There’s
a story Howard Hawks tells, which we might take with a grain of salt, Hawks
being known to embroider, when it suited him, but it goes like this. He’s on a fishing trip with Hemingway, and
Hemingway starts bitching that
Hawks took the project to William Faulkner. Faulkner’s first script had been for Hawks, in 1932, and they worked on six pictures together, the best known being To Have and Have Not, in 1944, and The Big Sleep, two years later. It’s probably not news that Faulkner and Hemingway took potshots at each other over the course of thirty years, but there doesn’t seem to have been bad blood on Faulkner’s part. Be that as it may, Faulkner told Hawks that To Have and Have Not would never make a movie. The censorship problems aside, there’s no story. Well, we gotta do something, Hawks tells him. And they did. They came up with a back story, everything that happened beforehand, and led up to where the book starts. Faulkner’s script is essentially a prequel to the novel. Hawks later said they had so much material there was enough left over for another movie.
Actually, there was enough left over for two.
Michael Curtiz cast
The Gun Runners isn’t
long on moral context. Audie Murphy is
very good in it, but he isn’t playing somebody who’s conflicted, he’s playing somebody
decent. (I think Audie Murphy’s very underrated; his
two best performances are for John Huston, The
Red Badge of Courage and The
Unforgiven.) Don
Siegel says he didn’t think Audie was right for the part, but Siegel says he
didn’t want to do the picture anyway. In
any event, it’s a very tight movie, carefully set up, with good support –
Everett Sloane, Jack Elam, Dick Jaeckel – but Eddie Albert steals the show as
the heavy, full of smiling menace. It
might remind you of the dynamic in the Randolph Scott pictures that Scott made
with Budd Boetticher: the charming villain, cat-like and purring, the hero out
of his depth and treading water.
There is, of course, one more. Islands in the Stream, which is Hemingway’s own remake. The novel was left unfinished, so the script for the movie interpolates not a little from To Have and Have Not, particularly in the third act. This is a class-A picture, no question. The cast, with George C. Scott in the lead, the director, Franklin J. Schaffner, fresh off Papillon, and using the same cinematographer, Fred Koenekamp, the swoony score, by Jerry Goldsmith – the composer’s personal favorite. My chief reservation is that it’s a shade too reverent. They could have done with a little B-picture subversion, Marie Windsor snapping her gum or her garters.
Maybe that should have been Hemingway’s complaint, that the movies were too respectful.He’s said to have liked Gary Cooper in For Whom the Bell Tolls, but they sure sanitized the crap out of the novel. I think Hawks had the right idea. Take a second-rate book, and turn it into a pretty good picture. Treat it with kid gloves, you’ll only embalm it. Leave out the pretense, keep the mischief.



