Three years after the end of the Civil War, Ethan Edwards (John Wayne) shows up at his brother’s Texas homestead, still wearing the gray coat and saber he donned while serving the Confederacy.
He’s welcomed back like the long-lost relative he is, but the Texas Rangers soon come calling, looking for volunteers to track down stolen stock from the Jorgensen ranch.
Ethan offers to go, urging brother Aaron to stay close to home in case the culprits turn out to be Indians on a raid.
Turns out that’s just the case. And by the time Ethan can make it back to the ranch, his brother and sister-in-law are dead; their two young daughters — Debbie and Lucy — are missing.
The Rangers, under Rev. Capt. Clayton (Ward Bond), head out to get them back, but the search party is eventually reduced to Ethan, the girls’ adopted brother Martin Pawley (Jeffrey Hunter) and young Brad Jorgensen, who hoped to marry Lucy.
Well, Ethan finds Lucy’s body, after she’s been used by the Comanche bucks. A suicide charge by Brad reduces the search party to just two.
And as time passes, Ethan loses all hope of rescuing a white woman.
Even if Debbie is alive, she’s now a Comanch.
Gorgeous movie filmed in Monument Valley and focused on a character obsessed with finding a long-lost relative, no matter how long it takes. And, eventually, becoming convinced that the best option should he find her is to kill both the Indian chief who made her his woman and and the soiled young woman herself.
Though the comedy sometimes seems forced, Ford manages to inject humor into what would have otherwise been an incredibly somber film. And while Wayne roams the countryside on his quest — with Martin Pawley by his side, to save his adopted sister if possible — we also get glimpses of the settlers who are forging a life for themselves in this wild country.
Natalie Wood, 18 at the time the film was released, was already a star, though her screen time is limited here. The role of Debbie as a young girl is actually played by her sister, Lana, in her very first screen appearance. You’ll also spot a young Patrick Wayne, in just his second credited screen role.
The best supporting performance just might come from Vera Mles, as Laurie Jorgensen, a young woman eager to get on with life and growing increasing frustrated with Martin Pawley’s insistence on tagging along with Ethan.
Directed by:
John Ford
Cast:
John Wayne … Ethan Edwards
Jeffrey Hunter … Martin Pawley
Vera Miles … Laurie Jorgensen
Ward Bond … Rev. Capt. Samuel Clayton
Natalie Wood … Debbie Edwards
John Qualen … Lars Jorgensen
Olive Carey … Mrs. Jorgensen
Henry Brandon … Chief Cicatriz / Scar
Ken Curtis … Charlie McCorry
Harry Carey Jr. … Brad Jorgensen
Patrick Wayne … Lt. Greenhill
Lana Wood … Young Debbie Edwards
Hank Worden … Mose Harper
Walter Coy … Aaron Edwards
Dorothy Jordan … Martha Edwards
Pippa Scott … Lucy Edwards
Beulah Archuletta … Look / Wild Goose Flying in the Night Sky
Antonio Moreno … Emilio Gabrial Fernandez y Figueroa
Runtime: 119 min.
Title tune: “The Searchers”
Memorable lines:
Rev. Samuel Clayton: “Well, the prodigal brother. When did you get back? Ain’t seen you since the surrender. Come to think of it, I didn’t see you at the surrender.”
Ethan: “I don’t believe in surrenders.”
Ethan, as Comanches close in from both sides: “Well, Reverend, looks like you’ve got yourself surrounded.”
Rev. Samuel Clayton: “Yeah, and I figure on getting myself unsurrounded.”
Brad Jorgensen, upon learning Lucy has been killed by Comanches: “Did they? Was she?”
Ethan: “What do you want me to do? Draw you a picture? Spell it out? Don’t ever ask me. Long as you live, don’t ever ask me more.”
Army commander, after showing Ethan the white captives he’s rescued: “It’s hard to believe they’re white.”
Ethan: “They ain’t white, anymore. They’re Comanch.”