The Fugitive (1947)
3/10
Not John Ford's finest hour.
17 January 2022
Not John Ford's finest hour. "The Fugitive" was his 1947 adaptation of Graham Greene's "The Power and the Glory" and like "The Informer" it suffers from a heavy dose of Expressionism and worse, 'religiosity'; this is enough to turn the best Catholic to paganism. Filmed in Mexico and, presumably, set there, though the opening narration informs us it's a 'nameless state'. It's about a place where religion is banned and where priests must hide out and become fugitives.

Henry Fonda is 'the fugitive' of the title, a priest trying to keep one step ahead of the law, represented here by Pedro Armendariz. No-one is given a name but simply a title, 'a figitive', 'an Indian woman' (that's Dolores del Rio), 'a Lieutenant of Police' and so on. Symbolism is the order of the day and Fonda's priest is decidedly Christ-like, (we also have a Judas, a Magdalene, a Barabbas etc.), and for a country where religion is banned on pain of death the peasants seem to embrace it and to burst into song at every opportunity. The superb black and white cinematography of Gabriel Figueroa is the only plus.
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