Pursued is a very decent picture, very nicely shot, darkly imaginative, and dripping with Noir style, but if it's actually a Noir film then that really is up for debate, as is, if this film really is a Western? It wasn't quite what I was hoping for, and in truth it was a little too offbeat for the frame of mind I was in, but it's definitely one I'll go back to at some point to re-evaluate prepared with the awareness of what type of film it actually is. Robert Mitchum {excellent}is Jeb Rand, who is constantly pursued by assailants all his life. The film is told in flashback from his childhood tragedy when his family were all murdered, with him being the only survivor. Upon learning that there was indeed a survivor, the killers set about erasing Jeb from the planet, thus Jeb spends all his life trying to find out what the hell is going on, and just why did his adoptive mother raise him in the first place?
An oddity of sorts because Pursued is thinly embracing a number of genres, stretching the elements of each strand to create a film that once viewed, leaves one very intrigued as to its purpose......... 7/10
Pursued
1947
Action / Drama / Mystery / Romance / Thriller / War / Western
Pursued
1947
Action / Drama / Mystery / Romance / Thriller / War / Western
Plot summary
After his family is murdered in the 1880s, orphan Jeb Rand (Robert Mitchum) is raised by the Callum family on their nearby horse ranch. He remains haunted by this childhood trauma in a recurring nightmare of flashing spurs and confinement inside a trap door as his family is slaughtered. Widow Callum (Dame Judith Anderson) does her best to make Jeb feel loved as he is growing up, but the young man stubbornly maintains a sense of his own identity. While he has great affection for his foster-sister Thor (Teresa Wright),his relationship with her brother Adam (John Rodney) is tenuous at best, especially when Jeb blames him for shooting a colt that he was riding. Although Mrs. Callum blames the incident on deer hunters, she is aware that the it was actually the attempted murder of the youngster by her brother-in-law Grant (Dean Jagger),a shadowy figure who, for vague reasons, is determined to harm Jeb. Jeb loses a coin flip with Adam, and becomes the designated family volunteer to fight in the Spanish-American War. Jeb returns a hero, but does not find happiness. Although Thor loves him, Adam is resentful about sharing the farm's profits, and the omnipresent, enigmatic Grant remains at the fringes of Jeb's life, waiting for a chance to revenge himself on the young man in some mysterious vendetta as Jeb continues trying to exorcise his demons.
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Noir? Western? really?
Haunted by the Past
In the turn of the Nineteenth century, the orphan Jeb Rand is raised by Mrs. Callum (Judith Anderson) with her daughter Thorley and her son Adam. Jeb has a trauma with recollections of boots and flashes of light and Adam envies him. When Jeb is shot by the one-armed Grant Callum (Dean Jagger),Ms. Callum goes to the hotel and tells his relative to stop the family feud and forget Jeb. Years later, Grant is a prosecutor and presses Jeb (Robert Mitchum) to fight in the war against the Spanish. When Jeb returns a decorated hero, he courts Thor (Teresa Wright) and proposes her. But Jeb has an argument with Adam that was poisoned by Grant and Adam snipes his step-brother while he is riding trying to kill him. However, Jeb shots him in self-defense and is declared non-guilty by the court. But Grant has not given-up to kill the last Rand.
"Pursued" is a great western by Raoul Walsh that blends western and film-noir creating an unforgettable film about a family feud with a revengeful man. The locations and the camera work are astonishing and top-notch. My vote is nine.
Title (Brazil): "Sua Única Saída" ("His Only Exit")
Enjoyable and well-acted even if the story is a bit ridiculous if your think about it....
Considering that the film stars Robert Mitchum AND is not just another recycled plot, I am willing to cut it some slack since the story itself seems a bit hard to believe....no, it's VERY hard to believe. Because 95% of all westerns have one of about five basic plots (maybe even four),the 5% that are NOT are gems. So the fact that this film is NOT about uppity Indians, nasty bosses determined to chase farmers/sheep herders/the little guy off their land, trying to bring a guy to justice despite the town not willing to get involved, it's well worth seeing.
The film begins with a young boy being raised by a woman and her kid after the boy lost his family. Exactly how is not revealed until the end, but having the grown boy (Mitchum) 'suddenly' remember what happened when he was a kid and how the family was killed was annoying--since life doesn't work that way. The rest of the intervening story is a series of run-ins with his foster-mother's extended family--they want to kill the boy as 'he's no good' and again and again the guy is forced to kill to defend himself. Each time he kills, it proves to this family he's bad--but THEY are the ones constantly trying to kill him! See the film to see more about why and in the process see some darn good acting. In addition to Mitchum (who's always great),I liked Dean Jagger--he played a despicable guy very well. Well worth seeing.