Another movie that I watched off my DVR before it expired is Gallant Bess. Having watched it, now I can do the obligatory post on it here.
Marshall Thompson, who was being groomed for stardom by MGM but never quite achieved it, plays Tex Barton. Tex runs a horse ranch in California, although he seems rather young to do it since it's implied later in the movie that he's 16 going on 17 and an orphan. He's got one particular horse, Bess, that he absolutely loves, since that horse more than any other is a link to his late father. So when Bess gets knocked up he's aboslutely thrilled and goes to the nearest "town" to the ag supply place to get stuff for a pregnant mare.
While he's at the store talking with proprietor Smitty (Clem Bevans), a couple of navy recruiters show up needing one more person to fill their recruitment quota. Why, I don't know, since World War II already seems to be on and you'd think they'd just draft people. And Tex should be exempt anyway since he's all alone on that ranch and involved in agriculture. He's more important to the war effort on the home front. Yet Tex rather stupidly signs on even though it's going to mean leaving that pregnant foal that he loves behind, leaving Smitty to run the ranch.
Tex goes to a naval base where he's going to learn to become a Seabee, and becomes friends with Lug (George Tobias). One day, however, he gets a letter from Smitty informing him that Bess is sick with pneumonia. So Tex utterly stupidly tries everything he can to get leave, literally busting in to the CO's office, and then trying to go AWOL when he can't get leave. He's put in the brig, until he's informed that his unit is shipping out so everyone in the unit gets 24 hours liberty. This enables him to go home just in time for Bess to die and Tex to bury her. At this point, the audience should have lived happily ever after, but that's not what happens in the movie.
Tex has an illogical resentment towards his commander, Lt. Bridgman (Donald Curtis), to the point that he makes life difficult for everyone around him, with only Lug trying to keep Tex from doing something that will really get him court-martialled. On the island where they're building an airstrip as part of the island hopping campaign in the Pacific, Tex starts having dreams about Bess and waking up in the middle of the night, although he's also waking up everybody else in the tent so they all absolutely despise him, and with good reason. And then he thinks he hears a horse and disturbs everyone else's peace even more.
Except this time, when he goes out into the jungle, he finds that there actually is a horse, and tends to the horse, which is something that saves his life when a Japanese air raid hits the tent in which he would have been sleeping. The horse beomes the unit's mascot and even saves Tex's life when Tex gets injured in another Japanese attack. Will Tex be separated from the horse again?
Gallant Bess, at least the second half of the story set on the Pacific island, is based on a true story, although the man who wound up with the horse was a career Navy man who was in his 40s by the time of World War II. The part before the character gets sent to war is wholly made up, and frankly to the detriment of the movie since it makes the main character terribly unsympathetic. When he started waking everybody else up talking in his sleep I really wanted them to beat the crap out of him. Instead, we get all the syrup MGM could bring to a project like this.
Well, not quite all the syrup. MGM for whatever reason didn't film this in Technicolor, but instead in Cinecolor. The result is the print TCM ran does the movie no favors either as the colors are both flat and inconsistent. When the horses are crossing either green pastures or reddish dusty ground, the tone of the red or green changes from one second to the next, and not because the camera is panning ground that's changing color -- many of these are medium-to-long shots.
Gallant Bess had potential, but I don't think it quite lives up to that potential.
