Scenes rarely play like “scenes” in the films of Robert Altman. They don’t so much begin, reach their point, and end. The dialogue is cluttered, non-stop, layered in around the leads. “Important” lines from the characters the story is about melt into the conversations going on all around them, some punchy and funny, some inane.
It’s like lives — a world — the viewer drops in on, eavesdropping or even invited into by the human comedy — sometimes tragic — unfolding in front of you.
Altman brought “Altmanesque” to the Western with “McCabe and Mrs. Miller,” a scruffy, gorgeous star driven drama about a gambler and entrepreneur (Warren Beatty) who meets a prostitute (Julie Christie) who introduces herself life this.
“I’m a whore, and I know a LOT about whorehouses.”
“McCabe and Mrs. Miller” was a big studio star vehicle with a stunning Pacific Northwest setting (Squamish, British Columbia was the filming location). Altman had spent a little of his “M*A*S*H” capital in Hollywood on the wildly eccentric “Brewster McCloud.” He tried to play Hollywood’s game with films like “McCabe,” the later Elliott Gould/Raymond Chandler mystery noir “The Long Goodbye” and the gambling buddy dramedy “California Split.”
The set is almost as detailed, wooden and “lived-in” as “Popeye’s” Sweethaven, which came later. The wintry location shooting, with themes and images borrowed by such later films as “The Claim” and” The Hateful Eight,” would provide a backdrop for a tale a of man trying to live “up” to his reputation and a British prostitute trying to get her piece of the American Dream before she aged out of that chance.
But being an Altman film, the obvious isn’t “obvious” and the chiaroscuro of the crowded images and “world” we’re immersed in is what’s paramount in this Warner Brothers box office bomb.
Beatty’s McCabe rides into newborn village Presbyterian Church — named for the structure they’re building, a symbol of “civilization” — as a man with a bearskin coat, a bowler hat and a reputation.
The proprieter of the bare-bones-minumum saloon (Rene Auberjonois) thinks he knows the man’s name, and his reputation, that he killed a fellow a while back. McCabe does nothing to deny this, insists he only be called by his last name, and rolls out a tattered red duck table cloth to invite the locals to play poker.
An Altmaneseque touch — we don’t see McCabe win, clean out the locals and finance everything to follow via his skills at five card stud. He loses. A lot.
But next thing we know, he’s secured land, planned a saloon and brothel and traveled back down the trail to Bear Claw to procure prostitutes, the saddest and most ill-used hookers in the West.
It isn’t until Mrs. Miller rolls up on him, asks him to feed her and lays out her “hygiene” and long-term plan (to make enough money to buy a San Francisco boarding house for her declining years) that everything starts to pay off for McCabe.
Mrs. Miller makes him build a bathouse, makes patrons of their brothel — which he also builds — visit and pay to bathe before they’re allowed to be near the new “San Francisco” sex workers she brings in, and McCabe almost doesn’t care that his saloon and gambling parlor takes a back seat.
McCabe kind of, sort of, goes sweet on Mrs. Miller, who indulges that ardour — for a price. Mrs. Miller has a secret. So does McCabe, we figure.
When McCabe is challenged to sell out his property to a bloody-minded mining concern (Michael Murphy represents them), we start to wonder if he’s as tough as his bluff, foul-mouthed bravado makes out.
“If a frog had wings, he wouldn’t bump his ass so much, follow me?”
Continue reading























