The Way West (film)

The Way West

Original 1967 cinema poster
Directed by Andrew V. McLaglen
Produced by Harold Hecht
Screenplay by Ben Maddow
Mitch Lindemann
Based on The Way West
by A.B. Guthrie Jr.
Starring
Music by Bronislau Kaper
Cinematography William H. Clothier
Edited by Otho Lovering
Production
company
Distributed by United Artists
Release dates
  • May 24, 1967 (1967-05-24) (US)
Running time
122 minutes
Country United States
Language English

The Way West is a 1967 American western film based on the Pulitzer Prize winning novel by A. B. Guthrie, Jr.. The film stars Kirk Douglas, Robert Mitchum, and Richard Widmark, and features Sally Field in her first major film role. The film was directed by veteran television director Andrew V. McLaglen and featured on-location cinematography by William H. Clothier.

Plot

U.S. Senator William Tadlock (Kirk Douglas) is leaving his home in Missouri in 1843, heading west on the Oregon Trail by wagon train. His son and slave come along, with Dick Summers (Robert Mitchum) as a hired guide.

Joining them on the expedition are farmer Lije Evans (Richard Widmark), his wife Rebecca (Lola Albright), and 16-year-old son Brownie (Michael McGreevey). Among others there are also the newlyweds Johnnie (Michael Witney) and Amanda Mack (Katherine Justice), plus the Fairman and McBee families.

Shy young wife Amanda isn't satisfying his needs, so Johnnie gets drunk and strays with young Mercy McBee (Sally Field). He also shoots at what he drunkenly thinks is a wolf and ends up killing a Sioux chief's son. Tadlock knows that no other form of justice will do for the Indians if the wagon train is to be permitted to go on its way, so he hangs young Johnnie. On the trail, it turns out Mercy is now pregnant as well. Brownie proposes marriage to her. Tadlock's son is killed in a stampede, causing the senator to be so distraught, he asks his slave to take a whip to his back.

Lije Evans has seen enough. The last straw comes when Tadlock fakes a smallpox scare in order to keep the emigrants from dropping out to settle near Fort Hall or to split off for California. Tadlock is attacked by Evans, who takes charge of the trek.

Nearly to the end, Rebecca Evans shows the others Tadlock's grand plan, just beyond a steep ravine. They lower possessions, livestock, and each other down the steep escarpment to reach the wagon road to the Willamette Valley. Emotionally destroyed by the loss of Johnnie, Amanda Mack cuts a rope and causes Tadlock to plunge to his death. Amanda runs off into the desert, but the others press on to Oregon.

Production

The film is notable for being the first big-budget western since 1930's widescreen John Wayne spectacle The Big Trail, to show pioneers lowering a wagon train over a cliff with ropes.

This was the first time that Mitchum and Douglas appeared in a film together since Out of the Past in 1947.

Douglas had previously filmed another A.B. Guthrie novel, The Big Sky.

Cast

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