BY JOHN M. WHALEN
In “Wings of the Hawk†(1953), Van Heflin stars as Irish
Gallagher, an American mining for gold down in Mexico. He and his partner Marco
(Mario Siletti) are ripped off by local military ruler Coronel Paco Ruiz
(George Dolenz), who takes over the mine and kills Marco. Irish barely manages
to escape on horseback and is rescued by insurrectionists led by Raquel Noriega
(Julia Adams), who gets a bullet in the shoulder for her trouble. Irish patches
her up in exchange for his freedom and romance rears its ugly head. Jealousy also
flares when revolutionary leader Arturo Torres (Rudolpho Acosta), who had been
her lover, sees what’s going on. Enter Pascual Orozco (Noah Beery, Jr.) who
asks for Arturo’s help in taking Ciudad Juarez. They’ll need $5,000 to buy 200
rifles but the revolutionaries have no money. However, they come up with a
brainstorm. They’ll steal $5,000 in gold from Irish’s mine, which is now under
Coronel Ruiz’s control. Irish must be gaga over Raquel because he agrees to go
along with it, “as long as I get my money back later.†There’s a lot of
shooting after that, chases on horseback, and a firing squad kills some
villagers.
It’s all crammed in to a fast-paced 81 minutes, leaving
little time for reflection or character development for that matter. Julia
Adams, most famous as Kay, the beauty who lures the Creature out of the Black
Lagoon, is always a delight to see on screen, but her performance as Raquel
goes no deeper than the Mexican makeup painted on her face and the black hair
pieces tacked on her head. Heflin gives his usual solidly rugged performance as
the Irish miner-turned-revolutionary, and George Dolenz (father of Monkee Micky
Dolenz) is sufficiently snide as the local gendarme, but there is little heat
generated by any of them in the on- screen proceedings.
This is not to say that “Wings of the Hawk†should be
dismissed as just another run-of-the-mill fifties western. Kino Lorber’s Blu-Ray is noteworthy for
several reasons. First of all, historically, it was only the second feature
film to be released by Universal International in 3-D, and the first to adopt
the 1.85:1 aspect ratio, which became the standard for all non-Cinemascope
films made since then. It’s also one of the first “Mexican Westerns,†that is,
a western about an American cowboy caught in the midst of the Mexican
Revolution. Other such include “Vera Cruz,†“Viva Villa,â€, “The Professionalsâ€
and the most notable of them all, “The Wild Bunch.†It was also the last of
nine films that Cult Director Budd Boetticher did under contract for Universal
between 1952 and 1953. Boetticher achieved his cult status for a series of seven
westerns he did later for Columbia shortly after that, between 1956 and 1960.
Known as the “Ranown Cycle†of films, because they starred Randolph Scott and
were produced by Joe Brown. “Seven Men from Nowâ€(1956), “Ride Lonesome†(1959),
“The Tall T†(1957), and “Comanche Station†(1960), among others, are some of
the greatest cinematic achievements of this or any other time. Not just films,
they are truly works of a certain kind of art.
“Wings of the Hawk,†is not filmmaking on that level.
Boetticher had not yet perfected his vision, nor achieved the clout to make
films his own way. But as the jumping off point from turning out formulaic
studio fare to creating individualistic masterpieces, glimmers of what was to
come are evident. Most prominent are the relationships between the three male
characters. In all of Boetticher’s best films there is a contest between what
can best be described as “men of stature. In “The Tall T†Randolph Scott is
pitted against Richard Boone. The two stand out against the weaker men in the
story, including Boone’s outlaw gang, and the cowardly fiancé of one of the
female passengers on a stagecoach. In “Seven Men from Now†Scott faced Lee
Marvin, the baddest of the bad. In “Comanche Station†Scott faced off against
Claude Akins, who stood taller than either of the two gunmen who rode with him.
As film historian Jeremy Arnold notes in his audio commentary provided on a
separate audio track, in all of these films, the Randolph Scott character could
just as easily switched places with his antagonist. They’re both the same kind
of man. Arnold says the difference is that one is weak and the other strong. I
disagree with that assessment. I think the difference is that one has maintained
his stature as a man to be looked up to, and the other has let himself down
somewhere along the way.
In “Wings of the Hawk,†Boetticher did not really develop
the conflict between Irish, Ruiz and Arturo as fully as he would with the
antagonists in the later films, but elements of it are there, if you look close
enough. It’s interesting to see the embryonic Boetticher at work.
Kino Lorber’s Blu Ray contains both 2-D and 3-D versions
of the movie from 2K Scans of the left and Right Eye Interpositive. The picture
is generally good, but some scenes are too dark, and others a bit too grainy.
Color is by Technicolor and the transfer goes a good job preserving the
original look of the film. Clifford Stine’s 3-D cinematography is rather
stunning in the way it emphasized picture depth over the gimmicky hurling of
stones, and bodies at the 3-D audience. Many action shots feature deep focus of
riders on horseback coming toward the camera from a great distance, while actors
and stunt men move about at various distances in between riders and camera.
Another impressive shot has a knife being lowered slowly on a rope from a
skylight. Even at 2-D the knife almost seems to float out from the screen.
Frank Skinner’s soundtrack has a lot of Mexican flare,
and is presented on the disc in what is described by KL as “High Dynamic Range
Theatrical Mix plus 5.1 Surround Sound.†Bonus features include the audio
commentary by Jeremy Arnold (which I can’t recommend highly enough, for all the
detailed information he imparts), and a 3-D Woody Woodpecker cartoon. “Wings of
the Hawk,†is another important film restoration by Kino Lorber of a bygone era
of filmmaking, the likes of which we’ll never see again.
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(John M. Whalen is the author of "Vampire Siege at Rio Muerto". Click here to order from Amazon.)