Charlton Heston is an
aging cowboy in Will Gries' 1968 gritty Western Will Penny. This
is not the West of larger than life heroes, men of rugged independence
and strength, just ordinary men without glamour who have to struggle for
a living in a tough, bitter, and lonely environment. Will is a loner, not
a "tough" guy with a romanticized image, but he is a survivor. After one
job comes to an end, Penny takes off to look for work along with two companions,
Blue (Lee Majors), a young cow hand, and Dutchy (Anthony Zerbe), a more
experienced worker. Along the way, after a dispute over an elk, Will and
his friends are attacked by Quint (Donald Pleasance), the most demented
preacher this side of Harry Powell (Night of the Hunter). When one of Quint's
sons is killed, the preacher vows revenge and we know we haven't seen the
last of him.
When Will enquires at
a roadside inn about the nearest doctor for Dutchy who accidentally shoots
himself, he meets Catherine Allen (Joan Hackett) and her young son Horace
known as Button (Jon Gries), on their way to Oregon to find her husband.
After leaving Dutchy in the care of a doctor, Will finds a job for the
winter at the Flatiron Ranch as a line rider keeping squatters off the
property. When he arrives at the line rider's cabin, however, he finds
Catherine and her son living there after they were abandoned by their guide.
When Will is suddenly attacked by the Quints and left to die in the cold,
Catherine nurses him back to health and he soon develops a close attachment
to Catherine and Button.
When Will realizes that
he cannot force Catherine and HG to leave, he agrees to let them stay during
the winter and they spend Christmas together and the story becomes both
a tale of conflict with the Quints and his growing love for a married woman.
Although we root for Will to overcome his reluctance to take risks, we
know that Will has known nothing but handling cattle, cannot read or write,
and has little self-confidence or belief that he can ever change. There
are many familiar faces in Will Penny: Slim Pickens, Donald Pleasance,
Lee Majors, Anthony Zerbe, and Bruce Dern. This outstanding ensemble cast
produces a Western that is authentic and intelligent and is probably Heston's
best performance of his career.
Interestingly, the film
opened in the New York's R.K.O. Coliseum at Broadway and 181st Street,
a neighbourhood theatre in which I spent many boyhood afternoons and even
worked as an usher. The Coliseum was one of the most attractive movie theaters
in New York and as described at the time, had "a lovely oval opening, surrounded
with a wooden railing, from which it was possible to look down from the
balcony onto the first floor". Like many movie palaces of my youth, it
is gone now, but the memories remain.