It kicks off with the ferocious burning of a church while a rhapsodic Yvette Mimieux looks on dreamily and approvingly. As the moment progresses, she eventually holds a golden cat in her arms during the pyrotechnics.
Next we come upon Roy Thinnes, a young minister crossing the desert who has lost a wheel off his wagon and is out of water completely. Oh, and his horse is dead, too! Under a makeshift shelter, Thinnes' wife Lyn Loring is passed out and severely sunburned from what has clearly been an arduous trek.
Things are looking up, though, because just when Thinnes has collapsed, a passing wagon comes upon the scene. In it are Ray Milland, the afore- mentioned Mimieux and Hank Worden. They stop and assess the situation.
While the men look over Loring, realizing they've come just in the nick of time, Mimieux tends to the parched Thinnes. When a rattlesnake suddenly appears and coils up to strike, the blonde beauty merely gives it a mildly determined stare and it changes its mind, sauntering away.
Now safely back among civilization, Milland takes in the young couple. Thinnes recovers rather swiftly, but Loring is still in question- able condition and must remain in bed.
Milland reacquaints Thinnes with his would be Samaritan Mimieux, whose name in this story is Deliverance! The lovely young thing can hear and understand everyone, but is unable to speak herself...
Out amidst the townfolk, Milland explains to Thinnes how he and his fellow citizens built their town in the style of their New England homeland and have continued to live by the ways they were used to there (including the habit of carrying no firearms.) Thinnes also meets a young boy who cannot walk without crutches following an accident.
Next Milland shows Thinnes the remnants of their church, which was burnt practically to the ground in another incident. Logic follows that Thinnes might stay on and become the town's new pastor, but he was already on his way to another assignment in Saguaro and feels compelled to keep that commitment.
Just then, evil rides in to town. Henry Silva is a black-clad baddie who comes into town every so often to wrest a share of gold from the inhabitants in exchange for not killing them all! Milland has paid him all along, thinking it was worth it to avoid bloodshed but, as luck would have it, the mine has proven bereft of any further gold and they plan to close it permanently.
An outraged Silva, angered over the loss of any future income from them, lassos poor old Worden and drags him down the town street! Thinnes attempts to rescue him with only marginal success. Notably, the then seventy year-old Worden performed at least part of this stunt himself!
Thinnes (sporting a wound on his face from the incident with Silva) tries to encourage Milland and his fellow townspeople to stand up to Silva. They are a meek and nonviolent group and cannot see their way to doing in the villain.
You may have noticed a blonde woman tending to Loring in an earlier pic. Recognize her now? She comes downstairs to inform Thinnes that his wife is now conscious again and is "asking" about him (which she strangely pronounces "osking" - ha ha!) Anyway, it's Gloria Grahame, a long way from her days as a sultry femme fatale in the cinema.
Loring still isn't great. She's suffering from heatstroke, sunburn and general malaise, yet is eager to get well so that they can be on their way to Saguaro. Thinnes and Loring were married in real life at this time, so their scenes together as man and wife ring pretty true.
Mimieux enters Loring's room with a (huge!) candle she's made. It's her hobby. Though Mimieux doesn't speak and basically acts pretty sweet and innocent, Loring has her number from the start and is barely polite to her.
She has good reason to feel that way...! Out in the shed, Mimieux is busy forging a wax statuette of Loring, complete with a piece of the skirt she was wearing when they brought her in from the desert!
Thinnes is recruited to provide a church service the next Sunday, though there is no church available. He gives a sermon on the mound out back of Milland's place. All the residents turn out in their Sunday best to hear his theological musings.
Even Loring manages to get herself gussied up for the occasion, with her caregiver Grahame close by. (One has to assume that the producers threw Loring this bone, allowing her to look nice for a hot minute, since her character is ill for much of the program's running time.)
Thinnes' sermon, it must be said, is horribly delivered and is really nothing but a string of blurted Biblical platitudes without a lot of point to them. In the congre- gation is one particular towhead, though, who would later become quite famous for a while: Leif Garrett!
Thinnes eventually gets on to a topic rather than a recitation and it does have an effect. The little crippled boy is suddenly able to get up and gingerly toss away his crutches, finally walking on his own steam! Even Loring, whose adoration of her husband knows few bounds, is stunned by this development.
That night, Thinnes stops by Mimieux's workshop, where phallic candles dangle all over (which her cat contin- uously knocks into, giving them an almost wind-chime effect!) She shows him some of her handiwork, though not the one she's been working on based upon his lovely wife!
She manages, though her semi sign language, to ask him if he thinks he might be able to restore her speech the way he caused the little blonde boy to walk again, but Thinnes has to explain that he doesn't feel as if he did anything directly with the boy. It came from within him.
Loring still feels low and is suffering from burning headaches, fatigue and tension. She tells Thinnes she wants to get out of the town and head to Saguaro as soon as possible. Thing is, he's beginning to really like it (and the people) there...
He lies down next to his wife and soon is having dreams of this blood-splattered shirtless man running after him and trying to get his hands on him! (If you remove blood from the equation, I've actually had this same dream more than once in my life....!! Ha ha!)
"What...? It'll wash off!" |
Loring is awakened by a staggering headache, one caused by Mimieux out in
Hearing voices, she creeps over to the window and spies four hooded youngsters singing a creep-out song as they surround a tree stump that has something covered by a black cloth on it!
Heading out of the house and into the night, she suddenly discovers that the children have disappeared but her newfound nemesis Mimieux is on the scene. (If I recall correctly, Mimieux is being blown by a heavy wind while Loring's locks hang still in place!) Loring pulls back the cloth to find a dead owl and promptly passes out cold.
Milland simply doesn't believe her and her husband wants to, but he also finds the whole thing incredulous, even after his own loony dream. I found the staging of the moment below to be a bit hilarious as Loring pleads with Thinnes to believe her. She almost looks like she's in one of those cars from a Chamber of Horrors ride, which is basically what she's in...
"How the hell do I get offa this thing?!" |
"What's this about Nine Lives?" |
Loring and Thinnes have a deep conver- sation about their future. She knows that he feels indebted to Milland and the others for saving their lives and wants to stay on there as a preacher, but she is still vastly uncomfortable with both the people and the place. He explains - to no avail - that an offer of a new house and a hefty salary has been given to him.
After their discussion, Thinnes heads to the washstand to get Loring a glass of water and once again is greeted in the mirror by his shirtless, bloody friend! This time the mirror falls off the wall (but thankfully doesn't break.)
The church is now being hastily constructed by the townspeople and promises to be a lovely temptation for Thinnes, but the happy day doesn't last long...
"Any similarity between this movie and High Noon (1952) is purely intentional!" |
"I'll have two peaches and a pomegranate. To go!" |
As he drags Mimieux down the street, Thinnes picks up the gun and (in and interesting point of view shot) shoots Silva in the back killing him!
For a preacher to take up a gun and kill someone is something that Thinnes can hardly bear. But there is another shock in store.
The whole ugly incident has resulted in such a trauma for Mimieux that she wends her way up to Thinnes and tremulously utters her first words in many years, "Thank you!"
"Jesus Christ! Now the bitch can talk, too?!" |
Loring is far from being well, though, and is actually getting worse instead of better, regardless of the attentions of Grahame. She finally goes off the deep end and, in a moment that predates The Exorcist (1973) by two years, affects a throaty rasp and begins growling bug-eyed at her husband that she will never get well as long as they remain there.
"I'm ready for Mercedes McCambridge to take over now..." |
Thinnes is tormented with indecision. While cooling off his face in a nearby pond, he once again gets a glimpse of his ghostly friend in the reflection of the water. Mimieux shows up and begins reading sensuous passages from the Bible to him (!) before he finally opts to leave her and see how Loring is faring at the house.
Now it can be told. Yvette's hair on her head and on her pussy are the exact same color... (Sorry 'bout this one!) |
I'd say nightmares, but how bad can it be with Mr. Humpy chasing after you?!?
This whole sequence is uninten- tionally (and amusingly) homoerotic (homo- phobic?) with Thinnes desper- ately trying to avoid the clutches of this barely-dressed stud who is running for his life to catch up to him!
Now awake, he heads to the cemetery to beg forgiveness of Silva for having killed him, monster that he was. But he's not alone. Mimieux has come there as well and this time she's going to get what she wants, which is Thinnes!
The next day Loring is more than ready to get outta Dodge (okay, not Dodge... San Melas, but you get my drift!) Just as she's packing to leave and finally dressed again, she is struck by a crippling pain in her head and collapses to the floor! Small wonder since Mimieux is playing with her wax doll again, this time complete with a lock of Loring's auburn hair!
"You, too, can have your very own Voodoo Doll Barbie! Supplies sold separately." |
Authentic old west hair and makeup, Hollywood style... Mimieux must've taken her lead from Audra Barkley! |
Mimieux was a go-to gal in the early-1960s for pretty blonde parts such as in The Time Machine (1960), Where the Boys Are (1962), Light in the Piazza (1962) and Joy in the Morning (1965.) She proceeded to a couple of disaster-type flicks as well like Skyjacked (1972) and The Neptune Factor (1973.) The TV-movie format was a friend to her in the 1970s and she did very many of them before retiring by the early-1990s. She is currently seventy-seven.
Publicity photos for this telefilm show plucky Mimieux handling the rattlesnake herself, an act that doesn't occur in the finished movie. |
Grahame had appeared in many films, some of them classics like It's a Wonderful Life (1946), The Bad and the Beautiful (1952, for which she won an Oscar) and Oklahoma! (1956) before personal issues caused her career to hit the skids. (She had an obsession with her upper lip, constantly augmenting it to the point of near-paralysis and also married her step-son, with whom she'd allegedly had a sexual relationship with when he was a teen!) Still, she managed to work on TV and in the occasional movie until cancer claimed her in 1981 at only age fifty-seven. Her final years were depicted by Annette Bening in the unsuccessful 2017 movie Film Stars Don't Die in Liverpool.
Loring practically grew up on TV, playing youngster Patti Barron on the highly successful soap Search for Tomorrow for a decade. Many TV roles came after including series like Fair Exchange and The F.B.I., on which she worked for a dozen episodes. She also did The Horror at 37,000 Feet (1973) with husband Thinnes. Had there never been a Stefanie Powers, her career might have gone even further. By the mid-'70s, she was ready to segue into producing, ultimately becoming president of MGM/UA Television Productions in the late-1980s, a rare feat for a woman at that time. She is seventy-five currently.
The seemingly happy Thinnes and Loring were wed from 1967-1984 and had two children together. |
Worden had been a real-life bronc rider in rodeos before being enlisted to perform in the Broadway play Green Grow the Lilacs (the inspiration for Oklahoma!) He also worked as an extra for Cecil B. DeMille in The Plainsman (1936) and ultimately won roles in several Howard Hawks and John Ford films as well as further ones with John Wayne in them. He had a highly distinctive voice and manner, making him a memorable, if off-beat, character in films like The Big Sky (1952) and The Searchers (1956) among countless others. His last part was as a senile hotel waiter on Twin Peaks in 1990 and '91 before he passed away in 1992 of natural causes at age ninety-one.
This was near the dawn of young Garrett's acting career and he had no lines apart from some singing. He'd done Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice (1969) and a couple of sitcom episodes prior. A short-lived series called Three For the Road when he was thirteen led to a teen following and soon he was a red-hot bubble gum pop sensation. by the end of the 1970s, however, his life fell apart following a violent car wreck, a serious drug problem and scads of financial woes. He has continued to perform in concert as well as the occasional acting role or appearance in reality TV, but without the searing fame that was his briefly. He is fifty-seven at present.
"The Man in the Mirror" was portrayed by one Stan Barrett, probably not a name that spills off your tongue every day because he was only an occasional actor. His biggest contribution to the screen came in the form of stunt work, so most of his roles involved that. He was Burt Reynolds' stunt man (for the things he wasn't permitted to do!) and later coordinator on many of the star's films. He also stood in for Paul Newman a few times. Apart from all this, he was unofficially declared the first man ever to break the sound barrier in a land vehicle and parlayed that notoriety into a second career as a NASCAR driver. Seventy-six today, he was still doing stunt driving for The Mentalist up until 2015 and separately his sons have taken up the same pursuits in movie work and racing/stunt driving with success. Coincidentally, a book about a fatal crash during the 1964 Indy 500 was also titled Black Noon.
Forty-five years later, western screenwriter Andrew Fenady turned his teleplay for Black Noon into a novel and released it. |
"All right... Fine. I give up!" |
I jumped a bit when I saw this, I had an obsession with this movie for years. In 1971 I would have been 6, and my Dad often let me stay up to watch TV with him while he had beer and pretzels. He loved Westerns and that's probably why he was watching it. I could never remember the name of it, just the imagery of the burning church, Yvette, Tarot cards? and the hot bloody guy. It wasn't until I figured out it was Ms Mimieux and looked up her film career on IMDB that I realized it was called Black Noon.
ReplyDeleteYou are so right about Loring's resemblance to Stephanie Powers, could be her Sister.
I have always been scared by people who turn out to be not what they seem, and this movie has that in spades.
"A lock of hair"? more like a scalping for that Avon looking voodoo doll. Gloria Grahame is unrecognizable in this.
Very funny about ups and downs for Ray Milland, wasn't he in The Thing With Two Heads around this time? that's showbiz.
Thank you so much for the thorough treatment of this tv movie. It's an indelible part of my childhood memories.
Allegedly, "Once Upon a Time in Hollywood" is based on the friendship between Burt Reynolds and his stunt man / body double, so this is an interesting find with Stan Barrett. At the time of this movie, Burt would still not yet be the Legend he became in the 70's. Interesting. Barrett and Reynolds are equally as beautiful, if not more so, to DiCaprio and Pitt.
ReplyDeleteI don't recall this one, and am not a Western fan, but TV Writers certainly had crazy drugs in the 70's!
Hey Poseidon,
ReplyDeleteI vaguely remember this TV movie, what a Love Boat hodge podge of a cast!
Don't want to sound like a meanie, but Yvette seemed to make a career out of playing "challenged" or childlike characters... which drove my Mom nuts!
Speaking of Mom, Roy Thinnes was one of her TV heart throbs, in The Invaders. I always remember the one where Suzanne Pleshette was a guest star.
Ray Milland, what can you say about an actor who goes from starring opposite all the Paramount leading ladies like Lombard, Colbert, Goddard, Frances Farmer and even Bette Davis, to a two headed monster?
Cheers for stoking my curiousity once again!
Rick
Gingerguy, I'm impressed that you (and others!) are familiar with this movie. It was so far off my radar and I was thrilled to see it on my satellite movie channel! I was a dewy four in 1971 so I know I didn't see it in its initial airing. LOLOL Cracking up about the lock of hair. And, you know, she never notices!!! Take that much offa me (if you can find it!) and I'll let you know for sure! I'm sure there are some rivals for it, but the combination of Rosey Grier and Ray Milland as "The Thing with Two Heads" has to be one of Tinseltown's most off-beat pairings...
ReplyDeleteForever1267, I haven't seen the Tarantino movie but I know that Burt's closest association was with stuntman/director Hal Needham, though all three men were friends with one another. Hal directed "Smokey and the Bandit" starring Reynolds with Barrett doing some of the more daring/difficult driving! Small world... I also marveled at the fact that Mr. Barrett did Paul Newman's stunts in "When Time Ran Out..." and Newman was one of his son's godfather!!
Rick, LOL about Mimieux and her parade of rather dim bulbs. I doubt that any were quite as challenged as her first one in "The Time Machine" wherein all the blonde people on earth were like dazed zombies. (Whew! Thank goodness that's changed now... er.... ha ha ha!) I love hearing about people's mom's opinions on stars. They are nearly always either heartfelt or hootily hateful!!!! I liked it best when Ray Milland acted with that other thing with two heads: Sam Elliott in "Frogs!" Ol' Sam had a handsome one on his shoulders and a prominent one in his jeans...!!!
A fact I am compelled to mention at every appearance of Henry Silva: he and Frank Sinatra are credited with introducing karate to American cinema with their fight scene in The Manchurian Candidate.
ReplyDeleteThis must have been on TV last Sunday night--I did not catch the name, but I turned over and got to see the church burning part and the yellow cat, but then changed the channel to Flea Market Flip. I try to never miss that show and it is on right now on GAC. LOL.
ReplyDeleteEerily enough, I used to have dreams where I was chasing Roy Thinnes, he of the steely blue eyes. I never really got Gloria Grahame's rep as a sex-pot, perhaps because I was more familiar with her frequent television work in the sixties and seventies where she was usually cast as a harridan. If she had been born a man, she could've hidden her upper lip with a big seventies porn-stache ala Sam Elliott.
ReplyDeleteAnother great write-up of a film I haven't seen, so thanks for bringing another "classic" to our attention, Poseidon. I must say, sometimes, I get so into your synopsis and can't wait to read what happens and, suddenly, it's, "If you would like to know the rest of the story, you can check this book out of the library..." lol. Have you ever considered doing a spoiler alert version? Just a thought. At least it looks like I can catch it on YouTube!
ReplyDeleteAnd thank you for the glorious capture of Roy's shapely derriere in the photo where he meets the boy with crutches. Not to mention the shirtless hottie...good stuff.
Thanks again...
F. Nomen, interesting tidbit about Henry & Frank. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteSkippy, I like "Flea Market Flip," too, but usually that's a weekend morning in bed sort of show for me. I never go to an outdoor antique show that I don't wonder what I would do if suddenly asked to flip things...!
rigs, that's a good point about Gloria's lip! A mustache probably aided Stacey Keach's career, too! I like Sam clean shaven as well as not. He was very cute on "Mission: Impossible" and in "Frogs."
jobj69, you know what... you are so right and I have to own that bit of annoyance! I have such an aversion to spoilers. I just hate them!! But I've probably pendulumed in the opposite direction as a result. Often I will link the film somewhere in the body of the post so people can see for themselves, but sadly these recent ones haven't had that capability (unless one wants to watch hideously blurry and grainy uploads on youtube.) I'm glad you enjoyed this post (and others) nonetheless! Thanks! And that will be $0.70 in late return fees, please... LOLOL