John
Wayne stars as a railroad engineer who is blasting out a mountain so the
titular tycoon (Sir Cedric Hardwicke) can run his railroad through it. The snobby tycoon looks down on the
hardworking blue-collar Wayne and that feeling is exasperated when Wayne falls
in love with his daughter (Laraine Day).
Both men are stubborn to the core and butt heads at every turn. Things come to a boil when Wayne suggests
they stop tunneling in favor of a building a bridge.
If
this is starting to sound like Public Works:
The Movie, that probably because that’s exactly what it feels like.
Tycoon
was an expensive flop for RKO Pictures and you can see why. It’s a slow moving and overlong melodrama
that features more scenes of people building shit than you’d ever want to see. It’s hard to tell where all the money went
since the model work on the train is so damned phony looking.
Wayne
does what he can with the subpar and maudlin material. Even someone of his stature and charisma
can’t breathe any life into the movie as the script never really gives him
anything to do besides dig tunnels and bat eyelashes at his leading lady. Admittedly, there are intermittent sparks
between Wayne and Day. Their scenes are
marginally more appealing than the boring drama with Hardwicke and the dull
tunneling sequences. Hardwicke isn’t bad
as the stuffy millionaire and Anthony Quinn has some nice moments as his right-hand
man, but both men are hamstrung by the weak script.