Plot Synopsis (continued)
The
wagon train is soon surrounded by a large band of about one hundred
yelling Indians. [This Indian attack upon the settlers is visible,
unlike the earlier unseen attack that killed Fen's wagon train.] "Saving
a bunch of gamblers and women" means pulling all the cowhands
off the drive and leaving the cows to drift aimlessly through the
sagebrush. Matt and three other men ride into the perimeter of the
circled wagons to join the besieged travelers. During the Indian
attack, Matt strikes up an acquaintance with one of the members of
the train - Tess Millay (Joanne Dru in her second film), a pretty
woman who isn't a prostitute, who is courageously shooting at Indian
targets circling the wagons. [Her predicament mirrors the one that
Fen faced when she lost her life.] While he helps defend the wagon
train, she asks: "What are you so mad about? I asked you why
you're angry. Is it because - because some of your men might get
hurt, killed maybe?" Mid-sentence, she is struck by an arrow
in the right shoulder even though Matt had warned her to stay down.
After the Indians are routed by the approach of the
other cowpokes, Matt returns to Tess, removes the arrow from her
shoulder and sucks the poison out of her wound while she presses
him more about his anger: "I asked you before why you were so
mad. Is it, is it because your cattle, the cattle Cherry told me
about, might run off? Or maybe, maybe you don't like the idea of
helping, helping a bunch of...(women)." A feisty, strong woman,
she is put off by his attitude toward her (he distances himself because
he believes she is one of the loose prostitutes, although in actuality
she isn't) and slaps him before fainting into his arms. [When Dunson
first met Matt, he also slapped him.] Tess, however, is instantly
intrigued by Matt, and asks about him when he doesn't attend the
evening's dance celebration, but tends the cattle in the fog. She
learns from Groot where he is located and how Matt took the herd
away from Dunson.
She seeks him out to talk to him with an affectionate
and encouraging manner - revealing her future role as reconciler.
She seeks refuge in talk (unlike both Matt and Dunson) - as a therapeutic
way to release her heart-felt, emotional feelings:
I'm scared too. That's why I'm talking because it's
the best thing to do when you feel that way. Just talk and keep
on talking...I talk to myself even if I have to sit in front of
a mirror and talk...You can talk to me. I'm right here. It would
help. Oh please, you can tell me to mind my own business if you'd
like. And if it would help any, you can hit me, like I did you
right across the mouth. But it would be good for you to talk, and
I'd like to talk to you...Please, I'd really like to talk to ya.
In a very brief love scene, Matt reveals his care for
Tom. He portrays Dunson as a single-minded man who seized an opportunity
and helped to develop the West - but also refused to surrender to
his vulnerability or weaknesses when confronted. Quickly, the heroine
Tess falls in love with Matt as it begins to rain - she initiates
him sexually:
Tess: Why does he [Dunson] think that way?
Matt: Because he got to a place where, see, he'd taken empty land
used for nothin', made it the biggest ranch in the state of Texas.
Fought to keep it...one bull and one cow, that's all he started
with...After he'd done all that, gotten what he'd been after
for so long, it wasn't worth anything...So he started this drive.
Everybody said, 'you can't make it. You'll never get there.'
He was the only one believed we could. He had to believe it.
So he started thinking one way, his way. He told men what to
do and made 'em do it. Otherwise, we wouldn't have got as far
as we did. He started 'em for Missouri and all he knew was he
had to get there. I took his herd away from him.
Tess: You love him, don't you? He must love you. That wouldn't be
hard. (She kisses Matt on the lips.) Did you like that?
Matt: I've always been kind of slow in making up my mind.
Tess: Maybe I can help. (They kiss again.)
Matt: I don't need any more help but will you do that again? (They
kiss again.)
When a sudden rainstorm causes the river to rise, Matt
decides to push on immediately with the herd rather than waiting
until morning, leaving his new love Tess behind - something that
Dunson did years earlier to Fen. Groot confirms that they can't take
Tess with them:
Matt: We can't take her with us, can we?
Groot: Well we could, uh...
Matt: What?
Groot: No, no, I don't suppose we could.
The next page of the diary describes Dunson's pursuit:
And that night they moved. The river was rising,
they must get across while there was still time. In the meantime,
Dunson had found men and ammunition and taken up the chase. He
was determined to overtake Matt...
In his relentless chase after joining up with several
gunmen, Dunson rides up to the wagon train. They are told that the
cattle trail herd is over a week's journey away and that Matt left
the wagon train eight days earlier. Dunson's men are offered a meal
and Tess personally offers to feed Dunson:
"I'll take care of Mr. Dunson." He is surprised that she
knows his name:
Tess: I believe it's your beef we're eating.
Dunson: Who told you that?
Tess: The man you promised to kill.
Dunson: Did he tell you that too?
Tess: You're tired, aren't you? Tired, hungry and just a little bit
irritable. You'll feel better after you eat. We'll talk then.
Dunson grabs her wrist, noticing that she is wearing
the snake bracelet given to her by Matt. The bracelet (originally
linking Fen to Dunson and Matt) now links Matt to Tess. She explains
how she was left behind, like Tom had left Fen. Dunson realizes that
Matt is re-living with Tess his own departure from Fen fourteen years
earlier - she becomes the link between the two men and allows Dunson
a chance for redemption. They play cards - (she was to be employed
as a card dealer for the gamblers):
Dunson: How'd you get that away from him?
Tess: I stole it...
Dunson: So you stole that bracelet. How did you get it?
Tess: Would you really like to know, Mr. Dunson?
Dunson: How'd you get it?
Tess: I got it in the rain eight days ago, before he took your herd
across that river and left.
Dunson: I'm wondering whether to believe you.
Tess: I don't care whether you do or not.
Dunson: I believe that.
Tess: You wanna hear more?
Dunson: Go ahead.
Tess: It was raining. If it hadn't rained, I wouldn't be here talking
to you. He wouldn't be here where you could find him to kill him.
You still intend to kill him, don't you?
Dunson: Nothing you can say is gonna...
Tess: I didn't say anything...
Dunson: So he went off and left ya. I didn't give him that much credit.
Are you in love with him?
Tess: I thought you'd ask that. Can a woman love a man who'd go off
and leave her?
Dunson: Well, she, she shouldn't...
Tess: I wanted to go with him, but he had work to do. He had to get
your cattle to market. Said I wasn't strong enough to go and nothing
I could do or say to make him change his mind. But I wanted to go
with him. I wanted him so much that...
Dunson: That you felt like you had knives stickin' in ya.
Tess: How did you know that? I suppose other people have felt that
way before.
Dunson: They have.
Tess understandingly listens to Dunson's reason for
wanting to kill Matt, his once-respected son, and how they grew to
defy each other:
Tess: Now will you tell me something, Mr. Dunson?
Dunson: What?
Tess: Why do you want to kill him?
Dunson: Because he's a thief.
Tess: Do you think he thinks that?
Dunson: He should. I picked him up in the brush leading a cow. That's
fourteen years ago. Taught him all I could. He knew what I was planning.
Saw what I was building. He knew that someday, it'd all be his. His
land, his cattle, the whole thing. Even talked of a woman as men
will talk. A strong woman who could bear him sons, a woman like you.
Tess: Why did you want him to have a son?
Dunson: Because I built something. Built it with my own hands. And
I can't live forever and live to see it grow. I thought I had a son.
But I haven't and I want one.
Tess: I'm sorry for you, Mr. Dunson. Very sorry.
Dunson emphatically orders Tess to stand up and turn
around so he can look at her [and assess her fertility], and then
offers her half of his cattle empire if she will bear him a son -
to pass on his heritage (and land) to the next generation. [Not wanting
to lose another woman, Dunson quickly negotiates for the appealing
Tess.] She agrees to bear a son for him if he will renounce his determination
and change his mind about vengefully killing Matt:
Dunson: What would you say if, if I offered ya half
of everything I own for a son?
Tess: Your son?
Dunson: You can have a son, can't ya? That's all that matters.
Tess: By Dunson out of Millay? Half of everything you've got.
Dunson: That's right.
Tess: I'll have your son, Mr. Dunson, if you'll stop now. Stop now
and go back where you came from. I'll have your son.
Dunson: Yeah, I thought so.
Her unrealistic acceptance of his offer (she conceals
a gun in her shoulder sling) is only an attempt at peacemaking -
she soon reveals her love for Matt. Dunson recognizes the painful
similarity between Tess and Fen - both women were left behind in
the same manner. So, in remembrance of his lost love (Fen), he decides
to allow her to travel along with him to Matt in Abilene, even though
he refuses to give up on his murderous quest for Matt and his vow
to kill her lover:
Dunson: When did you fall in love with him?
Tess: It was under a wagon, in six inches of mud. When did, when
did you...when did you fall in love with her?
Dunson: Who?
Tess: The girl you told me about. The one you left, walked out on.
Dunson: 'I told you about'? Did he tell you...?
Tess: No, no, you told me. You knew how I felt when he left me. She
must have felt the same way when you left her. That's right, isn't
it? Or can't you remember?
Dunson: I can remember.
Tess: Oh I, I hope so, because, because I want you to think about
it while I ask you something. I want you to think hard.
Dunson: What?
Tess: I want to go on with you.
Dunson: That won't do any good. Nothing you can say or do...
Tess: And though I know you told me that, oh please, I want to go
with you. Please.
Dunson: All right.
Tess: Thanks. Thanks a lot.
The cattle drive moves on, although Matt suffers from
doubts that his judgment is wrong - that there may be no railhead
at Abilene and that Dunson will soon catch up:
One hundred days and in Matthew Garth's heart a growing
fear that there was no railroad...
Shouts from the "point" drivers of the herd
erupt when they hear a steam locomotive's whistle off-screen - it
announces that Abilene exists at the end of the tracks after all.
And then see the thick black smoke billowing up into the sky, proving
that they are only a few miles from a railhead at Abilene, Kansas.
Relieved and joyful, Matt successfully brings in the large herd of
cattle all the way from Texas - the first rancher to use what will
become known as the Chisholm Trail. Abilene townspeople are ecstatic
to see the cattle ("We've been waitin' a long time for this")
- the cowboys are instructed to drive the cattle straight down the
main street of town to the stockyard.
Another page of the diary turns, marking an historic
day in western history [the actual historical date for the
opening of the Chisholm Trail was 1867]:
And history was written that day in Abilene, August
14, 1865, a day that marked completion of the first drive on the
Chisholm Trail. Excitement and wild hilarity greeted the trail
weary men and cattle as they poured into...
Cattle trader-buyer Mr. Melville (Harry Carey, Sr.
- in his final Western film before his death in 1947) from "the
Greenwood Trading Co. of Illinois"
negotiates a contracted price for Matt's cattle. (They started the
drive with over 9,000 head, losing six or seven hundred on the way.)
Only four or five hours behind them, Dunson comes upon
the tracks where the cattle crossed to enter the town. The cattle
clog the streets of Abilene - it takes many hours to herd them into
the overflowing corrals in the stockyards. In Abilene that night,
Mr. Melville settles at a "top price" of $21.00 a head,
offering Matt an initial check for $50,000 dollars - made out to "Thomas
Dunson."
He tells Matt that he believes a celebration is in order for his men:
There's three times in a man's life when he has a
right to yell at the moon: when he marries, when his children come,
and when he finishes a job he had to be crazy to start.
Then after purchasing the cattle, Melville asks whether
Matt's successful actions in bringing the herd to market will turn
Dunson in his favor:
Melville: You gonna wait for Dunson, huh? I've been
talkin' to some of your men. Isn't that check and the fact that
you got here, isn't that gonna make any difference?
Matt: I don't think so, Mr. Melville.
Melville: I suppose I'm crazy but...
Matt: You want me to run away?
Melville: No, of course not. Couldn't, couldn't I talk to him?
Matt: I still have to talk to him after that.
When Matt steps into his Hotel Royale room for the
night, he finds Tess waiting there for him. She warns that Dunson
is camped two or three miles out of town, ready to enter town by
sunup. Due to his battered pride, Dunson still plans to carry through
on his threat to kill Matt ("He says he's going to kill you").
As she apologizes for accidentally being dressed in black mourning
clothes, he crosses the room to approach her. He bumps into the hanging
kerosene lamp, causing its swaying shadow to move back and forth
over them [a premonition of Dunson's approach] and the room's walls
as she nervously talks about his predicament the next day:
Tess: I know you've only a few hours, but listen
for just a minute, that's all, and then I won't talk about it anymore.
Just a minute. He hasn't changed his mind, Matthew.
Matt: I didn't think he would.
Tess: We saw the railroad and I thought, I thought it might make
a difference, but it didn't. Nothing would. He's like something you
can't move. Even I've gotten to believe it's got to happen - your
meeting. I was gonna ask you to run but, no I'm not, I'm not. It
wouldn't do any good. You're too much like him. Oh, stop me, Matthew!
Stop me! (He covers her mouth and silences her. The moving shadow
stops.) God bless you, Matthew. (He kisses her.)
Presumably, they are reunited and spend the night together
after the scene dissolves away. The next morning, Matt emerges from
the front door of the hotel into the bright sunlight looking relaxed
and cool as he lights a cigarette. Tess stands next to Groot on the
porch, as Matt leans on the horse railing and slouches amongst his
men.
In the expected confrontation scene (a controversial,
much-criticized ending for its flatness and lack of believability),
bull-headed and intractable Dunson (with a group of ten men) rides
through the cattle in the streets of Abilene to move toward Matt.
After spotting Matt's surrogate father approaching, Buster rides
ahead to alert him ("He's comin' in now"). When Dunson
sees Matt in the distance, the camera tracks with him as he rides
forward, dismounts and strides (actually plows or wades through them
like water in a river) obliviously through the stray cows - the herd
that took fourteen years to build up and nurture with his son. The
soundtrack's driving music accentuates his rhythmic determination
to reach his son. From the sidelines, Melville comments:
Melville: You know that young man [Matt] isn't gonna
use his gun, don't ya?
Cherry: Yeah. But I haven't any such notions.
Almost immediately, after Dunson's contact with the
herd - and its association with the Red River, there is violence.
Cherry confronts the indomitable Dunson and wounds him in the left
side, but is himself shot and crumples to the ground. When Dunson
finally gets within firing range of Matt, he challenges him to draw,
but Matt won't respond with his gun and risk a gunfight. Matt's eyes
signal that he won't provoke a fight with a weapon:
Go on, draw. I said 'DRAW'! (Long pause) Then I'll
make ya.
In the showdown, Dunson badgers his foster son. He
begins shooting half a dozen shots all around the immobile, confident
Matt - firing at his hat, at his feet, and nicking him on the right
cheek. Frustrated by his son's steadfast refusal to fire back, Dunson
cannot carry through his threat and kill Matt as he promised. His
sense of morality and honor guarantees that he cannot kill a man
in cold blood who doesn't intend on killing him first. Dunson throws
his gun away and prepares to physically brawl with Matt:
You're soft! Won't anything make a man out of ya?
(He seizes Matt's gun from his holster and throws it away.) You
once told me never to take your gun away from ya. (He hits and
punches Matt in the face several times.) You yellow-bellied, cotton-livered...
Eventually, Matt's temper breaks and he retaliates,
punching back hard at Dunson's jaw - and the jab puzzles him momentarily.
It evolves into a brutal, savage, monumental fistfight. Groot cheers
the resolution of their brawling battle:
It's all right. For fourteen years, I've been scared,
but it's gonna be all right.
The two men slam each other into one end of a chuck
wagon, sending pots and pans clattering to the ground - similar to
the incident that led to the deadly stampede. Disturbed by their
senseless fighting, Tess fires a gun twice close to them to
get their attention and then commands them to end their fighting
and quit destroying each other. [Her feminine presence at the end
of the film balances and corresponds to Fen's presence at the film's
start.] By talking to both of them from her perspective, she reconciles
Matt with his father in a new relationship:
Tess: (She fires once) Stop it. Stop it. Stop makin'
a holy...(She fires a second time) Stop it I said. I'm mad, good
and mad. And who wouldn't be. (To Dunson) You Dunson, pretendin'
you're gonna kill him. Why, it's the last thing in the world you...(Dunson
moves.) Stay still. I'm mad I told ya. (To Matt) And you Matthew
Garth, gettin' your face all beat up and all bloody. You oughta
see how, you oughta see how silly you look, like, like somethin'
the cat dragged - STAY STILL - What a fool I've been, expectin'
trouble for days when, when anybody with half a mind would know
you two love each other. (To Dunson) It took somebody else to shoot
ya. He wouldn't do it. Are ya hurt?
Dunson: No, just nicked the...
Tess: Then stay still. No, don't stay still. I changed my mind. Go
ahead. Beat each other crazy. Maybe it will put some sense in both
of ya. Go ahead. Go on. Do it! (After angrily thrusting her gun into
the stomach of a cowhand/bystander, she marches off, disgusted by
both of them.)
After hearing her sensible talk and intercession (and
remembering - possibly - that he didn't listen earlier to lost fiancee
Fen), Dunson realizes Matt's virtues as a son and advises him:
Dunson: You'd better marry that girl, Matt.
Matt: Yeah, I think I...Hey, when are you gonna stop telling people
what to do?
Dunson: Right now. At least as soon as...
Matt: When?
Dunson: ...as soon as I tell ya one thing more.
Matt: What?
Then, in the last lines of the film, Dunson orders
one last thing, promising to add Matt's initial to the Red River
D cattle brand to make him a full partner in his cattle business.
He draws the new brand in the dirt - a close-up of the brand ends
the film as he announces that Matt has "earned" his manhood
and become a full partner of his adoptive father. The first name
initial, 'M', symmetrically balances out the surname, 'D', on the
other side of the wavy, parallel lines that represent the Red River:
Dunson: When we get back to the ranch, I want
ya to change the brand. It'll be like this, the Red River 'D'
and we'll add an 'M' to it. You don't mind that do ya?
Matt: No. (They smile affectionately toward each other.)
Dunson: You earned it.
|