Ben Johnson Movies: Oscar-Winning Actor (original) (raw)

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Ben JohnsonBen Johnson isn’t exactly what one would call a movie icon; Johnson isn’t even a Western icon, despite his presence in numerous Old (and not-so-Old) West movies during his 50+-year career.

Johnson’s semi-obscurity today is a great reason to celebrate Turner Classic Movies’ devoting one whole day to him as part of its “Summer Under the Stars” film series. (See TCM’s Ben Johnson Movie Schedule further below.)

TCM will be presenting 12 Ben Johnson movies, including one premiere, the 1957 Western War Drums, directed by Viennese filmmaker Reginald Le Borg (Voodoo Island, Sins of Jezebel), and starring former Tarzan Lex Barker. The movie sounds like a hoot: Mexican señorita Riva (Joan Taylor, actually from Geneva, Illinois) is wanted and desired by both a white trader (Johnson) and an Apache chief named Mangas Coloradas (Barker). Make sure to keep an eye out for future Best Actor Oscar nominee Stuart Whitman in a bit part as a certain Johnny Smith. [Update: The name Mangas Coloradas apparently means “Red Sleeves” – not “Colored Mangoes”; also, he was a historical Apache war leader, not some Hollywood studio creation.]

Ramon Novarro Beyond Paradise

Western and baby fans may enjoy John Ford’s good-looking 3 Godfathers (1948), a highly sentimental tale about three outlaws (John Wayne, Pedro Armendáriz, Harry Carey Jr) who, upon becoming aware of their fatherly instincts, risk life, liberty, and the pursuit of worldly pleasures so as to return a newborn to civilization. Inspired by the fable of the Three Magi, 3 Godfathers is a remake of Richard Boleslawski’s 1936 movie starring Chester Morris. Ford’s conventional Western She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (1949) is even better looking than 3 Godfathers – and it’s better remembered as well. Wayne stars along with Joanne Dru and John Agar.

The year after She Wore a Yellow Ribbon, Ford gave Johnson a lead role in another Western, Wagon Master (1950). I’ve never watched it, but it’s not one of the director’s most revered efforts. However great-looking and despite its mostly solid cast, neither is Cheyenne Autumn (1964), a rare Ford Western in which Native Americans are portrayed as actual human beings. Richard Widmark and the excellent Carroll Baker star.

Ford was supposedly instrumental in getting Johnson to accept a supporting role in The Last Picture Show (1971), Peter Bogdanovich’s beautifully shot (Robert Surtees) early 1950s-set drama about drab lives in a small Texas town where the last movie house is about to be shut down – after a screening of Howard Hawks’ Red River (1948), in which Johnson performed stunt work. Johnson was initially reluctant to act in a movie that featured cursing (but was he okay with the blood-red violence in The Wild Bunch?); he was recompensed for temporarily setting these particular scruples aside when the Academy handed him a Best Supporting Actor Oscar.

Ben Johnson Day also includes three Sam Peckinpah efforts: Major Dundee (1965), starring Charlton Heston; the modern-day Western Junior Bonner (1972), starring Steve McQueen, Robert Preston, and Ida Lupino; and the controversial classic The Wild Bunch (1969), starring William Holden, Robert Ryan, and Ernest Borgnine.

Ben Johnson movies: TCM schedule (EDT)

6:00 AM 3 GODFATHERS (1948)
Director: John Ford. Cast: John Wayne, Pedro Armendáriz, Harry Carey Jr. Ben Johnson. Color. 106 min.

8:00 AM FORT DEFIANCE (1951)
Director: John Rawlins. Cast: Dane Clark, Ben Johnson, Peter Graves. Color. 82 min.

9:30 AM WILD STALLION (1952)
Director: Lewis D. Collins.
Cast: Ben Johnson, Edgar Buchanan, Martha Hyer.
Color. 70 min.

11:00 AM WAR DRUMS (1957)
Director: Reginald LeBorg.
Cast: Lex Barker, Joan Taylor, Ben Johnson.
Color. 75 min.

12:30 PM CHEYENNE AUTUMN (1964)
Director: John Ford.
Cast: Richard Widmark, Carroll Baker, Karl Malden. Edward G. Robinson. James Stewart. Ben Johnson.
Color. 156 min. Letterbox.

3:30 PM MAJOR DUNDEE (1965)
Director: Sam Peckinpah.
Cast: Charlton Heston, Richard Harris, Jim Hutton. Ben Johnson.
Color. 136 min. Letterbox.

6:00 PM JUNIOR BONNER (1972)
Director: Sam Peckinpah.
Cast: Steve McQueen, Robert Preston, Ida Lupino. Ben Johnson.
Color. 100 min. Letterbox.

8:00 PM MIGHTY JOE YOUNG (1949)
Director: Ernest B. Schoedsack. Cast: Terry Moore, Ben Johnson, Robert Armstrong. Color. 94 min.

9:45 PM WAGON MASTER (1950)
Director: John Ford. Cast: Ben Johnson, Joanne Dru, Harry Carey Jr.. B&W. 86 min.

11:15 PM SHE WORE A YELLOW RIBBON (1949)
Director: John Ford.
Cast: John Wayne, Joanne Dru, John Agar, Mildred Natwick, George O’Brien, Ben Johnson, Victor McLaglen, Harry Carey Jr., Arthur Shields, Tom Tyler, Chief John Big Tree, Noble Johnson.
Color. 104 min.

1:15 AM THE LAST PICTURE SHOW (1971)
Director: Peter Bogdanovich.
Cast: Timothy Bottoms, Jeff Bridges, Cybill Shepherd. Cloris Leachman. Ellen Burstyn. Ben Johnson.
B&W. 126 min. Letterbox.

3:30 AM THE WILD BUNCH (1969)
Director: Sam Peckinpah.
Cast: William Holden, Ernest Borgnine, Robert Ryan. Ben Johnson.
Color. 144 min. Letterbox.


notes/references

TCM website.