Movie Review

Fighting Caravans

Directed by: Otto Brower

Starring:


Reviewed on: March 7th, 2007
Gary Cooper in Paramount Pictures' Fighting Caravans (1931)

Westerns aren't in vogue anymore, but this one could be remade today. Photo copyright: Paramount Pictures (1931)

Fighting Caravans is a very old, yet still entertaining western. It has one of the best stars of the golden era, Cooper. It has a big climactic fight with some Indians. It has two great comic relief characters. And just for good measure there is a love story thrown in as well.

Two old crusty scouts, Bill and Jim, along with a younger scout, Clint, that they raised, take a wagon train across the country during the early 1860s. Early in the movie, a French girl, Felice, is given a hard time about wanting to join the caravan as a single woman. When Clint gets into trouble with the law she pretends to be his wife in exchange for going along with the wagon train.

Once the wagon train makes a stop for the night, Clint comes onto Felice. He says that single people on a wagon train drink around a fire at night telling each other lies. The married folk go to bed, and since they are pretending to be married..... Felice turns him down, but Clint's parents, Bill and Jim, notice that they like each other and attempt to break them up. They tell the man in charge of the wagon train that they are not married in hopes that he will send Felice back. He doesn't and Clint and her spend the rest of the movie flirting and arguing as Bill and Jim scheme to keep them apart.

Bill and Jim give the movie most of it's humor. They have lines like, "Any man who doesn't drink with us is a double bladdered skunk."and "Your shooting like a cross eyed squaw." They act like an old married couple. Years before Brokeback Mountain, Bill and Jim were gay cowboys. They raised a child together and were inseparable. They drink together and look to get into fights together. The movie, of course, never says that they are actually gay, but when they die in a shoot out the one falls next to the other with his arm around him.

Fighting Caravans ends with a huge battle with some Indians at a river. Considering the name of the movie, I had hoped for more action than just the big finish. Early in the movie, a stagecoach passes the slow moving wagon train. A few scenes later they come across the burned remains of the stagecoach after it was attacked by Indians. Shortly their after, Bill, Jim and Clint go and attack the Indians and take the horses, from the stage, back. It never shows them do it. They just talk about it afterwards. There was plenty of room for more action in this movie but, for what ever reason, they left it out.

I know that westerns are not in vogue these days, but this movie, based on a Zane Grey story, could be remade into an exciting, action filled film. Hell, you could even play up Jim and Bill's unrequited relationship for more laughs.

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Photos © Copyright Paramount Pictures (1931)

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