The protagonist of Terror in a Texas Town is a sturdy, all-American sailor with a gigantic harpoon. He’s a worthwhile man, but the film’s soul is the film’s antagonist. We meet him as he sees himself: as a dark shadow passing over the screen, “death walking around in the shape of a man.” This is a torturous and dislocated film in which everyone is at odd angles to everyone else, a film that is fascinated with how people occupy space. But Johnny Crale (Nedrick Young), a self-hating mercenary whose body is almost always in side profile, alone seems to recognize how he presents himself to the world. When he speaks to others, he looks behind them or above them, never at them. He suggests a hesitance to meet the world directly, like he’s afraid of his own outline and can’t even acknowledge where he stands, how he might look in the mirror. His imagination is cynically circumscribed by capitalism: “As long as there are men like you,” he tells a rapacious robber baron, “there will always be work for men like me.” The film doesn’t insist on any of this. It exhibits such casual mastery, such economy of form. He begins the film passing in the foreground, facing away, moving from left to right as he passes over the camera, and over the film frame. This is the black hat of the traditional Western no longer as a mere villain or an antagonist to be felled or bemoaned but a moving abyss in which the film finds itself.
Crale is a fascinating figure here, a self-hating antagonist who, after shooting a man dead, shoots his corpse five more times, angry at the body for not accepting the status quo and for activating his capacity to be complicit in its perpetuation. His violence reads as displaced impotence. He is a victim of a dehumanizing system incentivized to abstract responsibility and to turn his frustration onto others, to kill for people in power so that he does not have to reckon with the possibility that the system might be otherwise. When confronted with the death of his father, our quasi-protagonist George Hansen (Sterling Hayden) asks what kind of a country can condone a man dying and not asking any questions. Crale cynically remarks that, in this country, you can be sure he’ll get a pageant in lieu of an interrogation. The dead will be honored in America, but the causes of their death will never be seriously reckoned with.
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