Say, I don't have (m)any technical complaints, but one thing that did get lost because the movie was b/w was the look of the gold, and that's the only thing I can think of... Especially in the final scenes: it looks like... dust... In the wind.
You (and titoli, it seems) are of the opinion that Dobbs is basically good to begin with, but gradually is corrupted by his experience, and goes mad. I'm persuaded differently: I think there are character flaws in the man from the very beginning, and that, although there are some good qualities within him (well itemized by you above), those positives do not represent the whole of Dobbs. He is a man deeply conflicted, and it is his internal contradictions, and the tension those contradictions produce, that drive him insane.
Dobbs reveals his true character early on in subtle (and not so subtle) ways. At that first encounter with Howard (Walter Huston), he listens incredulously as the voice of experience tells him about the effects of greed on men. “It wouldn't be that way with me,” he protests. “I swear it wouldn't! I'd take only what I set out to get, even if there's still half a million dollars lying around waiting to be picked up.” One can't help asking, Why so adamant, Dobbsy? (Notice that Curtain seems more thoughtful). Of course, this could just be Huston providing some necessary foreshadowing, except for one thing: something similar occurs in the second part of the film.
Later, at the dig, when the issue of divvying shares arises, Howard explains the best way to proceed and Curtain, seeing that reason and experience have produced wisdom in the old man, endorses his ideas. But Dobbs' response is very different.“What a dirty, filthy mind you've got!” he snarls. It's an odd thing to say—unless one is in an extreme state of self-denial. The fact that Dobbs responds in this way a second time suggests that Huston is trying to tell us something important about the character.
Other signs of instability are also apparent: Dobbs delights inordinately in the gunfight on the train, and later, is quick to threaten death to those (Howard, Curtain, Cody) who vex him (was he really going to club Howard to death with that rock just because he was tired and frustrated?). In the matter of Cody the other two men go along, but Dobbs is the one who instigates it.
For me, the changes we see in Dobbs are less about an actual transformation of fundamental character traits and more about his gradual letting down of a facade, one that civilization and its mores has forced him, over many years, to construct. We don't get a new Dobbs at the end, just the real Dobbs, fully revealed. There are still many good points about the man—he seems just as tough as ever—but the negatives, now pushed to the fore, outweigh them.Dobbs tries to deny this to himself, but his self-delusions, stretched to the breaking point, finally snap. Suddenly his certainty about who he is is gone. And this is what finally sends him into madness.
That makes me remember I forgot to write that the fact that the mexicans outlaws cannot discern gold from dust is very unlikely (or, more exactly, absurd?): another instance of a plot inconsistency introduced for the sake of didactics.
Don't forget they agreed to kill an innocent men without significant quarrel.
.....it is only because Dobbs is in the focus so much that the fragile outer facades of his character get broken at some point. It would imply nobody is ''good'' or ''bad'' per se, but conditioned by the norms of society, and I agree to a good extent with that. But yet again it is only another nail in the coffin of your theory - only because whoever is telling the story (Huston, I presume) wants it that way. Only because otherwise there wouldn't be much of a story.Dobbs has to conquer more obstacles that the others (or again - that is the way he sees it): that's basically the main reason why he ultimately fails. Everything else is no more than a deceiving hint.
Cody "an innocent man"'? Personally, if after a year of hard work somebody tried to butt in my business like Cody did I would have killed him without consulting the other two. And Howard, so experienced, lets Curtain (who allows Cody to follow him to camp: another absurdity) go buying stuff at the village when he's the one of the three who could leave a would-be stalker behind (like he showed before to his two partners).
The fact that Curtain and Howard share Dobbs's experiences and come away with very different attitudes is the capper to all my arguments. I don't see Dobbs as having to conquer more obstacles than the others, except maybe at the very end, and Dobbs has long flown over the cuckoo's nest by then. There's always something getting up Dobbs's nose. From the film's second act Dobbs shows classic symptoms of paranoia, and there is one thing that every paranoid knows: all his problems are outside himself. It is the disease of those incapable of personal introspection. Dobbs can do many things, but inner stock-taking isn't one of them.
And I won't quibble over whether "good" or having "moral integrity" are equivalent terms.
You are merely arguing with yourself at that point.
Yeah well, you got me there, "innocent" is almost in the same category as "good". Almost. Still, Cody didn't ask for a share of what they already had, only of what they'll have in the future. He would have made his money helping them. The way I see it, at the point he joined the party they needed him more than he needed them, in more than one way.
But you're right about the second part - Howard should have gone in town instead of Curtin. It would have been more logical. Except, everybody makes a mistake every now and then, and the old man could have easily been tired.
Cody knows very well he's walking on a razor's edge, betting on the slim chance of being able to persuade the three of his usefulness, knowing that he may (as he does) fail at that. So he plays it soft by asking a cut only on the future earnings. That makes him neither "innocent" nor "good". Just cautious. The fact is that he does intrude into something he didn't work for or might have had the capability to reach. The three pards perceive his behaviour as unexcusable and their debates are on how to get rid of him, not if he's in the right. But the fact that you were led to dub the character as "innocent" betrays another inconsinstency of the plot, in which the man who wrote the letter differs from the one who takes advantage of Curtain's naivete and tries to force his presence on others.
Yeah, but plot holes like these do not make, in my book, a 9\10 movie.
I think the man who wrote that letter could as well be the same man who's trying to force himself in the business of the three. If you would kill someone trying to steal from you one year of hard business, just think what would one who has hungry mouths to feed be prepared to do in order to see them full (and see them).
I'm usually very stingy with ratings, and I understand most of the criticism here, but all in all, I still like this movie very much. I also feel kinda generous these days.
Well, for one he could find himself a normal job instead of prospecting, a highly hazardous and individualistic activity not fit for family people.
Can I touch you for a hundred euros?
As usual, the problem with you remains always the same: you chase down shadowy hints and make cranky theories out of them, but then (unlike the rest of us here) you try to sell them as something rock-hard palpable. That's exactly what's going on here, although nobody questioned your assumptions thoroughly, because we are just chattering and exchanging opinions anyway, so one is as good as another, you just won't let go and will continue to pound on some collateral tosh just to hide the simple fact it doesn't sound that ingenious to anyone other than yourself, and now probably not even to yourself anymore.Who the hell ever questioned there's something funny smelling about Dobbs from the start, especially in his attitude? - Nobody.