"Garden of Evil" director Henry Hathaway's western whodunit "5-Card
Stud" (**1/2 out of ****) pits a "hellfire gambler" Dean Martin against
a "gunfire preacher" Robert Mitchum in a frontier tale about lynching,
murder, and revenge. Mind you, deducing the whodunit will pose a minor
challenge to astute audiences. You will spot the actor committing the
crimes long before the film identifies him in its penultimate scene. If
you study the stable strangling scene, the killer's headgear gives him
away. The characters in "True Grit" scenarist Marquerite Roberts'
screenplay based on Ray Gaulden's novel are flat since they neither
change either their their mentality or their morality. Nevertheless,
Roberts boots around an interesting question about "who people were
before they became who they are" which segues with the mystery.
Otherwise, this Hathaway horse opera is sturdy enough, contains a
believable cast and knows how to blend comedy with drama nimbly enough
so that it rarely becomes either heavy-handed or repetitious.
Compared
to Hathaway's other oaters, "5-Card Stud" doesn't top "True Grit,"
"The Sons of Katie Elder," "Garden of Evil," "From Hell to Texas," or
"Rawhide." However, "5-Card Stud" surpasses "Shoot Out" and "Nevada
Smith." Although some critics don't cotton to Maurice Jarre's orchestral
score and denigrated it as "Dr. Zhivago" on the range, I contend it is
superb music and differs from anything that Jerry Goldsmith, Elmer
Bernstein, or Ennio Morricone would have done. Jarre's score enlivens
the action and enhances the atmosphere. The Dean Martin song at the
beginning and end of "5-Card Stud" marks this sagebrusher as a
traditional western As far back in the 1950s, many major westerns
contained a ballad about the story or the hero with lyrics like ". . .
play your poke and he'd leave you broke."
Interestingly, "5-Card
Stud" makes some racial references that chipped away at the usual
barriers. In one scene, Robert Mitchum's gun slinging preacher doesn't
think it inappropriate that a black man be buried among whites,
something that marked this western as a departure from Jim Crow
mentality. John Sturges' "The Magnificent Seven" had broken ground
earlier with a gunfight so that an Indian could be buried in a white
graveyard.
Professional gambler Van Morgan (Dean Martin of
"Sergeants 3") takes a break from a Saturday night poker game while Sig
Ever's son Nick (Roddy McDowell of "Planet of the Apes"), stableman Joe
Hurley (Bill Fletcher of "Hour of the Gun"), Mace Jones (Roy Jenson of
"Big Jake"), storekeeper Fred Carson (Boyd 'Red' Morgan of "Violent
Saturday"), Ever's ranch hand Stoney Burough (George Robotham of "The
Split") continue to play poker with newcomer Frankie Rudd (Jerry Gatlin
of "The Train Robbers") until Nick catches Rudd cheating 'red-handed'
and organizes a lynch party. They take Rudd out to a stream and string
him up from the bridge. Barkeeper George (Yaphet Koto of "Live and Let
Die") warns Morgan and Morgan lights out after Nick and company to
thwart the necktie party. "You don't hang a cheat," Morgan growls, "you
kick him out of town." When Morgan arrives, Frankie is swinging with a
noose around his neck, and Nick clubs Morgan on the back of the head
with his six-gun.
Mama Malone (Ruth Springford of "Vengeance Is
Mine") discovers Morgan strewn on the boardwalk the following morning
and summons George to help the battered gambler to his room. Morgan
decides to pull out of Rincon and try his luck in Denver. Before he
leaves, he rides out to Sig Ever's spread to bid goodbye to Sig's
comely daughter Nora (Katherine Justice of "The Way West") and deck
Nick as repayment for clobbering him at the hanging.
Naturally,
the town marshal (John Anderson of "Young Billy Young") can neither
identify the lynch mob nor the hanged man. Later, participants in the
card game begin to die off one by one. One is wrapped up in barbed
wire, another is hanged in the church, and still another is suffocated
in a barrel of flour. This was pretty radical stuff for 1968. Indeed,
Hathaway and Roberts make each death look different. Eventually, George
visits Morgan in Denver, and Morgan decides to ride back to Rincon.
Two things have changed since Morgan rode out of Rincon. First, the
town has acquired a gun-t0ting pastor who renovates the church and
holds Sunday services. Second, Lilly Langford (Inger Stephens of
"Hang'em High") has opened a barbershop that features a $20 item that
intrigues Morgan when he visits her establishment for the first time.
Lilly and Nora contend for Morgan, while Morgan closes in on the new
preacher Jonathan Rudd.
"5-Card Stud" boasts several good
scenes. The shoot-out in the streets of Rincon when paranoid miners go
berserk because they fear that they may be the next victim of the local
serial killer is well staged. If you slow down your DVD or VHS copy,
you can see Dean Martin lose his Stetson when he grabs hold of an axle
to let a wagon haul him out of harm's way. You can see his headgear
fall off completely and in the next scene is hat is back on his head.
Nevertheless, it is still a neat gunfight with Morgan and Rudd standing
back to back against the opposition. The scene at a windmill where Rudd
hits each of the windmill blades because he was aiming at the spaces
in between the blades is fun, too. George plays a role in the story and
provides his buddy Morgan with a clue to the killer's identity. The
animosity between Nick Evers and Van Morgan is feisty throughout the
action with Nora trying to do her best to dampen it. Van Morgan and
Lilly have some amusing banter. The expository scenes about Nick's
childhood almost make his character marginally sympathetic.
Indeed, "5-Card Stud" is no classic, but it good enough for a rainy day.
CINEMATIC REVELATIONS allows me the luxury of writing, editing and archiving my film and television reviews. Some reviews appeared initially in "The Commercial Dispatch" and "The Planet Weekly" and then later in the comment archives at the Internet Movie Database. IMDB.COM, however, imposes a limit on both the number of words and the number of times that an author may revise their comments. I hope that anybody who peruses these expanded reviews will find them useful.
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Tuesday, March 26, 2024
"5-CARD STUD" (1968) **1/2 OUT OF ****
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