Still at the start of the John Ford filmography, I'm getting a chance to see the creation and experimentation of the director's technique, and I'm constantly surprised at the dichotomy among his movies as being either underwhelming or utterly spectacular. Before I started this queue through Ford history I was only acquainted with the films that made him famous, pictures like The Searchers (1956), She Wore A Yellow Ribbon (1949), My Darling Clementine (1946), etc. I love all of those movies and Ford sticks out as one of my favorite directors. My affection also created a set of expectations for him, and in the back of my brain I imagined every movie he made was as fantastic as the ones I already knew. I don't discredit myself for that either; it's natural to think everything a favorite director makes will be great. When I first began looking at film seriously (sometime in the late high school years), my as yet uninformed opinion told me that Scorsese was infallible, that he was The Best director hands-down. Then I started watching more movies and quickly realized that's a tough title to defend. Scorsese is still one of my favorites and I always find something singularly great in his movies, if not the entire picture itself, but for all of his influence he is not film's finest.
As I watch Ford's earlier obscure movies, like my experiences with Scorsese, there is something intriguing about all of them, too. They're not all masterpieces, but there is always something redeeming in them that catches my eye. It can be anything from a single shot composition or angle of light to the repeated use of an actor. Sometimes it's really not much, but there hasn't been one movie yet that didn't make me think about it historically, compositionally or otherwise. The two that are the subject of this post are good examples of the disparity in the overall product of his films; The Informer (1935) is an "experimental" work that plays with stylized lighting, camera work and sets; it's 100% "artistic," a trait Ford never liked put to his work, according to Joseph McBride's biography In Search of John Ford: A Life. McBride explains that Ford, as an emotionally-guarded Irishman insecure of his masculinity, defensively referred to his filmmaking as "work," not art. Mary of Scotland looks just as experimental for Ford as The Informer, with soft close-ups on Mary's (Katherine Hepburn) face contrasting with cavernous interior shots. What is striking about the latter film was a resemblance I noticed it had to Citizen Kane (1941) in terms of its low-angle camera placements and masterful use of shadow. On this note I should add that the cinematographer was not Gregg Toland (of Kane fame), but Joseph H. August, who worked with Ford again in 1945 on They Were Expendable. Toland took cinematography credit on two of Ford's films that did, however, precede Kane by one year in 1940, those are The Grapes of Wrath and The Long Voyage Home.
The Informer and Mary of Scotland have a similar aesthetic that employs Ford's artistic experimentation, though the former is my favorite of the two, entirely due to its story.
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Both of these films provide an historical thread that leads me to my Ford favorites of later days. One (The Informer) comes out on top as a favorite, while the other (Mary of Scotland) is a reference point for changes and experimentation in Ford's technique; both are valuable in understanding what came next.
What's next on the Ford queue? Young Mr. Lincoln (1939).
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