IMDb > The Ox-Bow Incident (1943) > Reviews & Ratings - IMDb
The Ox-Bow Incident
Quicklinks
Top Links
trailers and videosfull cast and crewtriviaofficial sitesmemorable quotes
Overview
main detailscombined detailsfull cast and crewcompany credits
Awards & Reviews
user reviewsexternal reviewsawardsuser ratingsparents guidemessage board
Plot & Quotes
plot summarysynopsisplot keywordsmemorable quotes
Did You Know?
triviagoofssoundtrack listingcrazy creditsalternate versionsmovie connectionsFAQ
Other Info
box office/businessrelease datesfilming locationstechnical specsliterature listingsNewsDesk
Promotional
taglines trailers and videos posters photo gallery
External Links
showtimesofficial sitesmiscellaneousphotographssound clipsvideo clips

Reviews & Ratings for
The Ox-Bow Incident More at IMDbPro »


0 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Vengeance is Swine., 25 January 2010
8/10
Author: dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California

*** This review may contain spoilers ***

"Play with fire, you burn your fingers and / Lose a hold of the flame, oh It's over, it's done / The end is begun If you listen to fools... The Mob Rules!" --Mob Rules, Black Sabbath.

It's Twelve Angry Cowboys!

Long before Henry Fonda was sequestered in a jury room trying to convince a buncha guys not to kill a guy, he was out here at the Ox-Bow River trying to convince a buncha guys not to kill a guy.

Two men ride into a tiny, sleepy western town in Nevada 1885, Red River Valley playing sadly on the harmonica soundtrack, Carter (Fonda) and Croft (Harry Morgan). The town's idyll is broken by a messenger breathlessly reporting a well-loved cattle rancher, Kincaid, has been murdered and his cattle stolen.

A frantically-assembled posse of blood-crazed rednecks (which Carter and Croft join for the drifter heck of it) encounter three men at the Ox-Bow River in the middle of the night, with cattle bearing Kincaid's brand. The leader, Donald (Dana Andrews) says they purchased the cattle and knew nothing of Kincaid's death. A fair hearing is the last thing on the posse's mind, but as the night wears on, two factions splinter the posse - those who want a trial, and those who want a hanging.

THE OX-BOW INCIDENT is a tension-filled, dialog-driven, maddeningly astute look at how justice works in America - at the end of a redneck noose. In 2009, the cowboy duds are Armani, the law books are thicker, the killing methods are "sophisticated" - but nothing's really changed. America is still an ornery kill-first questions-later redneck state. In their uncivilized youth, Europe and Russia and Asia dealt with their skeletons of torture and conquest and barbarism, but Amerika, a mere quarter-millennium old, retains such a juvenile disposition, it is still dealing with the fact that it CAN conquer and has not stopped to ask whether it SHOULD.

Underneath the grand strokes, the ravenous characters of OX-BOW, each with a different self-esteem or emasculation reason for joining the posse; each trying to prove himself a man in some way. There's Tetley (Frank Conroy), outfitted in a Southern uniform which we know he didn't see any battle in; Tetley's pacifist son (William Eythe), forced into the manhunt by Tetley, to gird the boy's loins; new deputy "Butch" Mapes (Dick Rich), a brutish dope out to prove himself worthy of the star; Farnley (Marc Lawrence) just being a man's man; there are those who tag along to avert disaster, such as Davies (Harry Davenport) and Sparks (Leigh Whipper, considered a preacher because, I guess, he's ambiguously black and knows a few Negro Spirituals). Some join the posse because they've just got nothing better to do.

Anthony Quinn is a baby-faced Mexican, one of the accused; the Wicked Witch of the West is the maid (Margaret Hamilton); and the gratuitous skirt is Mary Beth Hughes (from the classic MST 3K episode, I ACCUSE MY PARENTS), Carter's old flame from town, now married to a loquacious dandy.

Despite the 12 ANGRY MEN reference, Fonda is not the driving force behind the seeking of justice here; he is on the periphery, more like a group conscience. Yet even he can't staunch the posse's inexorable bloodlust, and to drive home its point, the movie must end tragically.

No trials, no representation, no evidence. Sound familiar? This movie is somehow presciently an exact representation - EXACT - of how the George W. Bush administration prosecuted its failed state "justice" in its bogus War on Terror.

A cowboy actually says: "Down in Texas where I come from, we just go out and get a man and string him up!" Hmm, who else hails from Texas? George W. Bush! OX-BOW is directly of his generation. He would have watched this movie and others like it, as a kid (as did his bloodlusting posse: Yoo, Addington, Rumsfeld, Petraeus, Bybee, Gonzo, and of course, that hellspawn from Satan's own vagina, Dick Cheney) - and taken away the wrong message! How do we know this? One word: Guantanamo.

Donald the accused pleads: "Why don't you take us in to trial?" And decades later, a Bush appointee (Cheney regarding criminal trials for accused Gitmo detainees) replies in the exact words of one of the posse: "Because the law is slow and careless up here sometimes. We're here to see that it's speeded up."

Deputy Butch deputizes everyone, so that they can go on a killin' with impunity. Again, exactly - EXACTLY - what the Ku Bush Klan did when they told their lawyers to craft the torture memos, so theys can go on a killin' with impunity.

Amerikan Illegal Military were given free reign by the criminal Bush-Cheney Administration to kill innocents alongside criminals without any distinction. If there are no trials, no representation and no evidence required, why bother making a distinction?

There's a difference between the lynch mob at Ox-Bow and all the president's men of the Dubya reign of terror - the Ox-Bow lynchers felt regret that would eat out their hearts all their living days, whereas the Ku Bush felons still feel nothing, especially apparent in their leader - too mongoloid to feel emotion. He has proved himself over eight incompetent years as an incognizant fool. And if you listen to fools, the Mob rules.

Review by Poffy The Cucumber (for Poffy's Movie Mania).



102 reviews in total

Add another review


Related Links

Plot summary Plot synopsis Amazon.com summary
Ratings Awards Newsgroup reviews
External reviews Parents Guide Plot keywords
Main details Your user reviews Your vote history