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Dedicated to the Study and Appreciation
of the Movies and Personalities of the Golden Age of Hollywood

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Wyler Catches Fire: Hell's Heroes (reprinted)

July 1 will mark the 110th anniversary of the birth of
William Wyler (1902-81), peerless movie director
par excellence. The occasion is being observed
by a blogathon hosted by The Movie Projector 
over the next six days, in which many of my
fellow members in the Classic Movie Blog
Association (CMBA) will be holding forth on
their favorite Wyler pictures. Go here for a
list of blogathon participants and links to
their individual posts as they go up.

For my part, in conjunction with The
Movie Projector's blogathon, I'm
republishing a series of five posts I
did on Wyler in 2010, one a day for
five of the six days of the blogathon.
Happy Birthday, Willy, and thanks 
for the memories!


 *                    *                    *


In his biography of William Wyler, A Talent for Trouble, author Jan Herman makes the kind of statement movie buffs love to see become obsolete: "There are no extant prints of the sound version of Hell's Heroes." Herman then goes on to discuss Wyler's first talkie in terms of its silent version (like many early sound pictures, Hell's Heroes was released silent as well, for theaters that had not yet been wired for sound).

A Talent for Trouble was published seventeen years ago, and I'm sure Herman himself is pleased to know that his pronouncement is no longer operative. Fortunately for us, Hell's Heroes was remade by MGM in 1936 under author Peter B. Kyne's original title Three Godfathers (and again in 1948 as 3 Godfathers, that time directed by John Ford and starring Duke Wayne), so ownership of this Universal picture devolved upon Metro.

In those days, when Metro remade a movie, it was studio practice to buy up and suppress (some say destroy) any earlier versions. If those originals were in fact earmarked for the incinerator, we probably have a fumbling studio bureaucracy to thank for the fact that we can still see Paramount's 1932 Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Universal's 1936 Show Boat, the British Gaslight of 1940, even MGM's own silent Ben-Hur, and other movies that the suits at the Tiffany Studio took it into their heads to remount over the years.

We can certainly thank MGM's acquisitiveness for the fact that these titles from other studios ended up in the MGM library and are now owned by Warner Home Video. The Warner Archive offers a double-feature package of Hell's Heroes with MGM's 1936 remake, and it affords us an opportunity to appreciate this landmark in William Wyler's career that wasn't available to Jan Herman in 1995.

Peter B. Kyne's short novel The Three Godfathers was published in 1913 in The Saturday Evening Post, and was his first great success in a writing career that would carry him through 1940 as a popular and well-read author. The story has a mythic resonance: three outlaws on the run from their latest crime come across a dying woman in childbirth in the desert. Before the doomed mother dies she extracts a promise from the three desperadoes to take her baby to safety, and the helpless child awakens the latent humanity of the three unregenerate bad men.

By the time Carl Laemmle Jr. decided to make The Three Godfathers the basis of Universal's first outdoor all-talkie, the studio had already gotten more than its money's worth out of it. There was a screen version in 1916 starring Harry Carey, and another in 1919 titled Marked Men, again with Carey and this time directed by John Ford. Both pictures had been good moneymakers for Universal. (There was another Ford western in 1921, Action, which the IMDb claims was based on Kyne's story, while Clive Hirschhorn's The Universal Story gives an entirely different and unrelated plot. Alas, this is one of Ford's many westerns presumed lost, so we may never resolve the discrepancy.)

To direct the new version of the story, Laemmle chose 27-year-old William Wyler. Wyler had begun work on the Universal City lot as an errand boy, and after a rocky start -- at one point studio chief Irving Thalberg dubbed him "Worthless Willy" -- Wyler had risen to where he was considered an asset to the studio. Hell's Heroes was to be his first talkie, but he was no stranger to westerns, having cut his directorial teeth on them from 1925 on -- first a series of nearly two dozen two-reel horse operas for Universal's so-called "Mustang" unit, then five-reel features in the "Blue Streak" series.

Wyler began shooting in California's Mojave Desert and Panamint Valley, just south of Death Valley, on August 9, 1929. Jan Herman tells us that the temperature on location rose as high as 110 degrees Fahrenheit, but those of us who know the California desert in August suspect that's probably a conservative figure -- 115 to 125 sounds more like it. In any case, one can only shudder at what the poor cameraman in his booth -- like a meat locker, but without refrigeration -- must have gone through. He must have needed five gallons of water a day just to ward off dehydration.

In the movie, the three outlaws -- Charles Bickford, Raymond Hatton and Fred Kohler -- are on the run after robbing the Bank of New Jerusalem on the edge of the desert (and killing the cashier, who we later learn was the father of the baby they rescue -- a nice detail not in Kyne's story, supplied by scenarist Tom Reed). For Wyler's company, New Jerusalem was Bodie, Calif., an erstwhile Gold Rush boomtown near the California-Nevada border.

Bodie was near the tail-end of its boom-and-bust history in the late summer of 1929. Originally founded on a nearby gold strike in 1859, it had grown by 1880 to a reported population of 10,000, home to 65 saloons and other establishments of ill repute. By 1929 the population hovered around 100. Three years after the Hell's Heroes crew left town, so the story goes, a young boy at a church social threw a tantrum when he was given Jell-O instead of ice cream. Sent home as a punishment, he set fire to his bed and burned down over 90 percent of the town. The final blow came in 1942, when War Production Board Order L-208 closed down all nonessential gold mines in the country, including Bodie's; even the U.S. Post Office closed. Today, what's left of Bodie is a California State Park and a National Historic Landmark.





Notwithstanding the efforts of that youthful
Depression-Era pyromaniac, traces of Bodie
as it appears in Hell's Heroes survive to the
present day. Here's Bodie's Methodist Church,
which figures prominently in the movie's
opening and closing scenes, as it appears today.







And here it is again, 
on the left edge of the frame, 
at the top of Bodie's -- er, that is, 
New Jerusalem's -- dusty main street.







Here's a glimpse of town
and the hills beyond
in the closing moments 
of the movie ...







... and a similar view taken more 
recently, showing what's left 
of the same street.




Hell's Heroes was a success for Universal and for Wyler personally. He'd become an asset to Universal for his westerns, but outside the studio Universal's westerns -- cranked out in days for small-time houses in neighborhoods and farm towns -- hardly deserved notice. Now people were noticing. Over at Warner Bros., Darryl F. Zanuck ordered all his producers to see "this picture by this new director."

What specifically excited Zanuck was a tracking shot that Wyler inserted as a way to sidestep a conflict with his leading man, Charles Bickford (on the right in this picture; the others are Raymond Hatton, left, and Fred Kohler). Bickford was a recent import from Broadway -- Heroes was his third picture, made and released hot on the heels of the other two -- and he evidently didn't cotton much to being directed by some Hollywood rube who didn't know anything about real acting. Herman tells us he even went out of his way to undermine Wyler with his fellow actors, an unconscionable breach of protocol then, and an actionable offense under union rules now.

Their particular conflict came over a scene late in the movie as Bickford, the last survivor of the three bandits, trudges through the desert with the baby in his arms. Wyler wanted Bickford, carrying a rifle as well as the child, to first drop the butt-end of the rifle in the dust and drag it for a distance before dropping it altogether. Bickford refused. He insisted on stopping in his tracks, looking at the rifle, then hurling it away from him into the dirt.

I almost wish this shot survived in the Universal vaults; I'd love to see it, because it sounds perfectly ridiculous -- just the kind of grandiloquent gesture you'd expect from a stage-trained ham with a lot to learn about movie acting. A man dying of thirst won't be able to summon the strength to throw a heavy rifle at all -- and besides, shooting the scene in a real desert, he'd have to throw it about a hundred yards before it looked as impressive to the camera as the actor doing it thought it did.

Wyler's solution was ingeniously simple. He filmed the scene the way Bickford wanted to play it. Then, one day when Bickford wasn't on call, he dressed a prop man in Bickford's boots, had him make tracks in the desert sand, and photographed them with a moving camera.


First we see just the bandit's footprints,
occasionally staggering and shuffling ...








... then the tracks and the divot dug by the rifle butt ...

 

... then the discarded rifle itself ...
... and so on through other items discarded by the bandit under the grueling desert sun. When we next see Bickford's character, he's stumbling along clutching the child, discarding the last of his burden -- the gold from his bank robbery. 

Bickford's reaction to this end run is not recorded. He no doubt didn't see it until the picture was finished. Did he recognize the tracking shot as a directorial tour de force and an improvement on his own idea? Maybe not; Bickford was always headstrong and cantankerous, and I suspect the whole thing rankled: when he next worked with Wyler -- 28 years later, on The Big Country -- they took up squabbling again as if they had never left off.

But it's not as if Wyler ruined Bickford's budding career. In fact, Hell's Heroes is probably where he first gave evidence of the actor he'd become, and it's still one of his best performances. Along with the four other movies he appeared in during 1930, this one marked him as a strong and distinctive actor who bore watching. 

It marked Wyler as someone worth watching, too. Variety's review called it "gripping and real. Unusually well cast and directed." True, the movie's director was misidentified as "Wilbur Wylans" -- but it was the last time anybody would make that mistake.

One who didn't like Hell's Heroes, it must be said, was Peter B. Kyne. Asked to provide a complimentary letter for studio publicity, he indignantly refused. "Frankly," he wrote to Tom Reed, "I think your Mr. Wyler murdered our beautiful story ... I don't care how much money the picture makes, my conscience will not let me cheer for the atrocious murder of one of the few works of art I have ever turned out ... I will not write any letter to Mr. Wyler. The young gentleman must fight his weary way through life without a helping hand from me."

My, aren't we cranky! Maybe Kyne was miffed that the movie altered the character dynamics, embellished the plot and changed the ending of his story. Whatever got him all riled up, there's no getting around the fact -- the man had rocks in his head. Hell's Heroes is a terrific picture, and in 1930 everybody but him knew it. Of the three versions of the story I've seen, it is easily my favorite, and certainly the simplest and least sentimental.

The acting is straightforward and unpretentious, and at a swift, lean 68 minutes the movie spends no time wallowing. The presentation is hard-eyed and terse, which makes the three desperados' conversion to decency and self-sacrifice all the more persuasive and moving. As the first of the bandits to die, Raymond Hatton has a line that's straight out of Kyne's story: "Don't let my godson die between two thieves." Hatton's reading of the line, and the staging of his suicide as the other outlaws plod doggedly away, are presented with a simplicity that -- in hands other than Hatton's and Wyler's -- could easily have become lachrymose and bathetic. 

There is a creative use of sound, too, that Jan Herman could not have appreciated in 1995, not having an extant print to review. Notice especially the last scene, as Bickford's character staggers into that church, the in-and-out subjective sound, so eloquently showing us the man's delirious condition. 

Seen today, too, the movie's age works for it. The primitive technology of early sound, the rugged conditions on location, the stark frontier setting and the primal power of the story all work together to make Hell's Heroes feel not like a movie but a relic, in the best sense of the word -- something rare and precious brought back by a time traveler just returned from 1880 or 1900. 

As things turned out, young Mr. Wyler fought his weary way through life rather well, with or without Peter Kyne's help, and Kyne himself lived long enough to see it. By the time Kyne died in 1957, he had seen -- or could have, if he cared to notice -- Wyler direct two of his three best picture Oscar winners, win two of his three Oscars for direction, and receive ten of his twelve Oscar nominations. 

I'll have more to say about Wyler later. This is just a respectful -- I might even say, given the subject matter, reverent -- look back at the movie that really put him on the map. If it really was lost, as Jan Herman said, in 1995, it's not anymore. Hallelujah.



23 comments:

Classicfilmboy said...

Great post on a film I have not seen. I will need to check it out.

Caftan Woman said...

Kyne's attitude is indeed puzzling. I love your fond designation of "relic" to identify "Hell's Heroes". Fascinating background on that Wilbur Waylans fellow.

Silver Screenings said...

This is a really interesting look at Wyler's early career as well as the early days of film making. Great historical photos, too!

Anonymous said...

Thanks for your usual perceptive - and entertaining - analysis. A tip of the hat, too, to the Warner Archive, for the innovative approach of including originals/remakes on double-feature DVDs; they did the same with MADAME X.

Anonymous said...

Thanks again for another perceptive - and entertaining analysis. A tip of the hat also to The Warner Archives for their double-feature effort (they did the same with MADAME X, including Ruth Chatterton's original and Gladys George's remake on the same DVS).

R. D. Finch said...

Jim, an admirably thorough and exceedingly well illustrated post on what is considered Wyler's first important film, the one that pointed ahead to the great things he would do later. Unfortunately, it's the only film in the blogathon I haven't yet seen. I tried to get it from one of the DVD rental services I use before the blogathon started and it's still at the top of my queue although not yet available.

I have recently seen the two later versions of the same story--Richard Boleslawski's excellent 1936 version and John Ford's rather sticky 1949 version, both called "Three Godfathers." So I'm looking forward to seeing
Wyler's film for comparison, especially after reading your excellent post again.

Jim Lane said...

Thanks, all! Filmboy, you'll find Hell's Heroes well worth your time; it was certainly an eye-opener for me. It also offers a hint of what Wyler's work was like in those early silent westerns for Universal, most of which are probably lost.

R.D., if Hell's Heroes is in your Netflix queue, don't hold your breath. For reasons known only to themselves, Netflix doesn't offer any titles from the Warner Archive, and that's the only source for this one. I urge you to consider buying the double feature; it's well worth the price for a Wyler enthusiast like you, especially since you admire the '36 remake (which, in its MGM way, is almost as good as Wyler's picture).

Rick29 said...

Jim, I haven't seen this version of the THREE GODFATHERS, but thoroughly enjoyed your well-researched (and illustrated) article. Well done!

FlickChick said...

Thank you for posting this very interesting piece - lots of great info on a film I've never seen (yet). I look forward to the rest of your series.

Brandie said...

I have yet to see this movie, but I was nonetheless fascinated by your detailed and entertaining post!

Ken Anderson said...

A fascinating read! I'm unfamiliar with the film personally, but have read about it and it's many incarnations over the years. You really bring Wyler's version to vivid life what with all the backstory, and my favorite, that marvelous anecdote about the filming of the scene with the rifle. Amazing how a well-written piece on a film can get one re-thinking seeing a movie that once held little interest. Thanks!

R. D. Finch said...

Jim, thanks again for your superb contribution to the Wyler blogathon (also, in advance, for the contributions to come). I also use a service called ClassicFlix which does have "Hell's Heroes" and other Wyler titles not available from Netflix. It's a small outfit and apparently they don't have a lot of copies of some titles so there is often a wait, which can sometimes be considerable, to get them. They also have many other titles of interest to fans of classic film that you can't get from Netflix. There's a link to their selection of Wyler films on the Wyler blogathon page at The Movie Projector.

Jim Lane said...

Thanks again, everyone; your response to this reprint has been most gratifying!

R.D.: Thanks for the tip re ClassicFlix. I checked it out, and others should too; looks like a nifty resource -- can't wait to have time to go exploring in detail. (BTW, I just watched Hell's Heroes again, and I still say you well might end up wanting to own it.)

Judy said...

A great piece, Jim, and looking forward to reading your others in the blogathon. I'm another of those who haven't seen this one - Warner Archive titles are not available in the UK, except to buy on import - but I will hope to do so in the future!

Kevin Deany said...

I love Ford's "Three Godfathers" but this one sounds like a dandy. Warner Archive, here I come. I was greatly amused by reading the dust-ups between Bickford and Wyler while shooting "The Big Country." I did not include them in my piece on that film, but you're right, it's like the squabling that occurred on the 1930 film started right up again 28 years later. Another great post, Jim.

Kimberly J.M. Wilson said...

Jim, I've never see Hell's Heroes. I found Peter B. Kyne's response to the film as idiotic as you, though. Writers are known to be temperamental, but he takes the cake. Lots of great info in here!

Grand Old Movies said...

Really great post on what I think is one of Wyler's most underappreciated films. I really like how hard and gritty Wyler made this film - and in spite of their difficult relationship, Wyler drew a wonderful performance out of Bickford (and came up with a great solution to Bickford's stubborness!) -thanks so much.

Jim Lane said...

Great to hear from you, GOM! I don't think Hell's Heroes is so much "underappreciated" as underseen, as many of the comments here, from veteran Wyler admirers, attest. I think if TCM decided to run the picture once or twice a month for a while, it would soon have the reputation it had (however briefly) in 1930, and which you and I agree it deserves today.

Karen said...

I greatly enjoyed your post, Jim -- I'd never even heard of this film before, but I'd like to check it out (even though I'm generally not a big western lover). I also appreciated your "then and now" pictures!

Jon P said...

I love this film! It has haunted me since I first saw it ten years ago: the awfulness, and yet the majesty of the desert were what attracted me at first. I love how the fluidity of a silent western (probably with some dubbing in the bank robbery scene) and the absolute starkness of an early sound film combine here so well. This makes the contemporaneous Virginian look like little better than a filmed play. Also, the dialogue, with a few completely genuine curse words (something that only the earliest sound films even have) makes this all the more stark.

Laura said...

I just saw this and my mind was blown when I recognized Bodie on screen. I've been there many times and have never seen it in a film.

I was so glad to find your article. Your closing description about a time traveler is exactly right -- I told my dad after I watched it I felt like I'd been time traveling! Seeing the town as a living, breathing entity was amazing.

As a child I traveled the 13-mile road off Highway 395 multiple times when it was all dirt -- it was a hard trek which sometimes caused us to get carsick. It can't have been easy getting the movie equipment there in 1920s vehicles. Today only the last 3 miles are dirt so it's easier to get there.

I'll be linking to this in my post on the movie. Thanks so much for it!

Best wishes,
Laura

Jim Lane said...

Thanks, Laura, for your kind words, and for sharing your own memories of Bodie. I hope to get out there one of these days.

I'm honored that you plan to link to Cinedrome when you post on Hell's Heroes yourself. Please, though, if you would, link to the post at my new site:
http://jimlanescinedrome.com/wyler-catches-fire-hells-heroes

The layout of the new site is more stylish and versatile, and the post looks much better there, I think.

Thanks again for stopping by, and for linking!

Laura said...

Hi Jim!

Thanks for your comments both here and at my site -- I have updated my post with your newer link.

If you can visit Bodie, I'm certain you'll find it a fascinating experience, especially having seen this film.

Best wishes,
Laura

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