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Home From the Hill (1960)
In director Vincente Minnelli's highly-stylized, widescreen
CinemaScopic, romantic, coming-of-age melodrama set in the late 1950s
in small-town Texas, about a dysfunctional western family:
- the main characters: strident, arrogant, callous
and authoritative town patriarch Captain Wade Hunnicutt (Robert
Mitchum) - a philandering macho man with hunting guns and dogs
and booze -- lovelessly married to aloof, angry, bitter, frigid,
scornful and estranged, blue-eyed wife Hannah (Eleanor Parker),
with an acknowledged, gullible and soft
17-year-old son Theron Hunnicutt (George Hamilton)
- the early duck hunting scene when Wade was nearly
killed (wounded) by irate, recently-married cuckolded husband John
Ellis (Tom Gilson); Wade was saved by his loyal and ambitious hired
ranch-hand Raphael "Rafe" Copley (George Peppard) who defensively
pushed him away - revealed later to be Wade's unacknowledged illegitimate
son (from a much earlier liaison with Ann Copley before marrying
Hannah) and Theron's half-brother - establishing the fact that Wade
had a well-known reputation for possessively womanizing most of the
town's females
- as Theron was about to turn 18, Wade (in his study
with red leather sofas and dogs running about, and a shotgun in Theron's
hands) worried about his son's lack of manliness; Wade's decision
was to indoctrinate Theron into a macho lifestyle (hunting, drinking,
etc) with the help of Rafe; he delivered a memorable speech to Theron: "I'm
not sendin' you out for game. I'm not askin' you to go out and bring
meat home for the table. What I'm talkin' about is comin' face to
face with your own courage, your own cunning, your own endurance,
because what every man hunts out there is himself...I had something
from my father that his father gave to him. I'm gonna give it to
you. It's late but it's not too late. You know one of these days,
I'm gonna die, Theron. You're gonna come into 40,000 acres of land:
cotton, beef, goats, timber. Takes a special kind of man to handle
that. Kind of man that walks around with nothing in his pockets.
No identification because everyone knows who you are. No cash because
anyone in town would be happy to lend you anything you need. No keys
'cause you don't keep a lock on a single thing you own. And no watch
because time waits on you. What I'm saying is, you're gonna have
to stand up and be counted. You're gonna be known in these parts
as a man or as a momma's boy"
- Wade also expressed his worry about excessive coddling
to Hannah and told her about Theron's reputation as a self-doubting
Momma's boy: ("You've had him for seventeen years. Now I want
him. I'm gonna take him out in the company of men. Whether you like
it or not, Hannah, that's boy's gonna come of age...You can't stop
me")
- Rafe's words of advice to Theron: "You gotta
learn to make out on your own. These tears and cryin' and carryin'
on is a waste of time. Colored folks know that, and little white
orphan boys gotta learn it too, so hitch up your pants and be a man.
I never cried again where anyone could see me"
- the exciting two-day pig-hunting chase sequence when
Theron plunged into the swampy woods and finally killed a huge tusked
wild boar on his own - proving his strength, masculinity, identity,
and receiving his father's acceptance
- the scene of Theron's growing friendship and eventual
scheduled date (arranged by Rafe!) with tomboyish Elizabeth "Libby" Halstead
(Luana Patten), the daughter of Albert Halstead (Everett Sloane),
a local merchant-businessman - when Theron went to the door to pick
up Libby to take her to a celebratory, coming-out pig-killing BBQ
party, he was denied even entering by her raging and judgmental father,
without an explanation (but obviously due to the reputation and history
of infidelity of Wade)
- Hannah's first cemetery encounter with Rafe at a pauper's
burial ground where he was tending the gravesite of his own mother,
Ann Copley; afterwards, Rafe walked along the riverside with a hoe
over his shoulders (looking like a prisoner in stocks), and came
upon Theron enjoying an amorous picnic scene with Libby at a secluded
spot; afterwards they would engage in love-making
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Rafe at Gravesite of His Mother
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- Theron's confusion and outrage upon learning from
Hannah about his family's dysfunctionality and his father's past
history of cheating: ("Everyone knows about your father...Oh,
he's not the kind of a man you think he is. Why, there's hardly
a woman in town whose name hasn't been linked with his at one time
or another"), and the suggestion of his own cursed, passed-down
tendency to continue his father's unfaithfulness; due to his emotionally-scarred
upbringing, Theron retaliated by breaking up with Libby and swearing
off marriage
- the conflict between father and son -- after being
told by Hannah that he was Rafe's half-brother, Theron challenged
and confronted his father regarding Rafe: "I don't want any
part of you....He's the best there is, and if you were any kind -
if you were any kind of a man, you'd be proud of him and love him!" Wade
countered: "His mother was a tramp, a sandhill tacky havin'
her child by the edge of a ditch" - Theron renounced his father
and moved away to take a job in a cotton mill
- in a supermarket diner, the scene of Libby telling
Rafe that he ought to be eating more healthy foods, followed by her
tearful and despairing confession to him about feeling disgraced
that she was pregnant with Theron's child; a compassionate Rafe was
persuaded to marry Libby to legitimize her situation, and they became
husband and wife
- the scene of Wade shot to death in his home by a volatile,
unseen intruder (revealed as Albert), who wrongly thought through
town rumors that Libby's baby was actually Wade's; to seek revenge,
Theron pursued Albert and gunned him down (in the same place that
he shot the boar) - the killing was ruled self-defense; Theron then
told Rafe that he could never face Libby again (after shooting her
father) and departed from the town forever
- in the final cemetery scene when Hannah was visiting
Wade's gravesite, she met up with Rafe and showed him the headstone
inscription that clearly acknowledged that Wade was the "beloved
father" of two sons: Raphael and Theron; she accepted him as
one of her own, and agreed to visit his son (actually Theron's) -
her grand-son
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Duck Hunting Accident
Wade with "Rafe"
Wade with Wife Hannah
Wade's Talk About Manliness with Son Theron
Theron's Killing of a Huge Boar
Libby
Theron's Love-Making with Libby
Hannah Describing Family's Past
Supermarket Diner Scene: Rafe with Libby Discussing Her
Pregnancy by Theron
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