**SOME SPOILERS**This 1974 north western stars Donald Sutherland in the title role as Dan Candy, a Royal Canadian
Mounted Policeman on duty in the plains of Saskatchewan. He is a
little immature, a little annoying, and perfectly balanced by his
family man partner Kevin McCarthy. The duo arrests Gordon
Tootoosis for stealing one of the government's cows out of
desperate hunger. Chief Dan George is Tootoosis' father.
Sutherland takes the whole thing as a big joke, until Tootoosis
escapes from jail and kills McCarthy. Sutherland spends the rest
of the film tracking down the now dangerous criminal, with little
help from his fellow constables or the native people.
At ninety minutes, the film is way too brief, and takes short cuts in
its story to get to the action scenes. This means that Sutherland
goes from party doofus to vengeful rogue cop in about twenty
seconds. Tootoosis goes from hungry martyr-like indian to cold
blooded killer in record time. McCarthy is in just three scenes.
When the film tries to be an action film, it fails as well. Sutherland
is usually screaming as his superior for the umpteenth time, then
rides out into the woods and is shot at...again and again. The
finale, when the criminal and friends are trapped in the woods, is
equally puzzling. The RCMP higher ups do not seem to care about
catching the killer of one of their own, but suddenly arrive with
cannon to root out the villains. Even McCarthy's funeral scene is
messed up, as Sutherland thinks about McCarthy's murder, even
though he was not there.
Sutherland, for being given such an impossible part to play, does
a good job. One amazing scene has him trying to tell McCarthy's
orphaned son a funny story about crows and an outhouse roof
while he slowly breaks down in grief.
Fournier catches some of the amazing vistas we are lucky to
experience up here in the Great Plains, and his fog enshrouded
opening credits are dazzling, but with the lousy editing and dull
script, he is as creatively bound as Sutherland.
"Dan Candy's Law" should have been a rumination on revenge,
and a comment about how the United States does not have a
monopoly on mistreating its native peoples, but instead this film
went for the cheap action thrill without an action thrill to exploit. I
cannot recommend it.
This is rated (PG) and contains strong gun violence and strong
profanity.