Bad Company
(1972)
Director: Robert Benton
Cast: Jeff Bridges, Barry Brown, Jim Davis
It has been said that a woman stuck alone in the west in
the days of
the cowboy only had two options to turn to to generate a means a
support:
school teacher, or prostitute. Though the latter choice certainly had
its
bad side, it was, in its own way, a legitimate way of work in the day
and
place. And think about this: what if, instead, the person who was alone
was someone stuck between that stage of being a boy and being a man?
How
can such people survive out on the prairie, especially when they have
little
life experience as to how cruel the world can be?
Bad Company isn't
based on a specific true story, but it unquestionably gives us a good
idea
as to what these youths must have gone through - this is far away from
the glamorization found in movies like
Young Guns. This movie
is one of my favorite westerns, and like Your
Three Minutes Are Up, is yet another '70s sleeper that
still
hasn't found its audience after almost 30 years. At least this
obscurity
is available for rent and purchase, so readers searching for a copy
shouldn't
find their search very difficult.
It's 1863, and at the beginning of the movie the Union
army is seen
going door to door to drag into their custody kicking and screaming
youths
that didn't initially come in when they were conscripted. One boy, the
God-fearing and moral thinking Drew (Brown), is successfully hidden by
his parents, who are not wanting to risk losing another son in the war.
Since he could be hanged if he's later caught, his parents give him
money
and tell him flee to Virginia City, which is not in Union territory.
There
he can wait out the rest of the war. But getting there proves a
challenge
once he gets to St. Joseph, Missouri ("The armpit of America," as it's
described); there is a six month waiting list for the stagecoach
to Virginia City, and Drew fears for his freedom with all the Union
soldiers
around.
Not only is that a problem but the city is currently
being repeatedly
hit by a gang of thieving youths, who will even rob at gunpoint those
younger
than themselves. Their leader Jake (Bridges), himself a draft dodger,
happens
upon Drew and mugs him. In a bizarre coincidence, the two happen to
meet
again a few hours later, and a fight breaks out. Though he beats Drew,
Jake is impressed enough to invite Drew to join his band of fellow
thieves
on their upcoming journey west of the Union, reasoning to Drew that
it's
the only way out, and there's safety in numbers. Pressed, Drew quickly
agrees, though he promises himself in his journal, "I resolve never to
do a dishonest act, or take part in any thieving, robbing, or false
undertaking.
I will always keep to the straight and narrow, so help me God. It's
still
a sunny day." He gains the trust of his fellow men by pretending he did
a daring daylight robbery (using part of the secret stash of money in
his
boot.) However, as he, Jake, and the others venture to the west, a
number
of circumstances, troubling in different ways, severely pressure Drew
on
this self declaration.
The movie's underlying theme is how "bad company" can
influence (for
the worst) even the most moral and honest person, though it is actually
more complex than that. For one thing, the people Drew travels with are
clearly not "bad" people. Yes, they rob from innocent people and even
from
each other, but they rob as a means to live and to have things that
briefly
lift themselves from their bleak lives. They do bad things, but they
are
not without feelings; even the tough Jake admits to Drew at one point
that
he misses his mother, and wonders how she is doing. The circumstances
the
youths are in simply leave them no other choice but to steal. Also, the
movie suggests that a new environment can also change a person. When
the
youths leave Union territory, the landscape becomes an endless flat
prairie,
with almost no trees, rocks, or hills in sight. This is clearly not
civilization
anymore, and they find out very quickly the rules are different out
here.
(It's probably not a coincidence that from this point on, almost the
entire
movie is shot in overcast conditions - few sunny days here.)
It's not just a different set of rules here, but it's
also a more violent
place. Nobody is safe, and each of the characters gets affected by some
degree or another of violence. Although the violence comes only
occasionally,
it comes quickly and savagely - Drew and Jake's fist fight is short,
but
grueling and tires them both out very quickly. Someone later in the
movie
sentenced to hang is seen (in an unbroken shot) having his horse ride
out
from under him, and we see him silently die before our eyes in a matter
of seconds. Though rated PG when first released, the level of violence
here (and the ample amount of swearing) would give this movie at least
a PG-13 if it were submitted today. None of this is glorified in any
way
- it simply portrays life as it really was in those days, shattering
the
glamorization of the wild west Hollywood kept up for many years.
Also, with no rules, the youths don't seem to have a
clear plan or purpose
once they leave Union territory. All they can do is keep riding, and
simply
hope they can stay alive. From that point on, the movie is generally a
collection of vignettes, each one well done enough to be like one of
the
pearls on a necklace. Some are funny, like when they meet the settlers
who have packed up to go back east, or when they catch a rabbit but
only
Jake knows how to clean it - and the expressions on their faces as Jake
cleans it are priceless. There are also some scary moments, though
strangely
enough some humor can be found in them. At one point the hungry boys
get
a chance to eat, though a creepy man keeps a shotgun beaded on them as
they eat. Another time when they are robbed of two dollars and some
change
from a pack of bandits, the bandit leader sighs, "I'd like to get my
hands
on the son of a bitch that told me to go west." The humor in this movie
makes the inevitable tragic moments to come more shocking.
When alone together, Bridges and Brown make a great
team, whether they
are working together or with their fists flying at the other. The best
scene between them is after Jake catches a chicken on his own, and
refuses
to share it with Drew, who was unable to help. A famished Drew says
everything
he can to try to get some of that chicken, finally resorting to a wild
and seemingly invulnerable "what if" story to try and get to Jake's
conscious,
and Jake manages to deflate the argument with just a few well chosen
words.
Each time their love/hate relationship makes a change to one side or
another,
both actors manage to not only pull it off, but pull it off repeatedly.
You really believe the feelings these characters have could change so
quickly.
The supporting players also do a good job, and also manage to continue
this changing of loyalties in their characters as well.
It's a pity Paramount Video did such a substandard job
on this particular
video transfer, apparently using an older print that gives everything
too
much of a soft edge. This movie not only deserves to be digitally
remastered,
but the landscapes of the movie scream for a letterboxed version of
this
movie to be released. Despite the quality of the print, the photography
here is still good enough to suggest to viewers how good this must have
looked on the big screen in 1972. What does completely remain good
after
all these years is the score by Harvey Schmidt. Only using a piano, and
playing at a very slow speed, he created one of the most beautiful
scores
I've heard in a western. It's not only good by itself, but it really
helps
to suggest the mood of what happens, which is what a score is supposed
to do. Director Benton (who also co-wrote the script) gave us a movie
where
we are not only interested in the characters (whether they are good or
bad), but what motivates them as well. When the last action done
onscreen
ends in a freeze-frame, we are made to think deeply - what will happen
next? How did things lead up to this point? For that answer, like
viewers
might have to do with Your Three Minutes Are Up, you
might
find you will have to rewatch it to see all that you missed the first
time.
Bad
Company is a rich, thought provoking movie that deserves to be
better known.
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
Check
for availability on Amazon (DVD)
See also: Cheyenne Warrior,
Goodbye Pork Pie, The Stalking Moon
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