George Sherman's
Big Jake is about as pure a John Wayne vehicle as has ever existed. When a vicious gang of outlaws kidnap a young boy known as Little Jake, his estranged grandfather, Big Jake McCandles, sets out to rescue him and bring the villains to justice...
frontier justice.
Big Jake is competent enough as a Western, mixing a great performance by Wayne, gritty action, and a satisfactory story concerning family and redemption. But the film didn't leave a very big impression on me otherwise. I am writing this review sixteen days after watching the film (don't judge me, I've had graduate school finals) and I am having a difficult time recalling anything other than the general plot outline. I have seen other Wayne vehicles that have left incredible impressions on me after only one viewing. It's been months since I first watched John Farrow's
Hondo (1953), but I remember that film quite vividly, particularly the scene where Wayne broke an untamed horse. I remember the sheer brutality of the violence in Howard Hawk's
El Dorado (1966), the high-spirited humor and massive fist-fight in Andrew V. McLaglen's
McLintock! (1963), and even Wayne's brief yet extraordinarily powerful cameo as the war-weary Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman in
How the West Was Won (1962). Yet, for the life of me, I cannot remember much of
Big Jake. But that's probably my fault. I'll give this film another look one day. But for now, I'll just give it a passing grade and call it a day.
6/10
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