Let me amend that. One take between two great actors.
Two Rode Together was the first film James Stewart had made with the legendary director John Ford. But, he'd been warned by pals John Wayne and Henry Fonda that Ford could be...let's say "irascible." "Irascible" is a good word for it.
It was Widmark's first film with Ford, as well...although Widmark had worked with Wayne on The Alamo and Ford had shown up on-set—to make his presence known. Unbeknownst to both actors, Ford had taken each one aside and warned them that the other was well-known for trying to "steal" the picture. As a result, both of them were at the top of their respective games, stepping on each other's lines, making it move fast, making it sound like real conversation, taking advantage of every drop of humor they could. It's one of the most natural of scenes of conversation ever done.
The video of the scene below shows just how good these guys were here: Stewart, with his distinctive ability to...pause...and control the rhythm of the conversation and to "snap" the laugh-lines; Widmark with his quick-witted reactions and mis-directions. And it's all in one unbroken five minute "take" without flaw and all with business about cigars and freshening up, all the while the river burbles in the background. Ford set up the crew standing in the cold, powerful current of the water—the crew might have rebelled if there was another take.
Ford was not happy with this movie. It's theme of the duplicity of civilized people in regards to the Nation's native race had been done by Ford...and done better...in The Searchers. He did this one as an I.O.U. to the late Columbia chief Harry Cohn, but this one didn't take his recent ruminations on the cost of "taming the West"—as a counter-argument to his earlier Cavalry pictures—as far as he wanted to go. He'd do that with Cheyenne Autumn, still three years away.
The Set-Up: Sheriff of Tascosa, Texas, Marshall Guthrie McCabe (James Stewart) is persuaded by Cavalry Officer Jim Gary (Richard Widmark) to accompany him on a mission to ransom Comanche captives for the bereft families. The task is easier than first thought, given the shiftless nature of the Marshall.
Action (such as it is).
McCABE: Yeah, yeah...Ride all night
on some wild goose chase. I'll tell you this, you didn't
decide me to come along.
I'll tell you that.
GARY: Those things come one in a box?
-
GARY: Thanks a lot.
GARY: That's what I heard.
McCABE: "Guth." "Guth." The first time I heard it I thought
she'd got something stuck in her teeth.
Guth, Guth, Guth.
McCABE: Well, that's not a subject you can
discuss in mixed company...especially when
one of the parties is...
GARY: Holy smoke.
McCABE: And, of course, in this case,
when one of the parties is sort of...
McCABE: And...we were sitting
around the place talking...
McCABE: You didn't know about that before?
-
McCABE: About the...the stiletto?
McCABE: You have to give her credit
for...
McCABE: ...it was that she didn't see
why I was satisfied with just 10 percent of her take when she was willing
to go for fifty-fifty.
GARY: I didn't know about that.
McCABE: It's no secret about it.
-
GARY: You're a dirty thief, McCabe.
-
McCABE: Everybody knows it.
McCABE: You don't think I could live
on the marshal's salary, do you?
McCABE: A measly $100 a month, Jim?
GARY: What?
Words by Frank S. Nugent
Two Rode Together is available on Blu-Ray from Twilight Time.
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