NFR Project: “Johnny Guitar”
Dir: Nicholas Ray
Scr: Philip Yordan, Den Maddow
Pho: Harry Stradling
Ed: Richard L. Van Enger
Premiere: May 5, 1954
110 min.
Should you be wary of a Western loved by French film critics?
Both Jean-Luc Godard and Francois Truffaut praised this film when it came out. It is a peculiar genre film, one that plays with the hallmarks of the type, turning them inside out and upside down. It is another remarkably idiosyncratic film by Nicholas Ray, who specialized in making movies his own particular way.
The film features two strong female leads, a real departure for the Western. Joan Crawford plays Vienna, a former prostitute who now owns a saloon and gambling house near a small Arizona frontier town. She forgoes frills and lace, and dresses like a man – and a gunfighter at that. Her stern, unmoving features make her a tight-jawed, thin-lipped protagonist.
She supports the incursion of the railroad to the area, setting her against the sentiments of the local cattle ranchers and the sheriff, led by McIvers (Ward Bond). In particular opposition to Vienna is Emma Small (Mercedes McCambriddge), who wants her dead and her saloon destroyed. Into this situation rides Johnny Guitar (Sterling Hayden), a former gunfighter and former lover of Vienna. Bittersweet is their reunion, but he decides to help her out.
Emma blames Vienna’s current lover, the Dancin’ Kid (Scott Brady), for a stagecoach robbery that resulted in the death of her brother. (Supposedly, Emma resents the Kid’s relationship with Vienna as well.) Finally, the townfolk give Vienna, and the Kid and his gang, 24 hours to get out of town.
Vienna goes to the bank to withdraw all her money the next day, planning to leave. The Kid and his gang, frustrated, angry, and broke, rob the town bank while Vienna is there. An enraged Emma, fresh from her brother’s funeral, blames Vienna and leads a posse of men dressed in mourning clothes to kill Vienna, Johnny, and the Kid and his gang. They capture one of the Kid’s men and hang him, and almost hang Vienna, who is saved by Johnny. Emma and her men burn down Vienna’s place.
By hook and crook, the posse finds the gang’s hideout behind a waterfall. They attack, and most of the gang is killed. Emma herself guns down the Kid. Vienna kills Emma. She and Johnny leave town.
Placing women in leading roles subverts the usual horse-opera dynamics. Vienna stands for integrity and reason; Emma is a vengeful Fury, out to destroy anyone who stands in her way. Later film critics have outlined the film’s lesbian subtext – Vienna is a butch hero and Emma, sexually frustrated by her inability to accept her own attraction to Vienna, wants to blot out the object of her affection.
The film sports many of the hallmark names of Western film – Ernest Borgnine, Royal Dano, John Carradine, Denver Pyle, and Sheb Wooley. The shifting psychosexual terrain makes this an oddball kind of feature, one in which the passions and actions are in the purview of the ladies.
The NFR Project is one writer’s attempt to review all the films listed in the National Film Registry in chronological order. Next time: On the Waterfront.


