All titles are linked to my reviews if I've done a review of that film :-)
1. Branded (1950) A conman (Robert Keith) persuades a drifting loner (Alan Ladd) to impersonate the long-lost son of a wealthy rancher (Charles Bickford) to acquire his fortune. But the drifter comes to care about the family and sets out to find their real son for them. It's unlike any other western I've ever seen, and I mean that in the best way possible. Refreshingly non-usual!
2. Shane (1953) A stubborn farmer (Van Heflin) hires a drifting stranger (Alan Ladd) to work on his farm. The stranger turns out to be a gunman who uses his deadly prowess to protect the farmer and his family from a bullying rancher who wants to push them off their land. This is probably Ladd's most famous movie now, and with good reason -- he fits the role with a comfortable grace seldom equaled.
3. Whispering Smith (1948) A railroad detective (Alan Ladd) discovers that his longtime best friend (Robert Preston) is stealing from the railroad. To complicate matters, he used to be in love with the woman (Brenda Marshall) who ended up marrying this friend instead. This is the movie that made me fall in love with Alan Ladd.
4. The Proud Rebel (1958) A widowed father (Alan Ladd) with a mute son (David Ladd) gets hired by a farmer (Olivia de Havilland) to help repair her run-down farm and keep a greedy rancher (Dean Jagger) from seizing her land. When he learns of a possible cure for his son's muteness, he sells the boy's beloved dog to raise the money for the operation, with heart-breaking results. But it all turns out okay. I love the scenes between Alan and his son David -- they're very sweet and natural together.
5. Red Mountain (1951) Near the end of the American Civil War, a Confederate officer (Alan Ladd) is sent to Colorado to aid General Quantrill, but ends up involved in a murder, a rebellion, and a love triangle. It's a totally different movie than I was expecting, but not in a bad way. Another atypical western for Ladd.
6. Saskatchewan (1954) A member of the RCMP (Alan Ladd) rescues a woman in distress (Shelley Winters), leads his troop to safety when local natives rise up against them, and stops an invasion. All with absolutely breathtaking Canadian scenery. One of the few westerns I've seen that are set in Canada!
7. The Iron Mistress (1952) Highly fictionalized and adventuresome portrayal of the live of frontiersman James Bowie (Alan Ladd). Bowie falls in love with a sophisticated New Orleans woman (Virginia Mayo), fights a bunch of duels, and finally forges the perfect frontier knife.
8. Drum Beat (1954) A former Indian fighter (Alan Ladd) is sent to make a peace treaty with the Modoc tribe of northern California. This involves him having to guard a wagon train, make quite a few speeches, and fight one unwilling-to-make-peace Modoc played by a very young Charles Bronson.
9. The Big Land (1957) After the Civil War, former Texas Confederates are still battling former Yankees, especially in Missouri. When one Texan (Alan Ladd) saves one Yankee (Edmond O'Brien) from a lynching, the two decide to work together to help the railroad reach Kansas so the Texans can drive their cattle there for shipment instead of to embattled Missouri. The Yankee has a pretty sister (Virginia Mayo) to complicate matters.
10. Guns of the Timberland (1960) A group of lumberjacks (led by Alan Ladd) arrives in town to cut down a bunch of timber nearby, and the people of the town (led by Jeanne Crain) object. Loggers had clear-cut an area not far away and destroyed a town in the process, and these townsfolk don't want the same thing to happen to them. Interestingly, while on set, Alan Ladd became friends with Louis L'Amour (who wrote the book this is vaguely based on), and L'Amour later dedicated his book The Broken Gun to Alan Ladd and his best friend William Bendix after they had both died.
Okay, there you have it! My ten favorite Ladd westerns :-) Want to guess which one I'm planning to watch tonight?
Happy Alaniversary!
ReplyDeleteI expected that Shane would be number one on this list, so the fact that Branded is just makes me more excited to watch it. ;) And the other ones I haven't seen sound really good too.
Still SO cool that L'Amour dedicated one of his books to Alan. <3
Nope! Branded is my favorite Alan Ladd movie :-D Can't wait for this evening!
DeleteAmazing that you still remember the exact date when you chose Alan as your favorite celluloid date... I just know that it happened to me some time during late summer 2020, when a German TV channel showed "Shane", I recorded it with my special "I can record movies on my TV" thing, forgot it and watched it towards autumn 2020. And then it went "BANG!!!" and I thought, wow, what a looker, and I crushed heavily, and I found your blog, and I read everything I could find on other blogs and stuff, and I got half a dozen DVDs with Alan Ladd films and I am still learning a lot about Film Noir (I'm leading a discussion group at Open University right now) and Westerns. And "Shane" is still my favorite, and I still want to crawl into the picture and comfort him, he looks so sad at the ending...
ReplyDeleteAndrea, I keep a record of when I watch movies (and when I read books) in my daily journal, so I often do know EXACTLY when I first watched something :-) What happened, for me, is that I watched Shane and Whispering Smith in the same week, and the combination of the two was just irresistible!
DeleteAnd yeah, there are quite a few of Alan's movies where I wish I could go give him a big hug and make him some hot cocoa or something to cheer him up. Including Shane. He does that woebegone look so effectively!
My, how I like the English language... "woebegone" is such a wonderful word! I would SO like to binge watch "Shane" and "Branded" (and perhaps "The Proud Rebel"), but I've got to prepare my course "Crime and Glamour: Thrilling Movies" (about film noir) and watch "Laura" with Dana Andrews. (I seem to remember that you quite like Dana Andrews, too, right?)
DeleteAndrea, it IS a great word!
DeleteI absolutely LOVE Laura. My favorite Dana Andrews movie (and yes, I realllllly like him), and my favorite film noir!!! Have you seen it before? Oh, it's just So Good.
I just saw it for the first time – Clifton Webb as Waldo Lydecker is just marvelous, he steals the scenes again and again, I'm afraid. And I only knew Vincent Price as an elderly man in the famous (infamous...) British B-horror flicks he later did (I enjoyed those, too). To see him as something of a romantic lead was quite a shock... Ample material for discussion, I guess! Only ladies in my discussion group. And one of them, my best friend, today told me she's got Covid and has to isolate (one day after the Swiss government lifted almost all restrictions, brutal irony...). I wish you a wonderful Alaniversary with "Branded"!
DeleteAndrea, yes! Seeing Vincent Price as a mild mannered romantic(ish) normal guy was very weird the first time.
DeleteHow is your friend doing? My whole family had Covid last fall, and it wasn't worse than a cold for most of us, but my dad, who's in his 70s, did end up getting walking pneumonia. But he is fine now. I will pray for your friend!
"Murder, a rebellion, and a love triangle"--truly, what more could one ask for? Sounds like a perfect recipe for adventure.
ReplyDeleteKatie, right? It's such a great combo of items.
DeleteAwwwww, happy Alaniversary! Great list. Would like to see top 10 non-Westerns now.
ReplyDeleteThanks, DKoren! I could totally do a whole list of Alan's noir films. And maybe one of all the others.
DeleteThe above would also be my list, except the numerical order of favourite would be different.
ReplyDeleteChrisk, awwww, I love that you are fond of these same Ladd westerns!
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