Made in roughly the same Texan locations where
the historical events it depicts took place, She Came to the Valley dramatizes a mildly interesting episode from
the Mexican Revolution of 1910–1920. After a leg injury dashes their
agricultural dreams in Oklahoma, Pat Westall (Dean Stockwell) and his wife,
Willy Westall (Ronee Blakeley), relocate to the Rio Grande Valley on the advice
of a mysterious friend, Bill Lester (Scott Glenn). This places the Westall
family in the line of fire during battles between the American government and
Mexican rebel Pancho Villa (Freddy Fender). Executed with more Hollywood
panache, this material could have become something exciting and romantic, with
the fearless Willy torn between her alcoholic husband and the valiant Bill,
whom she discovers is a soldier in Villa’s army. Alas, cowriter, coproducer,
and director Albert Band isn’t up to the task. Beyond merely looking awful,
thanks to blotchy cinematography and nonexistent scene transitions, She Came to the Valley is hopelessly
unfocused. Band and his collaborators seem unsure about what approach to take
on the material, and they also seem unsure about which character occupies the
center of the narrative. Willy seems the obvious choice, but for long stretches
of screen time, she doesn’t do anything. Similarly, Bill disappears for
extended periods, and when he’s onscreen, the character is mostly polite and
soft-spoken. Not exactly the Bogart/Redford-type role this sort of material
demands. The first hour of She Came to
the Valley is borderline interminable, and even though the subsequent 30
minutes have some action because Villa leads a brazen nighttime raid, the excitement
level remains depressingly low given how little viewers care about the
characters. All the major performances are disappointing, too. Blakely and
Glenn sleepwalk through their roles, Stockwell overacts, and Fender
demonstrates why he was wise to focus on his music career.
She
Came to the Valley: LAME
Freddy Fender? Really? So, basically, the casting director said, "um...Villa was, well, a heavyset Mexican fella...we need a heavyset Mexican fella...HEY! THAT GUY! Added bonus, he's a celbrity! GOLD, GOOOOOOLD, I TELLS YA!" --in a voice similar to that of Albert Brooks.
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