Everything about Bad Day At Black Rock totally explained
Bad Day at Black Rock (
1955) is a film directed by
John Sturges that combines elements of
Westerns and
film noir. It tells the story of a mysterious stranger who arrives at a tiny, isolated town in a desert of the
southwest United States in search of a man. It stars
Spencer Tracy,
Robert Ryan,
Anne Francis,
Dean Jagger,
Walter Brennan,
John Ericson,
Ernest Borgnine and
Lee Marvin. The movie was adapted by Don McGuire and
Millard Kaufman from the story
Bad Day at Hondo by Howard Breslin.
Plot
In 1945, John J. Macreedy (Spencer Tracy), a
one-armed man, steps off the
Southern Pacific train at the desert hamlet of Black Rock. It is the first time the train has stopped there in four years; the little town has very few inhabitants and appears to be dying.
Macreedy is looking for a man named Komoko, but the residents are inexplicably hostile. At the hotel, the young desk clerk, Pete Wirth (John Ericson), says all the rooms are full. The newcomer is none-too-subtly threatened by local tough Hector David (Lee Marvin). But Reno Smith (Robert Ryan), the town's leading citizen, tells Pete to give Macreedy a room. Smith informs Macreedy that Komoko no longer lives in Black Rock; as a Japanese-American, he was
interned for World War II.
Certain something is wrong, Macreedy sees the town sheriff, Tim Horn (Dean Jagger), but the lawman is an alcoholic and clearly afraid of Smith. The town physician and undertaker, Doc Velie (Walter Brennan), advises Macreedy to leave town immediately. Smith lets slip that Komoko is dead. Liz Wirth (Anne Francis), Pete's sister, rents Macreedy a
Jeep. Macreedy finds Liz to be the only civil person in town.
Macreedy drives to nearby Adobe Flats, where Komoko lived. He finds the homestead burned to the ground. He finds plenty of water in the well and a patch of wildflowers growing in the dust. On the way back, Coley Trimble (Ernest Borgnine) tries unsuccessfully to run him off the road.
When, Macreedy returns, Smith learns that Macreedy lost his arm fighting in
Italy. Macreedy tells him he found a grave at the Komoko place, at the only spot where wildflowers are growing. He suspects that Komoko's body is in it. The guess scares Smith. Macreedy discovers that Smith is a virulently anti-Japanese
racist.
Macreedy tries to telephone the
state police, but Pete refuses to put the call through. Doc Velie admits that something terrible happened four years ago, but Smith has everyone too terrified to speak up. Velie offers to drive Macreedy out of town in his
hearse, but Hector walks up and rips the distributor cap and spark plug wires out of the engine.
Macreedy then dictates a
telegram to Hastings (
Russell Collins) addressed to the police. While Macreedy is having lunch, Trimble picks a fight with him, but Macreedy uses
karate to knock him out. Macreedy tells Smith that he knows Smith killed Komoko, but was too cowardly to do it alone, so he'd to involve Hector, Pete, and Coley.
Macreedy spends the night sitting in the hotel lobby, hoping that Smith and his men won't dare attack him in such a public place. Smith and his henchmen are already there. Hastings tries to give Smith a telegram, but Macreedy snatches it away. It is his own unsent message. Doc Velie accuses Hastings of committing a federal crime and demands that Sheriff Horn do something. Horn tries to confront Smith, but Smith just takes his badge and gives it to Hector. Hector tears up the telegram.
After Smith and Hector leave, Macreedy and Velie attempt to get Horn to enforce the law, but he refuses to become involved. Macreedy works on Pete; Pete finally tells him what happened in 1941. Komoko leased some farmland from Smith, who knew that there was no water there. However, Komoko dug a well and found some, making the land valuable. Smith was unable to break the lease. After Smith was turned down for enlistment after the
attack on Pearl Harbor, he and the other men spent the day drinking, then decided to scare Komoko. The old man barricaded himself inside his home, but the men set the place on fire. When Komoko emerged, his clothes on fire, Smith shot him, much to Pete's surprise.
Macreedy finally reveals his motivation. Komoko's son died trying to save Macreedy's life in combat. Macreedy was bringing the son's medal to his father. The loss of his arm had left Macreedy wallowing in self-pity and despair, but Komoko's murder gave him a purpose again.
Pete gets his sister to bring the Jeep. Pete then lures the watching Hector into the hotel office, where Doc Velie knocks him out with the metal nozzle of a fire hose. Liz drives Macreedy out of town.
When Liz stops the Jeep in a canyon, Macreedy realizes he's been betrayed. Smith begins firing at Macreedy, who shelters behind the Jeep. Liz rushes to Smith, despite Macreedy's warning. Smith tells her she's to die, along with the rest of his accomplices. He shoots her in the back when she runs. Macreedy finds a discarded bottle and fills it with gasoline, creating a
Molotov cocktail. When Smith climbs down to get a better shot, Macreedy throws it; Smith is splashed with burning fuel.
As dawn breaks, Macreedy drives up to the town jail with the injured Smith and Liz's body. Velie and Horn rush out. They had mustered up enough courage to jail Hector David and Coley Trimble. The state police are called in to take the murderers away. As Macreedy gets ready to leave, Doc Velie asks him for Kumoko's medal to help Black Rock heal. Macreedy gives it to him and boards the train.
Production
Nicholas Schenck, MGM's president at the time, nearly didn't allow the picture to be made, because he felt the story was subversive.
The film's producer, Dore Schary, wanted Spencer Tracy as Macreedy. Concerned that Tracy might not agree, Schary ordered the script changed so that Macreedy was a one-armed man. He rightly concluded that no actor would turn down the chance to play a character with a handicap.
This was Spencer Tracy's last film for MGM. This was MGM's first motion picture to be filmed in Cinemascope.
Preview audiences reacted negatively to the film's original opening sequence. A new shot, showing the speeding train rushing at the camera, was created instead. The shot was taken from a helicopter as it flew away from the moving train. The film was run in reverse to create the opening shot.
Bad Day at Black Rock was filmed in
Lone Pine, California and the nearby
Alabama Hills, one of hundreds of movies that have been filmed in the area since 1920. The "town" of Black Rock, Arizona was built adjacent to the Lone Pine railroad station, which was the last stop on the
Southern Pacific Railroad's "Jawbone Branch," which served the northern
Mojave Desert and
Owens Valley. (Just north of Lone Pine, at Owenyo, the Southern Pacific's standard
gauge tracks ended and the narrow gauge tracks running into Nevada and originally laid by the Carson and Colorado Railroad began, requiring that everything traveling both north and south had to be transferred to rail cars appropriate for the track width.)
Cast
Critical reception
The staff at
Variety magazine liked the film and wrote, "Considerable excitement is whipped up in this suspense drama, and fans who go for tight action will find it entirely satisfactory. Besides telling a yarn of tense suspense, the picture is concerned with a social message on civic complacency."
Bosley Crowther, film critic for
The New York Times, liked John Sturges' direction and the ensemble acting, writing, "Slowly, through a process of guarded discourse, which Director John Sturges has built up by patient, methodical pacing of his almost completely male cast, an eerie light begins to glimmer...Quite as interesting as the drama, which smacks of being contrived, are the types of masculine creatures paraded in this film. Mr. Tracy is sturdy and laconic as a war veteran with a lame arm (which doesn't hamper him, however, in fighting judo style). Mr. Ryan is angular and vicious as the uneasy king-pin of the town, and Walter Brennan is cryptic and caustic as the local mortician with a streak of spunk. Ernest Borgnine as a potbellied bully (he was Fatso in
From Here to Eternity), Dean Jagger as a rum-guzzling sheriff, Lee Marvin as a dimwitted tough, John Ericson as a nervous hotel clerk and Russell Collins as a station-master are all good, too."
Awards
Wins
Cannes Film Festival: Best Actor, Spencer Tracy; (tied with the ensemble cast in Bolshaya semya; 1955.
Nominations
Cannes Film Festival: Golden Palm, John Sturges; 1955.
Academy Awards: Oscar, Best Actor in a Leading Role, Spencer Tracy; Best Director, John Sturges; Best Writing, Screenplay, Millard Kaufman; 1956.
British Academy of Film and Television Arts: BAFTA Film Award, Best Film from any Source, USA; UN Award, USA; 1956.
Directors Guild of America: DGA Award, Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Motion Pictures, John Sturges; 1956.
Writers Guild of America: WGA Screen Award, Best Written American Drama, Millard Kaufman; 1956.Further Information
Get more info on 'Bad Day At Black Rock'.
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