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Ruth Roman

 

 

BARRICADE

 

Warner Bros., 1950.  Directed by Peter Godfrey.  Camera:  Carl Guthrie.  With Dane Clark, Ruth Roman, Raymond Massey, Robert Douglas, Morgan Farley.

   
     
   

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This movie seems to have fallen through the cracks, in the sense that, of all the conventional westerns made around that time, this isn't one of them, and nobody seems to have found anything much to say about it.  It's supposedly a remake of "The Sea Wolf," from the same source novel by Jack London.

A fairly evil joker (played by Raymond Massey) runs a gold mine.  Massey is the most dynamic character in the film:  most of the men in his charge are a dim mob, and everybody is flawed in one way or another.

One man comes to town looking like the hero, but he's on the run from prison, not notably moral or likeable, and he gets beaten to a pulp by either the major heel, or the minor ones, on a regular basis throughout the picture.

There's a disgraced former judge who Massey keeps around apparently for personal amusement, who talks of faith and morals, but is a slave to the bottle.

Then we have a well-spoken nosey gent, who also talks a good game but has a bad leg, and is even victimized by the comedy relief (which, by the way, isn't funny, but is one of the more memorably slimy characterizations to turn up in a Western before the spaghetti westerns of a later period).  Even the female love interest is on the run from prison.

Weird movie, due to the unusual perspective in which the most hateful character in the flick is also presented as clearly the most interesting, dynamic, and in some ways, admirable character.

Barricade is probably worth more attention than it's had, for all its flaws, including some weak acting among the featured characters, and some of the more memorably lousy fight scenes in Hollywood history.

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