-Caveat Lector-

The Conqueror and Other Bombs

How a wacky movie starring John Wayne as Genghis Khan sheds
light on the recent nuclear bomb tests in India and Pakistan.

by Bob Harris

9 June 1998
One of the funniest, strangest, and saddest movies of all time
is RKO's 1956 epic The Conqueror, starring John Wayne,
certified American Hero, as...Genghis Khan.

Given the Cold War politics of the 1950s, everybody couldn't
exactly fly to Mongolia to film the thing. Instead, they
decided to substitute...Utah.

Sure. Utah, Mongolia. Pretty much interchangeable.

Enamored with Utah's Snow Canyon area, director Dick Powell
shot most of the film in the same exact chunk of the Utah
desert. So, if you watch closely, there are several spots
where Wayne and co-star Pedro Armendariz ride some great
distance and wearily dismount...almost exactly where they
started.

And, since absolutely everything has to be wrong in a picture
like this, the script aims for a weird neo-primitive
Shakespearean vibe, giving John Wayne lines like: "I feel this
Tartar wo-man is for me, and my blood says: take her!" and
"She is wo-man-MUCH wo-man!" and "Know this, wo-man! I take
you for wife!" and so on.

Man, it's fantastic. Trust me. You've got to rent this thing
sometime. It's a freakin' laugh riot.

It was also such a colossal financial disaster that RKO never
recovered. So what does this have to do with anything in the
news?

Stay with me here. The Conqueror was also a disaster in
another, much more horrifying way. The town of St. George,
where the cast and crew spent much of their time, and Snow
Canyon, where most of The Conqueror was filmed, were about 100
miles downwind of the Nevada Test Site.

That's where the U.S. government tested various atomic
weapons. The government didn't bother to warn anybody about
the fallout. So the cast and crew of The Conqueror spent three
solid months immersed in contaminated air, food, and water.
You can guess the result.

Reviewing The Conqueror's credits, from the top:

John Wayne? Died of cancer.
Susan Hayward? Died of cancer.
Agnes Moorehead? Died of cancer.
Pedro Armendariz? Committed suicide while dying of cancer.
Dick Powell? Died of cancer.

And so on.

By 1980, when People magazine did a headcount, at least 91
members of the cast and crew had contracted cancer. People
never found out how many of the Indian extras were afflicted.
It's a brutal irony that John Wayne, the living embodiment of
American superpatriot militarism, may well have died as a
casualty of the U.S. government's willingness to endanger its
own people.

It gets much worse. The Conqueror is just a footnote to the
full story. The town of St. George, none of whose citizens
were big Hollywood stars, suffered a similar fate. Uninformed
of the danger, and exposed in their homes for years instead of
months, the residents of St. George eventually contracted
cancer in staggering numbers.

The Conqueror's crew numbered in the dozens. St. George's
population was in the thousands. You probably wouldn't
recognize any of their names. They weren't the sort of
bigshots you'd read about in People magazine. They were
ordinary folks, just like you and me. And they were
expendable.

Fast forward 40 years...

St. George is now a popular tourist gateway to Bryce Canyon
and Zion National Parks. A steady stream of tourists passes
through the town, on their way to gorgeous scenery and
carefree skiing. Utah's Web page now refers to St. George as
"Utah's Hot Spot."

Nobody seems to catch the irony.

Not only is The Conqueror forgotten; the only people who seem
to remember the atomic cancer cluster are the descendants of
the victims. The full death toll of American civilians from
U.S. atomic weapons testing may never be known.

Okay, India and Pakistan have now tested some big big bangs,
and everyone's worried about how their future nuclear stuff
might visit all sorts of horror on their enemies.

Which is scary, yeah. But how about we pay a little attention
to what they've already done to some of their own people?

India tested their nuclear weapons literally walking distance
from several small villages where some of their own
unsuspecting citizens live and work. And already hundreds of
Indians are showing some of the classic symptoms of radiation
poisoning.

The Indian governnment says it's all perfectly safe, of
course. Officials say the sick folks are just looking for a
handout. Which doesn't explain why livestock is keeling over
as well.

Even if Pakistan and India avoid a hot war, innocent
casualties of their conflict have already begun to mount. You
wouldn't recognize the names of the villages, nor would you
know the names of the people who live there. But they're
ordinary folks.

Expendable.

If you or I knowingly, recklessly, and needlessly kill a
single innocent person, we then stand guilty of manslaughter
and deserving of contempt. Does it not follow, then, that if a
government knowingly, recklessly, and needlessly kills an
innocent person-or indeed, hundreds of innocents: in fact, the
very people said government is supposed to represent-then this
government stands equally guilty and contemptible?

The danger of nuclear weapons lies not only in their
detonation in war. It also lies in their testing, their
maintenance, and their disposal-indeed, in every phase of
their very existence.

Humankind will someday abolish nuclear weapons.



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