s helped by the budding love of Amy, a hard-as-nails cowgirl astute sufficient to see the person hiding behind cynicism. Either side of the normal cattlemen-versus-ranchers battle are sympathetically portrayed, with exploitive profiteers as the true antagonists.

What Does Not Work As Effectively: Given the quick operating time, the plot is sort of too wealthy and over-stocked with characters. One actual romance, one duplicitous romance, one grieving father (Walter Brennan), a few hardened gunslingers, one stampede, and a protracted siege are all by some means wedged into the drama, leaving solely restricted room for reflection.

Key Quote:

Jim: I have been combined up in a whole lot of issues, Tate, however to date, I’ve by no means been employed for my weapons.

Riling: Are you able to afford to be so explicit?

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