Peckinpah's Mellowist Movie; Family Perfectly Cast
Sam Peckinpah's legend burned quick and fast in the years after "The Wild Bunch" (1969.)
That movie had full budgetary support from Warners and was rich in powerful, violent imagery, nowhere greater than in its spectacularly bloody gunbattle climax.
"The Wild Bunch" wasn't a huge hit (neither Westerns nor gory Westerns travelled too far, Sergio Leone excluded), but Peckinpah looked like a true auteur, and he seemed required to offer up two stylistic touches: bloody ultra-violence and a "slo-mo mix" of various camera speeds.
After the lyrical but tragic "Cable Hogue" and the ultra-violent modern thriller "Straw Dogs," Peckinpah changed gears again in 1971, making two films with superstar Steve McQueen for 1972 release, back-to-back.
The second one was "the big one" -- the ultra-violent crime thriller "The Getaway", a Christmas release with McQueen, MacGraw and plenty o' bang-bang.
But the first McQueen/Peckinpah picture stands as a sweet detour for Peckinpah -- not from lyrical non-sexual man-love (Ride The High Country and The Wild Bunch had covered that ground well), but from violence.
Meet Junior Bonner.
"Junior Bonner" is a nice piece of early seventies filmmaking, complete with a realistic semi-documentary look and feel (the sound recording sometimes has the tinny echo of a home tape recorder), and a lackadaisical approach to story-telling.
Still, the piece has a beautiful structure, aided and abetted by four perfectly cast actors as the Family Bonner:
McQueen, of course, who starts the movie busted up and shirtless (yea, girls) from a bad bull ride, and who arrives in Prescott, Arizona, looking to ride that bull again in the annual rodeo, see his parental family (who live there)and hook up with his daddy, who is played by
Robert Preston, a bigger-than-life movie star who invests "Junior Bonner" with the same kind of wonderfully overdone vocal style he used in "The Music Man," but who somehow seems RIGHT in his flourish. He also believably looks like a cool, tough guy who could sire Steve McQueen.
The beautiful first 40 minutes of the movie find McQueen looking to meet his dad (who is laid up in a hospital bed from a drunk drive crash), while his dad keeps just missing being met. McQueen looks forever for his dad before finding him sleeping in his hospital bed. McQueen agrees to come back the next morning, but before he can return, Preston flies the coop ("I'll find him, or he'll find me.") McQueen goes to get his horse, and finds his dad has "stolen it" to ride in the Prescott rodeo parade. Finally, the two men find each other, and father invites son to ride WITH him on the horse. It is a hugely warm and personal moment -- with two great stars playing father and son in perfectly warm accord-- and there's still a lot of movie left.
Before finding his papa, McQueen finds his mama -- perfectly played by 40's/50's survivor Ida Lupino (one of the first major PRODUCER-DIRECTORS in Hollywood; fitting to see her in a film by the talented Peckinpah, who worked for Lupino in televisin.) She's estranged from the lady-chasing n'er do-well Preston, but clearly loves him still.
And then there's McQueen's younger brother, played by Joe Don Baker as a money-hungry real estate promoter who is, nonetheless, the only true success in the Bonner family. One figures without him, they'd all starve. But that doesn't stop McQueen from punching Baker through a window when the latter says "you don't want to end up like (dad Preston.)" Nor does it stop Baker from eventually punching McQueen back ("I'm gonna kick your ass," Baker warns, to which McQueen replies: "Somebody's going to, and it won't be the first time.")The brothers are wary of each other, but they care enough.
With McQueen, Preston, Lupino and Baker in place, "Junior Bonner" moves effortlessly to real emotional involvement. These people LOOK like a family. McQueen and Baker look like they could be brothers. Lupino and Preston look like they could be their parents.
NO SPOILERS here, but suffice it to say that McQueen needs to get a few things done with and for his family before the movie ends. Riding that bull is important. Goals are set and bittersweet things happen at the finish.
Lacking any bloody deaths, Peckinpah at least tosses in a multi-film-speed barroom brawl, which McQueen elects to sit out -- with a beautiful woman while her rich boyfriend gets punched. Cute.
If there is a weakness to "Junior Bonner," it is that one senses Peckinpah trying to live up to his reputation, what with all the slow-mo, quick-cutting, flash-forward, flash-back. And the movie, like most of his films after "The Wild Bunch," has a cheaper look than that classic.
Still, it is a wonderful film. A great throwback to a kind of filmmaking not done much anymore. You get to like the Bonners, each and every one of them (even greedy but practical Joe Don, who has bought up his father's land on the cheap and bulldozed the man's house down!.)
There were two other rodeo movies in '72: one with James Coburn and one with Cliff Robertson. None of them were big hits. All three were good. "Junior Bonner" was the best. It didn't make a dime, but Peckinpah and McQueen had "The Getaway" waiting for cover.
See "Junior Bonner" anyway. And tell 'em Junior sent ya.
P.S. At one point in the flim, Joe Don's boys call McQueen "Uncle Junior." The Sopranos pick this up?