The Legend of the Lone Ranger is a 1981 American Western adventure film directed by William A. Fraker and starring Klinton Spilsbury, Michael Horse and Christopher Lloyd. It is based on the story of The Lone Ranger, a Western character created by George W. Trendle and Fran Striker.

Producers outraged fans by refusing to allow previous Lone Ranger actor Clayton Moore to wear the character's mask during public appearances, and created further bad publicity when it became known that the voice of leading man Spilsbury was dubbed by another actor, James Keach. The film was a critical and commercial failure, and Spilsbury has not appeared in any films since.

Plot

In 1854 in Texas, the outlaw Butch Cavendish and his gang of outlaws are chasing a young Comanche boy named Tonto. He rides into a thicket and falls off his horse and down an embankment. John Reid, a boy who was already there, hides Tonto, and the outlaws kill everyone in the small village but John. Tonto takes Reid to his reservation and teaches him to shoot a bow and arrow with precision, and Reid learns how the tribe lives and fights. The two become blood brothers, and once grown up, Reid leaves the reservation for Detroit where he becomes a lawyer. He leaves Detroit by stagecoach to set up a new law practice, and the coach is robbed by Cavendish’s gang. When the driver is wounded and the shotgun rider killed, Reid stops the coach and surrenders a mailbag containing property deeds.

A beautiful young woman named Amy Striker is another passenger on the coach. When Reid visits his brother Dan at a Texas Rangers station he hears that members of the Cavendish gang have ridden into town during a festival and killed Amy’s uncle Lucas, the owner of the local newspaper. Collins, posing as one of the Rangers, orchestrates an ambush of a Ranger posse by Cavendish’s gang. Everyone but Reid is killed, and he is rescued by Tonto. Tonto gifts Reid silver bullets for his pistol, and Reid captures and tames a white horse that he names Silver. Reid dedicates himself to fighting crime and becomes the great masked western hero, The Lone Ranger.

Cavendish takes President Ulysses S. Grant hostage as a bargaining chip in his bid to take over Texas and secede from the Union as an independent country. Reid and Tonto rescue Grant, and blow up Cavendish's compound with dynamite. Cavendish attempts to flee the United States Cavalry, but Reid pursues and apprehends him. The President thanks Reid and Tonto, and the pair ride away as President Grant asks, “Who is that masked man?”

Cast

;Cavendish gang

Production

Development

The rights to the Lone Ranger character had been bought in 1954 by Jack Wrather, an oil billionaire, and his wife Bonita Granville. They had made many attempts to create a Lone Ranger movie that would appeal to a modern audience, including making Tonto an equal partner and mentor to the Lone Ranger. By the late 1970s, they believed that the story was ripe for retelling in an epic vein similar to Richard Donner's Superman (1978), with the potential for sequels.

In October 1977, Sir Lew Grade announced he would make the film as part of a slate of movies worth $97 million, including Love and Bullets, Escape to Athena, and Raise the Titanic. Most of the films Grade would finance himself but Lone Ranger was a co-production with Wrather. Grade said the Lone Ranger would likely be played by an unknown, after a wide talent search. In October 1978, Grade said the film would be distributed by the new company Associated Film Distribution, a joint consortium between ITC Entertainment, EMI Films, and Marble Arch Productions.

"This is a grand old western in the heroic and glorious style of the cowboy picture," said Walter Coblenz, producer. "This is not Blazing Saddles. When he puts on his mask you're going to believe it."

ITC executive Martin Starger said the company was producing the film because "Heroes are needed today more than ever... We're playing it straight. This isn't a spoof or a satire."

Coblenz added, "I decided the Indian element needed upgrading. I decided to treat the Lone Ranger and Tonto more as equals. I wanted their relationship to be dignified. I wanted to take advantage of Indian lore."

In September 1979, Coblenz announced the director would be William Fraker. Fraker was normally a cinematographer, but he had directed Monte Walsh, which Coblenz admired. Fraker said "The Lone Ranger will work if we can make him real," and also that he was influenced by Lawrence of Arabia.

Two of the movie's four screenwriters, Ivan Goff and Ben Roberts, had previously created the hit TV series Charlie's Angels; they had also worked together on another hit series, Mannix. According to Larry McMurtry, novelist George MacDonald Fraser had written an excellent script for the film, but he was not credited in the finished film.

Casting

Actors considered for the lead included Stephen Collins, Nicholas Guest, and Bruce Boxleitner. The part eventually went to Klinton Spilsbury, a photographer who had studied art (particularly sculpting) in New York. Spilsbury, whose father was a football coach at the University of Arizona, had grown up on a ranch in Chihuahua, Mexico. Spilsbury signed to a three-picture deal.

Tonto was played by Michael Horse, a silversmith by trade, whose only other acting experience had been a bit part in the Raquel Welch TV movie The Legend of Walks Far Woman. "For me this is an adventure and fun," he said. "Who knows if I can act. I'll soon find out. And if I'm a flop I'll just go off fishing."

The movie's ballad-narration, "The Man in the Mask," was performed by country music artist Merle Haggard, and composed by John Barry with lyrics written by Dean Pitchford of Footloose and Sing fame.

The filmmakers were unhappy with Spilsbury's acting. "You just never believed what he was saying because he memorized the lines but he had never internalized them,” says Jim Van Wyck, who was a DGA assistant director trainee on the film. “It was like he was reading the script, but the intonations were wrong.”

"His inflections were a little strange, but I actually didn’t think he was that bad, to be honest with you,” says Keach. “I don’t know why they didn’t have him redo it. But it was a very well-paying job at the time, so I accepted it.”

The film was part of a brief revival of the Western in 1980, which also included The Long Riders, Heaven's Gate and The Mountain Men.

Clayton Moore lawsuit

Part of the plan was to shoot a feature film with a new actor to replace the 65-year-old Clayton Moore, who had starred in the long-running and hugely successful television series for much of the 1950s.

Wrather had a vision for the retelling of the story, and he felt that the profile of the character would be devalued by Moore's continuing to appear in costume, as he had done for many years entertaining children in hospitals and appearing at county and state fairs. Also, he did not want audiences to believe that the aging Moore would reprise his role as the Lone Ranger. In 1975, Wrather asked Moore to stop portraying the character, but Moore refused. In 1979, the producers obtained a court injunction barring Moore from appearing in public with his trademark black mask. He was also permitted to sign autographs only as "The Masked Man." Moore responded by changing his costume slightly, replacing the mask with similar-looking wraparound sunglasses and by cross-litigating against Wrather. The suit was eventually dismissed. Wrather finally allowed Moore to continue openly playing the character again in 1984 shortly before Wrather's death.

“I thought that was really kind of nasty and unnecessary,” said Lloyd. “Nothing Moore was doing was really interfering with the film. I thought that was kind of terrible.”), along with other Grade movies like On Golden Pond and The Great Muppet Caper. This resulted in the release of the film being pushed back. Spilsbury refused to do any publicity for the film.

Jack Wrather was good friends with Ronald and Nancy Reagan, and the Reagans were to attend the premiere at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C. Due to the attempted assassination of Ronald Reagan in March 1981 they did not attend, but Reagan sent a taped recording of congratulations to be played at the premiere.

Reception

Box office

The film was released in 1981 to massive negative publicity over the Clayton Moore lawsuit. The opening week was considered a disaster, making only $4 million after being shown on 1,000 screens.

Marvin Starger claimed the film cost $13 million rather than the reported $18 million but said with advertising and prints costing $10 million the film lost $10 million.) Fraker never directed a feature film again and Spilsbury never acted again. Time Out London said, "The mystery is how Fraker, a gifted cameraman who made a superb directing debut in Westerns with Monte Walsh, could produce such a clinker as this."

The Los Angeles Times said "you can have a very good time watching it."

In a 1981 episode of the weekly television movie review program, Sneak Previews, film critics Gene Siskel (of the Chicago Sun-Times) and Roger Ebert (of the Chicago Tribune) heavily criticized this film. Siskel stated that the movie was "badly acted and horribly paced." He chastised the tenor of the film, also stating, "How about having a sense of humor of the character? You know, enjoying the presentation of the character? You don't get it from the actor Klinton Spilsbury, and you don't get it from the filmmakers or the director." Siskel, anticipating a short film career for Spilsbury, added this: "I think it [this movie] is going to provide a great trivia question for the 1990s: Not ‘Who was that Masked Man,’ but who played him? The answer Klinton Spilsbury." Both Siskel and Ebert noted how it took an hour for The Legend of the Lone Ranger to really get started. Ebert specifically noted, "It's very slowly paced, and it should have been break-neck [paced] right out of the starting gate... a real disappointing movie." On behalf of both critics, Siskel summed up the film this way, "Roger [Ebert] and I agree that The Legend of the Lone Ranger is a total waste of time... neither one of us can recommend you see it". He refers to it as a "bad Western."

Grade later wrote, in his 1992 autobiography Still Dancing: My Story, that he thought that the problem with the movie was that it took an hour and ten minutes before the Ranger first pulled on his mask. "The mistake was not dispensing with the legend in ten minutes and getting on with the action much earlier on," his text said.

| Worst Picture

| Walter Coblenz

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| Worst Actor

| Klinton Spilsbury

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| Worst Musical Score

| John Barry

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| Worst Original Song

| "The Man in the Mask"<br>Music by John Barry<br>Lyrics by Dean Pitchford

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| Worst New Star

| rowspan="2"| Klinton Spilsbury

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| rowspan="3"| Stinkers Bad Movie Awards

| Worst Actor

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| Worst Song or Song Performance in a Film or Its End Credits

| "The Man in the Mask"<br>Music by John Barry<br>Lyrics by Dean Pitchford

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| Worst Remake

| The Legend of the Lone Ranger

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Merchandise

A novelization of the movie, written by Gary McCarthy and published by Ballantine Books, was released in 1981.

The film was adapted into a newspaper comic published between 1981 and 1984 that was written by Cary Bates and illustrated by Russ Heath.

A line of action figures was created by the toy company Gabriel in 1982, including Buffalo Bill Cody, Butch Cavendish, George Custer, The Lone Ranger, and Tonto. Also released by Gabriel were the horses Silver (The Lone Ranger's Horse), Scout (Tonto's Horse), and Smoke (Butch's Horse).

References

Bibliography

  • The Legend of the Lone Ranger Action Figures