Arriving a few years after the rodeo-movie boom
that included Sam Peckinpah’s Junior
Bonner (1972), this humble Canada/U.S. coproduction presents a clear
storyline and fairly thoughtful character development. Also working in the
picture’s favor are terrific locations, seeing as how events take place at
rugged sites throughout Alberta. So in some important respects, Goldenrod—also known as Glory Days—is a commendable film with a
humane sensibility and a naturalistic style. If only those things were enough
to put it over. Alas, Goldenrod
stumbles significantly in other areas. The plot is highly predictable, some of
the scoring is so atrocious as to evoke elevator music, and one climactic
sequence goes so dark that Goldenrod
ceases to be family fare, representing a major miscalculation in terms of tone.
Set in the early 1950s, the picture follows the adventures of cocksure rodeo
star Jesse Gifford (Tony Lo Bianco). At first, he seems a man in full. Winner
of Canada’s top prize for all-around cowboy, he lives in a custom trailer with
his wife, Shirley (Gloria Carlin), and their two boys, both of whom idolize
Jesse. Then things take a turn. Badly injured, Jesse has to quit the circuit
for a season, which spins him into a long period of self-pity. Shirley leaves
Jesse for a rival cowboy, Keno (Donnelly Rhodes), and even though Jesse inherits
sole responsibility for raising his sons, he compounds his problems by
drinking heavily. Eventually he enters the employ of an alcoholic dirt farmer,
J.T. Jones (Donald Pleasence), before suffering the final indignity—his eldest
son’s successful entrance into the rodeo game. The specifics of that
aforementioned dark sequence are best left discovered by those who watch the picture,
but suffice to say things get much worse before they show any promise of getting
better.
Lo Bianco, a swaggering Italian-American from Brooklyn, was an odd
choice for the leading role, but he puts across the character’s machismo and
stubbornness persuasively. And while his efforts at conveying pathos are a bit
more forced, he eventually finds a sort of hammy soulfulness during Jesse’s
moments of greatest anguish. Whereas the actors surrounding Lo Bianco mostly
deliver adequate performances, Pleasence contributes his signature brand of
bombastic eccentricity, a welcome counterpoint to the film’s otherwise
straightforward approach. Incidentally, don’t look for much in the way of hot
bronc-busting action in Goldenrod,
because even more than some other rodeo movies, this one treats sports as a
springboard for intimate character drama.
Goldenrod:
FUNKY
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