Movie |
Brother-in-law | Self-defense
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7.2/10
IMDbThis is the movie Jim Morrison (lead singer of The Doors) watched on the night he died (July 3, 1971).
This movie was screened on May 31, 2013 at the Rubin Museum of Art in Manhattan, especially to showcase the acting of Robert Mitchum and the way Director Raoul Walsh displayed the influence of Orson Welles with the movie's "crushing angles and looming close-ups." Made after World War II, this movie dramatizes a veteran's return home - after the Spanish-American War - almost fifty years earlier.
Emile Avery's debut.
One of the most obvious Orson Welles influences on Walsh is the scene when the camera tracks Mitchum and Wright as they ride their buggy through town. This is straight out of Welles' The Magnificent Ambersons.
"Jeb: [Narrating] One day I rode up in the butte country... [Approaching the burned out shell of a cabin] Jeb: Came straight to this place just like I'd known the way. There was something in my life that ruined that house. That house was myself. [Entering the charred remains] Jeb: I'd seen it a million times before... the fireplace... the trap door... [Walking outside again] Jeb: Out back there was some cattle bones. All of a sudden I couldn't breathe, and then as I walked around the side, I came upon some unmarked graves. If that house was me, what part of me was buried in those graves?"
"Mrs. Callum: [to Jeb] A person's gotta find his own answers. We're alone... each of us. Each in a different way."