-MONTHLY VHS & DVD REVIEW-
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copyright © 2001 - 2004 VideoVista
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Duel At Silver Creek
cast: Audie Murphy, Stephen McNally, Faith Domergue, Susan Cabot, and Lee Marvin
director: Don Siegel
75 minutes (U) 1952 widescreen ratio 1.85:1
Universal DVD Region 2 retail
RATING:
6/10
reviewed by Richard Bowden
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Duel At Silver Creek is a co-starring vehicle for Audie Murphy, the last of the
great B-movie western stars, briskly directed by the great Don Siegel. The baby-faced
Murphy, who made 46 films in 20 years before dying in a plane crash, was the most decorated
soldier of World War II (his appearance an ironic commentary on visual stereotyping - John
Wayne, who looks every inch a hero, avoided the call up entirely). For the most part Murphy
starred in second-rate vehicles with second-rate talent. A few titles have stood the test
of time, such as Red Badge Of Courage (1951) or The Unforgiven (1960) - both
directed by Huston, or Boetticher's fine A Time For Dying (1969), the actor's last
film. By and large, however, Murphy suffered from a bland screen persona which only strong
direction and casting could overcome, even if most of his vehicles remain watchable.
Siegel, who went on to direct Dirty Harry (1971) and Charley Varrick (1973)
was here at an early stage in his career, but had already made three or four other westerns
before this one, his first in colour. Duel At Silver Creek is perhaps the most successful
of those, so far, principally because the director is able to steer events along quickly
enough to cover most of the weaknesses inherent in the script and is able to create a cast
strong enough to balance out Murphy's presence. It opens as Luke Cromwell and his older partner
work a gold claim, only to become the latest victims in a murderous claim-jumping racket.
Luke's partner is forced to sign over the property while, after an exciting chase and shootout;
Cromwell only narrowly escapes his own abrupt end. Soon he resurfaces as 'the Silver Kid', the
baby faced gun-toting gambler, in a town where Marshall 'Lightning' Tyrone is also after the
crooks. Chief among the suspects is Johnny Sombrero, a taunting thug who may be in league
with the outlaws. The Marshall begins to develop an infatuation with the Opal Lacy (Susan
Cabot), sister of the chief villain who by this time has also arrived in town. Meanwhile,
handicapped by a wound, Tyrone is forced to turn to the Kid when the existing deputy is
shot, and the two form an uneasy partnership.
The above plot summary shows just how clichéd many of the plot points of Silver
Creek are. A lot of the film reveals its B-movie origins, perhaps chief of which is the
cliché of the crippled lawman. As the Marshall nurses his secret weakness, still
hoping the keep the 'indian sign' over the ambitious Sombrero, the obvious irony is his
reluctant need for the younger man to come to his aid. To this one might add the over-familiar
dichotomy between the woman of the world (Opal) and the good girl (Dusty), the hiding of a
key witness in a secret cave, as well as Silver Kid's conspicuous white handled armaments -
conventions familiar to those versed in the genre. Despite these commonplace matters, Siegel
still manages to turn in one or two striking scenes, such as when the sexually provocative
Opal abruptly strangles a wounded man awaiting the doctor (thereby demonstrating the dead
end nature of her charms) or when Pop, the original deputy, is shot and left facedown in
the rain. Siegel's film has the advantage of co-starring Murphy with Stephen McNally as
the Marshall and, after the opening sequence; they more or less spend equal time on screen
together. McNally's maturity, both as actor and character, balances out the Kid's inexperience
nicely. In particular the older actor's voiceover (a relatively unusual device in an otherwise
straightforward western of this sort), places a lot of the action in context, adding an
authoritative framework to somewhat flimsy proceedings. It also has the useful advantage of
not requiring the Kid to explain himself too often, where a lack of gravitas would be a
disadvantage. Several times explicit reference is made to the Murphy's youthful appearance,
so at odds with his lethal potential. "He didn't have the face of a killer," says
the Marshall on first sight of his ally-to-be, "but I noticed his hands were quick and
sure." In fact the Marshall's authoritative voiceover like this, grounding events in
descriptive seriousness, relates the film to a genre form that would be very familiar to
contemporary viewers: the radio western. (As far as I know though, Murphy never did a series
on air). In radio drama conventions of the period, a single male narrator frequently might
'carry' events by the force of his personality, his voice the sole source of moral judgement.
Dressed in black leather, self conscious and slightly gauche, the Kid's character and his
relation to a mature lawman reminds one of 'Mississippi' in Hawk's far superior El Dorado
(1966), played by James Caan, or the Ricky Nelson part in the earlier Rio Bravo (1959).
These later roles would be better developed, both in their relationship to the older mentor
(Wayne, in both cases) as well as the moral intelligence behind a flashy rig. Set up with
double guns, reserved although unnervingly assured, the Silver Kid remains two dimensional,
a perception that not even his awkward romancing of Dusty can allay. Fortunately, as well as
the strong role of the Marshall to distract us, there are some colourful characters further
down the cast list. Notable is Johnny Sombrero (played by actor Eugene Iglesias, looking
remarkably like a young Sean Penn), as well as Tinhorn Burgess, played by an already effective
Lee Marvin then currently working his way up through the ranks of B-heavies to future stardom.
Silver Creek remains excellent entertainment, notably in this vivid DVD reincarnation
that revels in a crisp colour picture with a range of vivid colours characteristic of 1950s'
film stock. Ratio is the original 1.85:1 aspect. There are few extras, merely chapters and a
trailer. Incidentally, modern viewers will relish lines like (on the Marshall's damaged hand)
"It's going to be kinda stiff for a while but you need to keep massaging it," as well
as (on Opal's coded attractions) "Women like that are likely to a put a man's shooting
iron plum out of action." Others will simply want to buy this and hark back to a less
cynical period of western production when, with little psychology and angst, the biggest clue
to man's intent was the size of his sombrero.
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