| Jason Robards, Jr., Stella Stevens,
David Warner, Strother Martin, Slim Pickens.
After the intense bloodshed of The Wild
Bunch (1969), this comic western fable took the opposite approach
to director Sam Peckinpah's continuing examination of the end of
the West. Left for dead by a couple of lizard-slaughtering desperados
in the middle of the desert, prospector Cable Hogue (Jason Robards)
is saved by his unexpected discovery of water "where there
wasn't any." Hogue turns the water hole, felicitously located
near a stagecoach route, into a thriving business, creating a rest
stop for a never-ending series of parched travelers. On his occasional
trips to the closest town, he meets chipper prostitute Hildy (Stella
Stevens), who joins him in his oasis, completing Hogue's little
paradise. But even though Hogue may be able to succeed and avenge
himself against his original attackers, there is one thing that
he cannot stop: progress. Completed before The
Wild Bunch was released, and replete with comical and even musical
interludes, Peckinpah's gently picaresque telling of Hogue's rise
and fall stands in distinct contrast to the visual violence of its
predecessor. The underlying message about the cost of modernity,
however, equals The Wild Bunch in seriousness. The callous randomness
of Hogue's fate is as shocking as the Bunch's final blaze of glory;
as in Robert
Altman's McCabe and Mrs. Miller from the same period, a tool
of "civilization" provokes a most uncivilized end for
an Old West dreamer. Although the film was as light-hearted in approach
as the 1969 smash hit revisionist western Butch Cassidy and the
Sundance Kid, Warner Bros. mishandled the release and it did barely
any business; Peckinpah returned to his trademark gore in his next
film, the controversial Straw Dogs
(1971). Still, The Ballad of Cable Hogue is less an anomaly
for a master of violence than an ironically charming chapter in
Peckinpah's career-long elegy to the western. |