Hey, Bob… I just remembered what tomorrow is. Feliz Navidad.
by chuckofish
3 Godfathers (1948) directed by John Ford and starring John Wayne and a cast of Ford stalwarts is one of my very favorite Christmas movies. I always watch it with the boy, because we are the two family members who really love it. Written by Laurance Stallings and Frank S. Nugent, it is the story of three outlaws on the run who discover a dying woman and help her deliver her baby. They swear to bring the infant to safety across the desert, even at the risk of their own lives.
Frank Nugent also collaborated with Ford on such classics as Fort Apache (1948), She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (1948), The Quiet Man (1952), Mister Roberts (1955), The Searchers (1956), Two Rode Together (1961), and Donovan’s Reef (1963). So you know what you can expect: great dialogue, a light touch with some underlying darkness, memorable characters.
John Wayne was seldom better than in this movie. He is in top form. Handsome, manly, graceful, full of repressed feeling and submerged anger. We wonder throughout the movie what has made him turn to a life of lawlessness. Why has he lost his faith? He is clearly a well-brought-up “good guy”. He is more than ably supported by Harry Carey, Jr. and the Mexican film star Pedro Armendáriz as the other two godfathers. The three of them work so well together. There is genuine affection in their verbal wrangling. Mildred Natwick, a personal favorite of mine, has a great cameo part as the doomed mother.
Because it is a Ford movie, the cinematography (by Winton Hoch), especially the outside scenes, are wonderful. The scene when they are trudging across the parched desert and the Abilene Kid lies down to die should be shown to all film students. There is nothing sentimental in this scene. It is heart-breakingly real.
In this movie Ford never resorts to the broad down-homey humor he sometimes does in order to break up what he must have seen as too much tension in a film. Ward Bond is kept in check. Hank Worden too. Jane Darwell and Jack Pennick portray remarkably observed characters that stand out in a very full line-up of characters.
And you gotta love a movie where scripture is used successfully as a plot devise. At least I do.
And, yes, it is a Christmas movie. It is a story of redemption and of three wise men who follow a star and find a baby. FELIZ NAVIDAD.



Oh! You beat me to it. I LOVE this movie! It is one of my very favorite John Wayne movies. And you even got a picture from my favorite scene. Bravo!
Feel free to blog about it too!! It really is one of my favorite movies.
Robert, William, PEDRO! Can’t wait to get home 🙂
I agree on the John Ford humor in this movie. There is plenty of light humor with the tempermental ass (bessy?) and the perley jokes of course. But it’s nothing like Ford inserting the Ken Curtiss (who happens to be one of my childhood favs. Its the singing) character into The Searchers. I will say I do love the scene where John Wayne stumbles, exhausted, into the bar in New Jerusalem at the end of his journey and passes out. The drunken guy with the mustache delivers one of the best, and most memorable lines… “That baby’s PAPPYYYY is one. Tired. Man.”
And let me comment one more time… The picture you included of John Wayne holding the hat up is classic. The shot of Harry Carey Jr. dying in the desert is great because the hat keeps only his head in the shade. It’s encircled, as if in a halo. I love cinematic subtleties like that. Not the in-your-face James Cameron/Steven Spielberg THIS. IS. THE. MESSAGE. ram it down your throat style.
I love that picture! And this movie.
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