Billy the Kid, 1941, is playing on Turner Classic Movies on Monday, March 8 at 6:00 a.m.
Billy the Kid (1941) is an early example of the use of Technicolor. The film is visually outstanding. Cinematographers Leonard V. Skall and Leonard Smith received an Oscar nomination for their work on the film and should have won. From close-ups to panoramic views of Monument Valley, Kanab, Utah and other locations they used color, composition and especially light masterfully. Some scenes evoke the stillness of a Vermeer and others the chiaroscuro of Rembrandt. Near the end of the movie Billy is standing near the window of a tumbledown shack. The viewer is outside and can see his body fading into the shadows except for the upper part of his face, especially the intense blue eyes. There is a Caravaggio-like spotlight on the hand and gun the outlaw is pointing out the window.
Historically, there is little resemblance between the film and the actual life of Billy the Kid. The general details of his background is correct but the names have all been changed, perhaps to head off the complaints of purists. There is no Pat Garrett, but rather a Jim Sherman (Brian Donlevy), no William Tunstall but an Eric Keating (Ian Hunter). The filmmakers obviously wanted to tell a good story without regard to historical accuracy.
Robert Taylor was 30 when Billy the Kid was filmed. He’s too old for the part but not by as much as some have made out. To seem younger, Taylor plays Billy as uncouth, uneducated and probably illiterate. The outlaw is incapable of understanding the consequences of his actions. He’s always being bombarded by new ideas and new customs. There is a lighthearted scene where Billy is handed a teacup and saucer, objects obviously new to him. He picks the cup up as though it were a glass until he sees what Keating is doing. Billy holds the cup awkwardly by the handle until Keating turns away then he gulps the tea with his original hold.
This was Robert Taylor in his element. He was a superb rider and did all of his own riding in this film, even in the long shots. Taylor also had the western swagger down pat and seems very comfortable in his cowboy costumes. In private life, he often wore jeans, boots and a Stetson. In the first and last parts of the film, Billy dresses all in black. In the middle he wears a blue shirt to indicate his changed lifestyle. Robert Taylor practiced left-handed drawing and shooting for weeks before the film and used the skill again in the film Ride Vaquero in 1953.
Taylor and Donlevy are comfortable with one another, having worked together before in This Is My Affair in 1937. The easiness of their relationship makes Billy’s (temporary) transformation into an honest cowboy believable. Mary Howard has a small role as Eric Keating’s sister and makes the most of it. Ian Hunter is believable as rancher Keating.
The villains, especially Hickey (Gene Lockhart) are suitably nasty. Henry O’Neill, a leading character actor, throws himself with gusto into the role of a newspaper publisher whose press is constantly being sabotaged. Review by me for the imdb.
Here are a few behind the scenes photos:
I have watched this movie many times. Robert Taylor never looked better. Thanks!
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You’re welcome, Jen. He did make one sexy gun fighter! Judith
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Robert Taylor was good family friends with my grandparents in Nebraska and he would go riding with my grandmother on their farm. Your blogs on him have made the stories of him that I heard from my grandmother have a different flavor. Thanks!
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Thanks so much for writing. Are there any stories that your grandmother told that you could share herre? Judith
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I think most of them have been shared with the R. Taylorʻs family. My grandparents knew him as “Arlington” and he would stop by and talk with them whenever he visited. His first headshot from Hollywood always sat on their piano. I believe it was his father, who was a doctor, who attended to my uncles and then motherʻs birth. My uncle was named Arlington; both my parents attended Doane College, too, and my father later was a dean there.
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I think most of them have been shared with the R. Taylorʻs family. My grandparents knew him as “Arlington” and he would stop by and talk with them whenever he visited. His first headshot from Hollywood always sat on their piano. I believe it was his father, who was a doctor, who attended to my uncles and then motherʻs births. My uncle was named Arlington; both my parents attended Doane College, too, and my father later was a dean there.
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Kaieie, how fascinating. Thank you for writing this. If you could expand on this a litttle, i’d love to start a new blog section called remininisces, with your permission, of course. Thank You. Judith
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