The Searchers was directed by John Ford (1894-1973) and released in 1956. John Ford is often called "the man who invented America". Through his films he is said to have shaped a certain vision of America, the values it stands for and what it means to be an American. He won Academy Awards for The Informer (1935), The Grapes of Wrath (1940), How Green Was My Valley (1941) and The Quiet Man (1952). In his obituary, the New York Times describes him as "imaginative, daring, sensitive, courageous, craftsmanlike, tough". According to the Encyclopaedia Britannica, "his films, whether westerns or in other genres, are notable for a turn-of-the-20th-century ideal of American masculinity—loyal, self-deprecating yet competent, dependable in a scrap, bound by duty …"
John Ford is mostly known for his westerns and some critics claim that The Searchers is one of his best. The film stars John Wayne, Natalie Wood, Vera Miles and Jeffrey Hunter. The screenplay is based on a novel by Alan LeMay, which tells the true story of Cynthia Ann Parker. She was kidnapped by Comanches when she was 9 years old, and rescued many years later. Historian Glenn Frankel wrote another book about the real story of Cynthia Ann Parker, in which he reveals that in fact "the story of how the white Comanche princess was treated became very much part of the fantasy, if you will, of the myth as it developed." Frankel explains that, unlike his book, Ford's film focuses on Cynthia's uncle, who is a "very charismatic western hero, and it’s all about western heroes." and "the quest" he goes on.
The western as a genre was and still is extremely popular. Set in the period from 1850 to the 1890s, it focusses on the conquest of the wilderness, the westward expansion of white settlers and the conflict between them and Native Americans. However, in The Searchers, the main character's "elliptical journey is contrary to the very nature of the Western, which, prior to The Searchers, habitually followed a set narrative path forward, specifically in a westerly direction. Good guys are good; bad guys are bad…" (Brian Eggert)
VOCABULARY
directed : réalisé
released : sorti
to shape : façonner
obituary : nécrologie
daring : audacieux
sensitive : sensible
craftsman : artisan
tough : résistant
whether … or : que ce soit … ou
self-deprecating : plein d'auto-dérision
a scrap : une bagarre
bound : lié, tenu
duty : devoir (moral)
screenplay : scénario
to rescue : sauver
quest : quête
wilderness : étendues sauvages
settler : colon
prior to : avant
a set narrative path forward : arc narratif vers l'avant
good guys : les gentils, les bons
bad guys : les méchants