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Co-written by actor Leo Gordon for an offshoot of John Wayne’s Batjac
Company, Escort West is a well-shot but ultimately dull Western
starring Victor Mature. Set immediately after the Civil War, Mature plays a
Confederate officer who is traveling westward with his daughter Elaine
Stewart in the hopes of finding a better life away from a south that no
longer exists for them.
During their journey, they’re joined by Faith Domergue and run up against
renegade Yankee soldiers and a band of Modoc Indians. Mature dispatches them
all, of course, in some nice-handled scenes that are marked by excellent
widescreen compositions, courtesy of director of photography William
Clothier.
The supporting cast is a who’s who of Batjac regulars, including Slim
Pickens, Harry Carey and Ken Curtis. Screenwriter Gordon pops up for a turn,
but the acting honors of the film go to the wonderful Rex Ingram. The
multi-talented Ingram, perhaps best known as the Genie in Alexander Korda’s
Thief of Bagdad, here plays a mule skinner with such quiet authority
that he lifts his scenes way above the average.
Sadly, average is just what Escort West is. For all the talent in
front of the camera, they could not overcome the pedestrian approach of
director Francis D. Lyon. A utility director of the old school, Lyon had
helmed the good Cult of the Cobra for Universal in 1955 and the
second-rate Joel McCrea vehicle The Oklahoman for Allied Artists in
1957. Thanks to television, his most widely seen film may be the 1967 Scott
Brady/Virginia Mayo horror flick Castle of Evil.
A decent craftsman, Lyon’s work on Escort West feels strictly “B,”
and defeats the potential of the film. The movie was made for the
double-bills, and taken in that context, Escort West can still be
enjoyed as a well-shot time-waster. |