By the 1970s, the popularity of the classic Western—which had been the hallmark ofJohn Wayne’s career—was losing ground fast. In its place,revisionist Westernshad surged onto the scene.Sergio Leone’s groundbreaking Spaghetti Westerns,led by the Dollars trilogy andOnce Upon a Time in the West, and other revisionist takes of the time, such asButch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid,had earned a place in the hearts of audienceswith their alternative kind of Western hero.In 1970, Wayne madeChisum, an underrated movie straddling the two worlds of the classic Western and this new wave. The movie also adds to Wayne’s complicated legacy, especially regarding his stance on war—from some ofhis controversial frontier portrayalstohis avoiding service in World War IIwhile maintaining a fiercely nationalistic image and outspoken support for the Vietnam War. In fact, just two years beforeChisum, Wayne had madeThe Green Berets, a movie that irked critics, includingRoger Ebert,who called it a “virus” for its outright propagandist tone. But inChisum, Wayne seems to make up for what he has been criticized for throughout his career.

Directed byAndrew V. McLaglenand based on the historical Lincoln County War fromAndrew J. Fenady’s short storyChisum and the Lincoln County War, the movie is a slight departure for Wayne, whose character is not only sympathetic to the Native American cause but also resists greedy settler expansionism. 55 years since its release,Chisumis an underrated gem that stands as one of the best war movies of the 1970swhile masquerading as a cowboy flick.

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John Wayne’s ‘Chisum’ Is a Battle of Ideals

The1970s saw the release of a flood of anti-establishment war movies,among themPatton, which gave usGeorge C. Scott’s towering, conflicted general. There was also the satirical insanity ofMAS*H.Chisum, on the other hand, was much quieter and more personal in approach. Unlike the other war films with a clear-cut enemy that served to unite in “us-vs-them” fashion—either a foreign power or faceless bureaucracy—Chisumhad a homegrown enemy within.With characters loosely based on real-life figures, the movie stars John Wayne as John Chisum,a frontier tycoon who finds himself between a rock and a hard place when corrupt businessman Lawrence Murphy (Forrest Tucker) teams up with local politicians and law enforcement to acquire anything he can set his hands on, including Chisum’s property.

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Do not forsake these, oh my darlin'.

To Lawrence Murphy, the end justifies the means, even if it means paying bandits to do the scaremongering before he systematically does the grabbing. Wayne’s Chisum, on the other hand, isa reformed gunslinger who gives the law a chance,but this new form of aggression tests his patience. Pushed to the limit,Chisum teams up with the hot-blooded Billy the Kid(Geoffrey Deuelin a smashing performance) to go against the rotten system.It’s a representation that is in line with the era’s disillusionment, something that’s at odds with Wayne’s publicly known stand about the optimism of the Vietnam War. Wayne’s Chisum is a guy who fights not just for survival but also for the ideals he believes define the kind of vision he has for the West he helped conquer.Their fight is over moral ground,with those like Chisum who believe in the possibility of a just society on the one hand and the Murphys of their world on the other.

‘Chisum’ Is a Bridge in John Wayne’s War Filmography

John Wayne’s career was bookended by war. He starred in some of WWII’s greatest movies, includingSands of Iwo JimaandThe Longest Day, as well as in the Civil War filmHow the West Was Won, in which he portrays the legendary General William Sherman. Chisum sits right in the middle as a bridge between genres,a Western that thinks like a war movie as well as for its gray approach to painting war, unlike the black-and-white affairThe Green Beretspresents. Wayne’s Chisum is not some invincible hero like his youthful cowboys. And when he rallies allies, it’s a unifying call that isn’t about patriotism.

McLaglen, who collaborated with Wayne on movies such asthe Western rom-comMcLintock!and the Civil War-setThe Undefeated, directs Chisum with a somber tone. His pictures are defined by sweeping vistas of perched landscapes with intimate close-ups of Wayne’s weathered face. EvenDominic Frontiere’s score is a mournful one, with its strumming strings evoking the era’s disillusionment. While not far in tone from the movies of the era likeApocalypse NowandThe Deer Hunter,Chisumstands out for its lack of the psychedelic chaosthat defines the others. Its power is in its subtle battleground that is set in a town square, where victory means surviving with your soul intact. Granted,Chisummight never match thethunderous applause bestowed on Wayne’sTrue Grit, butits 55-year-old slow-burn story of resistance against corruption will still be relevant for generations to come.

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