BY LEE PFEIFFER
Andrew V. McLaglen was almost predestined to be a movie director. The
son of the legendary character actor Victor McLaglen, Andrew came of age
on movie sets. His father often appeared in John Ford Westerns and
Andrew developed a passion for the genre. He ultimately gained a
foothold in the television industry during the late 1950s and early
1960s when TV Westerns were all the rage. He proved himself to be a
capable and reliable director and eventually moved on to feature films.
McLaglen scored a major hit with the rollicking Western comedy
"McLintock!" starring John Wayne and Maureen O'Hara in 1963. Two years
later, he teamed with James Stewart for the poignant Civil War drama
"Shenandoah". The film was a big success with both critics and at the
boxoffice. Thus, Universal, the studio that released "Shenandoah", hoped
to capitalize on the film's success and re-teamed McLaglen and Stewart
for a Western, "The Rare Breed".
Adding to the reunion aspect of the
production, it co-starred Maureen O'Hara and Brian Keith. O'Hara had
co-starred with Stewart in the 1962 comedy "Mr. Hobbs Takes a Vacation"
and Keith was O'Hara's leading man in the Disney classic "The Parent
Trap". Got all that? The script by Ric Hardman takes an unusual aspect
of the Old West for its central plot line. Martha Price (O'Hara) and her
daughter Hilary (Juliet Mills) have arrived in Texas from their home in
England. They are bringing with them their prized Hereford bull, a
breed not known in America. Their hope is to sell the animal at auction
so that cross breeding American cows will eventually result in superior
stock. The prim and proper upper-crust British ladies have endured a
tragedy that isn't depicted on screen: the death of Martha's husband on
the ship en route to America, although they seem fairly unperturbed, as
they only fleetingly reference the dearly departed in the course of what
follows. The Hereford is mocked by the cattle barons because it lacks
the signature horns of traditional Texas steers. In a convoluted plot
device, a smarmy rich man (David Brian) with an obsession for seducing
Martha, bids on the Hereford to impress her. When his awkward attempts
to bed her fail, somehow another unseen buyer steps forward and the
beast must be transported to him via the efforts of a wrangler named
Burnett (James Stewart). At this point, the story becomes difficult to
follow. Suffice it to say that Burnett agrees to escort Martha, Hilary
and their prized bull to the far-off destination to conclude the deal.
Along the way, they are ambushed by Simons (Jack Elam), a greedy crook
who causes a stampede of another cattle herd being escorted by Burnett's
friend Jamie (Don Galloway.) In the resulting chaos, Simons intends to
steal the Hereford as well as the money Martha has been paid to deliver
the bull. If all of this sounds confusing, watching it unfurl on screen
makes the plot even more fragmented when Martha accuses Burnett of also
trying to swindle her. Ultimately, they all wind up at the outpost of
the new owner, Bowen (Brian Keith), a Scottish eccentric who runs his
own cattle empire and sees the possibility of crossbreeding the Hereford
with his own herd.