7 / 10
The Horse Soldiers is John Ford’s only Civil War film and one of his weaker collaborations with John Wayne. Wayne plays Colonel John Marlowe, a Union cavalry commander leading a long-range raid behind Confederate lines. William Holden plays Major Henry Kendall, the regimental surgeon. Constance Towers plays Hannah Hunter, the Southern belle Marlowe takes prisoner after she overhears their plans. The film is loosely based on Grierson’s Raid of April 1863, in which Colonel Benjamin Grierson rode seventeen hundred Union cavalry six hundred miles through Mississippi to distract Confederate forces from the Vicksburg campaign.
The film should be better than it is. Ford and Wayne together produced The Searchers three years earlier. The setup is interesting. The locations were authentic. The result is competent but tired, and the production was disastrous behind the camera in ways that affected what was put on screen.
The Production Problems
The film was difficult to produce. Ford and Wayne were both showing the effects of age and alcohol. Tensions on set were high. The veteran stuntman Fred Kennedy was killed during a horse fall during the climactic battle sequence. Ford effectively gave up on the film after that. Several scenes that should have been polished were shot once and printed. The final reels are noticeably less careful than the early sequences.
Ford was never the same after this production. He continued making films for another decade, but the death on set affected him in ways he never publicly addressed. The Horse Soldiers is the breaking point of his classical Hollywood career. The films after it have their virtues, but the unguarded romanticism of his earlier work is largely gone.
For Writers
Production circumstances affect what is on screen. The Horse Soldiers is a tired film made by tired men in a difficult situation that became tragic. The fatigue is visible. The lesson for writers is that the conditions under which you produce work show up in the work. Burnout, grief, illness, distraction. They leave fingerprints. Sometimes you cannot wait until conditions are right because life does not arrange itself for your convenience. But you should know what the conditions are putting into the work, and you should consider whether the work deserves better conditions before it goes out.
What Works
The cavalry sequences are well-shot. Ford knew how to film men on horses. The early raid scenes have his characteristic affection for the cavalry as a way of life. The bridge sequence at the railroad junction is the best sustained action in the film. Holden’s performance as the surgeon is the best in the film. He plays Kendall as a serious doctor at odds with Wayne’s hardened soldier, and the conflict between battlefield medicine and battlefield necessity is the most interesting thread the script develops.
The decision to make a Union film with a Union protagonist is also unusual for Ford, who had a notable streak of Southern sympathy throughout his career. The Horse Soldiers is one of the few Ford films that does not romanticize the Confederate side.
For Writers
The conflict between two competent professionals with incompatible goals is a reliable engine for drama. Marlowe wants to complete the mission. Kendall wants to treat the wounded. Both objectives are legitimate. Both have costs. The conflict between them does not have a clean resolution because both men are right. The lesson is that the strongest conflicts in stories often happen between people who agree on the facts and disagree about what to do given the facts. Disagreement without a villain is harder to write and more rewarding to read.
What Does Not Work
The Hannah Hunter subplot is poorly constructed. Constance Towers is good in the part but the script does not know what to do with her after the first act. She becomes a hostage, then a love interest, then a problem, then a love interest again. The dynamic with Wayne never settles into something the film commits to.
The Confederate scenes featuring the Jefferson Military Academy boys marching out to defend their school is uncomfortable in ways Ford did not intend. Modern viewers find the scene where teenage Confederate cadets are repulsed without serious casualties harder to take than 1959 audiences did. The film is not interested in the moral complexity of what the boys were defending.
For Writers
A subplot needs to know what it is doing or it should be cut. The Hannah Hunter material in The Horse Soldiers is the script’s biggest problem. It does not have a stable function. The result is that the romance is unconvincing and the captive-narrative is incomplete. The lesson is that a subplot that exists primarily because the genre expects a romance subplot is worse than no subplot at all. Write the romance you have a reason to write or skip it entirely.
Craft Note
John Ford directed. John Wayne as Colonel John Marlowe. William Holden as Major Henry Kendall. Constance Towers as Hannah Hunter. Hoot Gibson, Anna Lee, William Tweedie, and Strother Martin in support. Based loosely on Harold Sinclair’s novel about Grierson’s Raid. Released June 1959. Stuntman Fred Kennedy killed during production. The film was the most expensive western Ford had made to date. Modest box office success.
The Verdict
7/10. A Ford-Wayne picture that is not as good as their best work together. Worth watching for Holden’s performance, the cavalry sequences, and the historical curiosity of seeing Ford near the end of his career. Skip if you want major Ford. Watch if you are working through his complete filmography.
FAQ
Is it based on real events?
Yes. Grierson’s Raid in April 1863 is real. Colonel Benjamin Grierson led seventeen hundred Union cavalry through Mississippi as a diversion before the Vicksburg campaign. The film fictionalizes characters and events but the campaign is accurate.
Who is Constance Towers?
An American actress with a long stage and screen career. Her two Ford films (The Horse Soldiers and Sergeant Rutledge) are her best-known. She later worked extensively in television.
Did a stuntman really die?
Yes. Fred Kennedy died from injuries sustained in a horse fall during the production. Ford was reportedly devastated and never recovered the same enthusiasm for filmmaking.
Is the Confederate academy scene real?
Loosely based on the actual Jefferson Military Academy incident during the raid. The historical incident did not result in significant Confederate casualties.
How does it compare to other Ford-Wayne films?
Below The Searchers, Stagecoach, Fort Apache, She Wore a Yellow Ribbon, and Rio Grande. Above some of the lesser entries.
Should I watch this?
If you are a Ford completist, yes. Otherwise, the better Ford-Wayne films are available.