In addition to being anti-racist, the film has a famous anti-sexism scene in which Elizabeth Taylor is shooed away from a conversation among the men about politics. Taylor proceeds to give the men a piece of her mind. I thought this was her best scene in the whole movie.
Indeed, it was quite a scene & she made the men feel very awkward. As she headed towards her bedroom as ordered by the Hudson character, she mocked them into making them feel like a parent who was scolding its child and telling the child to go to bed.
Elizabeth Taylor's character was the only truly likeable character in that movie. Her devotion was the Mexican immigrants' cause was noteworthy. She's the only one who noticed immediately that they were being treated (and looked up) as nothing more than cattle. The Mercedes McCambridge character, who played Rock Hudson's sister, was a mean old nasty bitch! She caused her own demise by torturing that poor horse (loved by the Elizabeth Taylor character) on her way back from the cattle run as she kept violently striking it with her spurs until the horse likely threw her off of him.
The Rock Hudson character's likeability was up and down. There were times where he could be charming, but other times when he could be nasty and ignorant. A key scene came at the end of the movie when the Elizabeth Taylor character told him that he had finally gained her respect (and love) after his fight with a racist restaurant owner. That scene indicated his turnaround from bigot/racist into a compassionate person. Of course, this never would have happened had his son (Dennis Hopper) not married a Mexican girl earlier on.
The dvd that i watched was the anniversary restoration/re-issue from 2007 which contained two discs, the second being a bonus disc containing behind-the-scenes stuff and interviews with the director's son and some of the secondary cast members such as Caroll Baker and Earl Holliman. Baker and another woman interviewed were very interesting to listen to. James Dean wasn't just a loner in life, but also on the set. He rarely hung around or mingled with others, other than getting very close to Elizabeth Taylor and one of the women interviewed (she may have played Dennis Hopper's wife in the movie). Rock Hudson seemed like a great guy, always having fun, holding parties for the fellow cast members and truly enjoying himself throughout filming.
But let's be real: How good or memorable would this movie have been had James Dean not killed himself in a car accident weeks before production ended?