Never-Before-Seen Costume Tests for an Unrealized Cecil B. DeMille Film
Recently rediscovered in the
Cecil B. DeMille Collection at the
Academy Film Archive was roughly 2,400 feet of
16mm Kodachrome footage featuring scouting and costume tests for DeMille’s unrealized feature film Rurales.
The footage consists of roughly 90 minutes of silent material shot on location in
Mexico. Judging from newspaper accounts of the development of the film, it is possible that the footage was shot in
1944 by
Arthur Rosson, who was slated to serve as associate director on the picture. In this exclusive clip from the costume tests, gorgeous color footage shows the unique costume ideas that were being considered.
Based on a story by
Jeanie Macpherson,
J. Robert Bren and Gladys Atwater, Rurales was optioned for DeMille by
Paramount in
1939, and told the story of two
Americans who join a branch of the
Mexican police, known as the
Mexican Rural Guard, or “rurales.” The rurales gained notoriety during
Mexican president Porfirio Díaz’s three-decade rule for their merciless brand of law and their distinctive grey uniforms.
While he was in
production on North West Mounted Police in 1939, DeMille was said to have wanted to produce a different picture before embarking on Rurales, which also dealt with a national police force.
Slated to be shot in
Technicolor, the project was in development from 1939 to 1944, with actors such as
Paulette Goddard,
Arturo de Córdova,
Alan Ladd,
Katina Paxinou and
Carol Thurston attached to star at various times. The film would experience a number of title changes, including
The Flame, The Borderman and
The Wind that Swept Mexico.
Seventy years ago, on
December 1, 1944, after scouting trips and multiple script revisions, the film was called off by DeMille and Paramount due to costs. According to
Motion Picture Daily on
December 5, 1944, the film was reported to have an expected cost of approximately $5 million at the time, roughly $67 million today if adjusted for inflation.
Having already spent $
187,
000 on research and development costs (roughly $
2.4 million today), the production was officially scrapped for financial reasons.
Rurales was also a complicated project due to the important relationship between the
United States and Mexico.
Correspondence between Paramount executives, contained in the
Paramount Pictures production records at the
Margaret Herrick Library, indicates that they were worried about offending
Mexican authorities, which could have resulted in the film being banned in Mexico or other
Paramount films being censored there.
In 1960, according to papers in the Paramount Pictures production records, Rurales came under consideration for production once more with
Leon Uris attached to write the script. The film, to be released as The
Gringo, would never reach the screen. Uris would later write the novel
Topaz, which served to inspire the
1969 Alfred Hitchcock film of the same name.
On
December 6, the
Academy will present a double feature of DeMille’s
The Golden Bed (1925) and
Male and Female (
1919) as part of our ongoing series
The Perfect Match:
Hollywood Costume Collaborations. The December series will offer three double features spotlighting great partnerships from Hollywood’s
Golden Age, including that of DeMille and early costume designer
Clare West.
From the Cecil B. DeMille Collection at the Academy Film Archive.
Special thanks to
Cecilia DeMille Presley.