Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

The Wonderful Country

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Author
  
Tom Lea

Genre
  
Western Southwestern

Initial release
  
4 November 1959

Music director
  
Alex North

6.3/10
IMDb


Illustrator
  
Tom Lea

Publication date
  
1952

Director
  
Robert Parrish

Production company
  
DRM Production

The Wonderful Country wwwgstaticcomtvthumbmovieposters1618p1618p

Subject
  
Mexican-American Border Region Fugitives from justice

Publisher
  
Little, Brown and Company (Boston)

Box office
  
1 million USD (US/Canada rentals)

Cast
  
Robert Mitchum, Julie London, Gary Merrill, Albert Dekker, Satchel Paige

Similar
  
Mercenary movies, Robert Mitchum movies, Westerns

The wonderful country dvd available now


The Wonderful Country (aka The Wonderful Country, A Novel) is a 1952 Western novel written by Tom Lea. The book is set in Chihuahua and Sonora, Mexico, and Texas and New Mexico in the United States. It was filmed in 1959.

Contents

After the financial success of The Brave Bulls, Lea wanted to write a story that he had been thinking about since he was a child, "...write about this borderland and about the people on both sides of the river".

Plot

Martin Brady, at age 14, flees to Mexico from Texas after he kills the man who murdered his father. Now, fourteen years later, in 1880s Mexico, he is called Martin Bredi. He is a hired gun for a rich Mexican rancher and Chihuahuan warlord, Cipriano Castro. Brady starts to feel like he would like to return to Texas. Castro send him north to Puerto, Texas, to guard a load of silver ore, with the intention of smuggling arms.

When he gets to Texas he breaks his leg and has to stay put in the town while he heals. He is approached by the head of the Texas Rangers division in Puerto about joining after the Captain confirms his identity and lets Brady know that he will not be prosecuted for killing his father's murderer. He also is enamored by the ranger captain's daughter, Louisa Rucker.

After killing a man who injured a friend, he returns to Mexico and is sent on an impossible errand to deliver a load of gunpowder by General Marco Castro, the brother of Cipriano. The wagon blows up before it is delivered. After returning to Chihuahua, Cipriano Castro sends Brady to assassinate a rival Salcido; however, the Castros are suspicious of him and have him followed. During his sojourn in Chihuahua, he meets an acquaintance from Puerto and learns that the man he killed was a criminal with a reward for his death.

Wanted in the United States and now distrusted in Mexico, he makes his way back to Texas and on the way assists a lost column of Buffalo soldiers that is deep into Mexico fighting Apache Indians. Back in Texas, Brady joins the Texas Rangers, as part of a deal for his being a wanted man, and helps them fight the Apaches back in Mexico.

A crucial character to the story is Brady's horse, a black Andalusian stallion named Lágrimas ("tears").

Reception

In TIME's review, the magazine called it "...an honest book written with obvious care and even reserved passion..." The review added: "Neither Brady nor anyone else in the book is a successfully developed character, but with all its weaknesses 'The Wonderful Country' is still a western plus. What is extra comes in author Lea's fine descriptive writing, a love for the West that is conveyed with grace and dignity, an authentic sense of place."

Lou Rodenberge, of McMurry College, said that the novel is: "...the best to date of all fiction created from materials of border life", from "The Southern Border" in A Literary History of the American West.

"One of the finest of all Southwest novels by a Southwesterner, whose power with pencil and paint is perfectly matched by his way with words," said Lawrence Clark Powell.

Adaptations

It became a 1959 film (with the same title) starring Robert Mitchum (also executive producer with his company, D.R.M. Productions, producing) and Julie London, directed by Robert Parrish, and Robert Ardrey adapted the book to the screenplay. Lea also has a bit part as Mr. Peebles (the barber). Satchel Paige has a cameo role as the leader of an Afro-American unit of the U.S. Cavalry, the Buffalo Soldiers.

Parrish went to Lea and ask him if he [Parrish] could direct it. The only money that Lea received from the picture was for his role as the barber.

References

The Wonderful Country Wikipedia