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Johnny Guitar (1954)
In Nicholas Ray's off-beat Western and bizarre psychological
film for Republic Pictures, often called a 'lesbian western' (with
major role-reversals) and a visually-excessive melodrama; it was
an astonishing, and unusual one-of-a-kind camp cult classic rife
with political allegory, repressed Freudian themes (guns as phallic
symbols), and gender-confusion; it was also presented as veiled commentary
on the anti-communist McCarthy hearings and the activities of the
House Un-American Activities Committee at the time:
- in the 1800s, gun-crazed drifter and
reformed gunslinger Johnny "Guitar" Logan (Sterling
Hayden) with a guitar strung over his shoulder, after witnessing
a stagecoach robbery along the way, arrived in a small Arizona
cattle town from Albuquerque, NM during a fierce sandstorm; he
entered into Vienna's - a deserted gambling saloon
- the owner of the empty Arizona saloon "with
no customers" was a non-conformist, strong-willed, drag-queen-looking
Vienna (Joan Crawford), who briefly appeared on an upper balcony;
she often wore masculine clothes: a black shirt, a string tie around
her collar, pants, and boots; she was described as very manly by
one of her four employees - her saloonkeeper employee Sam (Robert
Osterloh): "I've never seen a woman who was more a man. She thinks like one, acts
like one. It sometimes makes me feel like I'm not"
Group of Vigilantes in Saloon to Confront Vienna
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John McIvers (Ward Bond)
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Emma Small (Mercedes McCambridge)
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Marshal Williams (Frank Ferguson)
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- Vienna had built her gambling saloon on the outskirts
of town in lucrative anticipation of the transcontinental railroad
coming through with a station nearby
- shortly after Johnny's arrival, news of the robbery
of the stagecoach by a gang of four unidentified masked outlaws was
brought to Vienna's by a group of intolerant
'good guy' vigilantes (composed mostly of cattle ranchers); they
entered the saloon to confront Vienna; the male vigilantes
were led by blood-lusting, mean-spirited, sexually-repressed, bull-dyke
rancher Emma Small (Mercedes McCambridge), who displayed hostility,
vengefulness and animosity toward Vienna's opportunistic casino and
gambling hall
- Emma was upset that her brother Leonard Small (the
President of the town's bank) was killed during the robbery; the
body was laid out as she harshly spoke to Vienna: ("He was
one man who never even looked at you")
- the group, including influential and wealthy cattle
rancher John McIvers (Ward Bond) accused Vienna of collusion with
the suspected gunslinger leader of the gang ("You're one of them")
that had been accused of the robbery, the Dancin' Kid
[Note: the Dancin' Kid often protectively hung out in Vienna's
saloon and was saloon-owner Vienna's occasional former lover]; unproven
accusations were made against Vienna for supporting the gang, and
against the Dancin' Kid for the crime; the
stagecoach driver Jenks (Trevor Bardette) reluctantly admitted
to the town's Marshal Williams (Frank Ferguson) that the sun was
in his eyes and he couldn't definitively identify the gang leader
- part of Emma's hostility and jealousy arose from
her own "twisted" romantic interest in the Dancin' Kid, who wasn't
romantically interested in her, but as Emma recalled: "He was always
eyeing me"; Vienna hinted: "Maybe you don't hate him" [Note:
later in the film, it was hypothesized why Emma loved the outlaw: "He
makes her feel like a woman, and that frightens her"]; Emma
mistakenly postulated: "Now he thinks he can get me," but Vienna
suggested another alternative reason: "Now you think you can get
him....You want the Kid, and you're so ashamed of it, you want
him dead"
- in fact, Emma wanted both the Dancin' Kid and Vienna
dead - and then insulted Vienna: "You're nothing but a railroad
tramp. You're not fit to live among decent people"; Vienna
slowly descended the stairs of her casino with a gun; she spoke
back against the many "determined" individuals in the group
who were opposed to the railroad bringing in "dirt farmers" and "squatters"
who would fence off and subdivide the land (with fence posts and barbed
wire), push out the ranchers, and support her business; she cautioned
the antagonistic intruders against trying to run her out: "We're
here to stay, Mr. McIvers...This was free country when I came. I'm
not giving up a single foot of it...."
Saloon Owner Vienna - Confronting
Vigilantes Led by Rival Rancher Emma Small
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Vienna: "Come and get me, Mr. McIvers"
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Emma: "I'm going to kill you"
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Vienna: "I know, If I don't kill you first"
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- Vienna continued: "Down
there, I sell whiskey and cards. All you can buy up these stairs
is a bullet in the head. Now which do you want?"; Emma and
Vienna stood face-to-face and issued mutual warnings:
Emma: "I'm going to kill you" - Vienna replied:
"I know, if I don't kill you first!"
- when the Dancin' Kid (Scott Brady) entered the
saloon with his three gang members, and Johnny Guitar appeared from
the back room, Johnny defused the tension by asserting his simple
comforts in life: "There's nothing like a good smoke and
a cup of coffee," and then strummed his guitar as the Dancin' Kid unexpectedly grabbed
a surprised Emma for an impromptu dance
- afterwards, the Marshal refused
to believe the Dancin' Kid's claim that his gang, at the time of
the robbery, was mining a secret silver lode, and not breaking
the law; the suspicious McIvers unfairly allowed Vienna only 24 hours
to close up her casino on the outskirts of town and leave: ("I'm
passing a law against gambling and drinking anyplace outside the
town limits. That law goes into effect in 24 hours");
both the Marshal and Vienna disagreed and refused to obey such
an unreasonable and unilateral law: (Vienna: "You
got no call asking us to leave")
- afterwards, Johnny promised to remain in town, back
Vienna up and work for her business - as a guitar player and as
a gunfighter: ("Well, a man's gotta plant roots somewhere. This seems like a nice, quiet
place, friendly too"); the trouble-maker Dancin' Kid was immediately
riled up and became intensely jealous; to back up his gang leader,
Bart Lonergan (Ernest Borgnine) provoked a brawling,
unarmed fist-fight outdoors with Johnny - and lost
- shortly later, Vienna and her
ex-lover Johnny - who had been lovers five years
earlier - spoke about her struggle to build the casino; Vienna
mentioned how being a forthright female establishing and running a
business in the West meant being treated with an unfair double standard: "A
man can lie, steal and even kill, but as long as he hangs onto his
pride, he's still a man. All a woman has to do is slip once - and she's
a tramp. It must be a great comfort to you to be a man"
- an extended 'love scene' throughout the remainder
of the evening occurred between Vienna and Johnny although it was
mostly a relationship of attraction and repulsion; Johnny was obviously
interested in reviving their romance, and hoped she had been waiting
for him; however, Vienna wasn't sure about reviving their relationship
after their earlier break-up: "Did you honestly believe, after
five years, I'd be waiting for you?"; Johnny told how he had
to settle down somewhere: "A man's gotta stop somewhere. This
seems as good a spot as any"
- Vienna recalled: "Five
years ago, I loved a man. He wasn't good, he wasn't bad, but I
loved him. I wanted to marry him, to work with him, to build something
for the future"; Johnny interjected: "They should have lived happily
ever after"; Vienna continued: "They didn't. They broke up. He
couldn't see himself being tied down to a home";
she summarized how she now felt about loving him again: "She
learned not to love anybody again"; he
noted that after five years "there must have been quite a few men
in between," but she claimed there was no chance for them, because
the flames of their romance had burned out
- after returning to their secret mountain
hideout, the Dancin' Kid with his gang wondered who might have
robbed the stagecoach; the gang was ready to move to California
after their silver mine had failed; the only reason for remaining
in the area appeared to be the Kid's feelings for Vienna;
the Kid suggested a self-fulfilling prophecy - that they finance
their trip by actually committing a crime the next day (the local
town's bank robbery) that they could be hanged for
- later that night in the saloon-casino during a continuation
of their conversation, Johnny asked Vienna: "How
many men have you forgotten?"; she responded: "As many
women as you've remembered"; he asked for her to tell him something "nice" by
repeating back each of his loving phrases : "Lie
to me. Tell me all these years you've waited....Tell me you'd have
died if I hadn't come back...Tell me you still love me like I love
you"; when she was forced to comply and mimic
his words (without any emotion or feeling), he briskly and disgustedly
said: "Thanks. Thanks a lot!"
- Vienna smashed Johnny's drink glass, and refused to let Johnny
feel sorry for himself; she recalled how hard she had
struggled on her own to build her saloon, and that life was now very
different; she explained how she had grown much stronger
in the interim: "You think
you had it rough? I didn't find this place. I had to
build it. How do you think I was able to do that?...
I want you to know. For every board, plank and beam in
this place... you're going to listen...You can't shut
me up, Johnny. Not any more. Once I would have crawled
at your feet to be near you. I searched for you in every
man I met"
- Johnny claimed that they could still
be married and end the 'bad dream': "It's just like
it was five years ago. Nothing's happened in between...Not
a thing. You've got nothin' to tell me, cuz it's not real.
Only you and me, that's real. We're havin' a drink at the
bar in the Aurora Hotel. The band is playing, we're celebrating
'cause we're getting married. And after the wedding, we're
getting out of this hotel and we're going away. So laugh,
Vienna, and be happy. It's your wedding day"
- Vienna finally agreed that she had indeed waited for him, and was finally
relieved for his return: "What took you so long?" and
she sobbed in his arms as she kissed him
- the next day, Vienna decided to visit the town's
bank to close her account and withdraw all her
funds to pay off her employees (including Johnny)
and send them away for six months until the town
had cooled off and stopped condemning her; she was
implicated in the town's bank robbery when she
suspiciously happened to be inside the bank during
the heist by the Dancin' Kid's gang, although she
tried to dissuade the Kid from carrying through
on the robbery; the
unarmed Johnny was outside the bank and calmly
watched the theft in progress; he declined to get
involved and told the Kid: "Besides,
I'm a stranger here myself" - a good description
of his own identity
- Emma and her vigilante mob (with McIvers)
again formed a posse to seize both the Dancin' Kid's
gang and Vienna and punish them for the crime; meanwhile,
Johnny promised to remain and defend Vienna who insisted
on staying and fighting (without killing) the mob; however,
Vienna decided to dismiss him for his "gun-crazy" nature
("It was a mistake to send for you, Johnny")
- during the gang's flight on
a trail through a dynamited and blocked mountain pass,
the gang was forced to return to their hideout-lair; the youngest gang member - boyish-faced Turkey
Ralston (Ben Cooper), fell off his horse and later was brought to Vienna who cared for
his injuries in the saloon
Injured Turkey Cared For by Vienna in Saloon
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Classic Image: Vienna Playing the Piano As the Posse
Arrived to Question Her
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Vienna: "I held up no stagecoach, I robbed no bank"
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- the posse confronted Vienna in her closed saloon
(who was playing her piano); when they asked
her to reveal the location of the gang's lair, she refused; she
accused them of breaking into her home and having "angry
faces and evil minds"; she also claimed that she was completely
innocent: ("I held up no stagecoach, I robbed no bank");
however, Turkey was found hiding under one of her tables, belying
her words
- in order to save his own life, Turkey was threatened
by McIvers and Emma to falsely accuse Vienna of complicity in the
Dancin' Kid's bank robbery; after Turkey cooperated and blamed
Vienna, the posse-mob was still prepared to lynch
both Turkey and Vienna, and burn down Vienna's casino-saloon; Turkey
was hanged and Vienna's saloon was burned to the ground, but the
mob was reluctant to hang Vienna, even after Emma had generously
offered a bribe of $100 dollars; in the nick of time,
Johnny Guitar cut Vienna free and rescued her from
the lynch-happy posse of vigilantes led by Emma - the two evaded
capture, hid in the cellar of the burning saloon, and eventually
made it to the Dancin' Kid's secret hideaway cabin the next day
- in the film's show-down challenge and
ending, the posse found its way to the secret cabin through a hidden
waterfall entry; dissension within the gang caused Bart (who had
betrayed the gang) to knife co-gang member Corey in the back; Johnny
retaliated and killed Bart as the posse surrounded the cabin; McIvers
and the others decided to quit firing and let Emma and Vienna shoot
it out alone
- Emma and Vienna faced off with a bloody one-on-one pistol duel
on the outer porch of the cabin; in the midst of their shoot-out, the Dancin' Kid died from a gunshot to
the forehead by Emma as he raced up to the cabin; although Vienna was
wounded in the right upper arm, she shot and killed Emma who tumbled
off the porch and rolled down the hill
The Final Challenge and Face-Off Between
Vienna and Emma
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"I'm comin' up, Vienna"
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"I'm waiting"
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Standoff on the Porch
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The Dancin' Kid Shot in the Forehead by Emma
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Emma Shot and Killed by Vienna
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Survivors: Johnny and Vienna
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- Johnny helped Vienna to walk past the posse,
through the waterfall and away for a new life, as Peggy Lee sang
the title song "Johnny Guitar" with the words: "There
was never a man like my Johnny"
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Gunslinger Johnny Guitar Arriving at Vienna's Arizona
Gambling Saloon
Johnny "Guitar" Logan (Sterling Hayden)
Vienna (Joan Crawford)
The Dancin' Kid (Scott Brady)
Gang Members (l to r): Bart Lonergan (Ernest Borgnine) and Turkey Ralston
(Ben Cooper)
Corey (Royal Dano)
A Revival of Johnny's and Vienna's Romance From 5 Years Earlier
Johnny Outside the Bank During the Gang's Robbery: "I'm a stranger
here myself"
Dancin' Kid Robbing the Bank
Emma Joining Posse-Mob to Pursue the Dancin' Kid's Gang - and Vienna
The Black-Hatted Posse Chasing the Gang
The Shrewd Emma Inciting the Mob-Posse to Violence
Turkey Forced to Condemn Vienna
The Burning of Vienna's Casino
Turkey's Hanging
Emma's Lynch Mob Posse
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