Cuando un guardia de la diligencia intenta advertir a una ciudad de una redada inminente de una banda de forajidos, la gente lo confunde con uno de la banda.Cuando un guardia de la diligencia intenta advertir a una ciudad de una redada inminente de una banda de forajidos, la gente lo confunde con uno de la banda.Cuando un guardia de la diligencia intenta advertir a una ciudad de una redada inminente de una banda de forajidos, la gente lo confunde con uno de la banda.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Pinto
- (as Charles Buchinsky)
- Bar-M Rider
- (as Victor Perrin)
- Townswoman
- (sin acreditar)
- Townsman
- (sin acreditar)
- Henchman
- (sin acreditar)
- Townsman
- (sin acreditar)
- Townsman
- (sin acreditar)
- Townsman
- (sin acreditar)
Reseñas destacadas
Confusing enough? Not as confusing as comparing this modest Western with HIGH NOON, a masterpiece on many levels, including an incisive attack on HUAC and McCarthyism.
That said, I found it confusing, if not downright exasperating, to see Scott decide to stay in a barroom while the town's residents plan to lynch him, fire shots at him, goad the deputy sheriff Tub Murphy (the Christian name Tub fits, he spends most of the film eating) into doing something about Scott while Marady and Pinto proceed to rob the local bank. The barroom owner is understandably peeved that his prized mirror might be shattered by bullets, as Scott fires one to kill the flame of a candle giving away his position. All of that makes for a mid-section with many different faces, and not much of a connecting thread, but the ending is great with Scott suddenly taking the limelight again and making sure that the robbers will not be able to use their horses to flee. Even poor dumb Pinto gets his due while trying to mount, and Marady's good luck piece changes hands!
Good fun, decent direction by the ever predictable and steadfast André de Toth. OK photography and script... for a B Western.
Not quite up to High Noon standards, but a good yarn. Randolph Scott comes through, once again!
This is a great depiction of mob rule. These regular town folks may seem like cartoons but they are more real than one expects. These are men of pitchforks and torches. I love the regular people turning on the hero. As for the criminals, I expected them to be more ruthless. This is still an old fashion western which is barely more than seventy minutes. It doesn't go as dark as it could have. The last act is doing a happy Hollywood ending. The narrating is a little interesting in that it gives Larry's gunfire some inner monologue. I wouldn't mind a modern remake with a more brutal final act.
Director De Toth, who actually had ranch experience despite his Hungarian origins,obviously took great satisfaction in finding such a variety of effective angles and pieces of western imagery to present what is a well constructed story. When our weathered hero has to shoot out the candle in Fritz Feld's "dirty little cantina" it not only provides a chance for master cameramen Bert Glennon ("Stagecoach") to do an effective light change but it also gives us a couple of reels of the disturbing image of the blackened door-way that no one in the town is game to enter, not sure if Randy is dead or not.
The film making is better than most of the bigger pictures could muster.
The Warner western street re-dressed. Interesting cast - Joe Sawer in a non comedy role, punching it out with Scott, Charlie Bronson getting started, Millican in his best part - are those Frank Ferguson, Cesare Gravina and Bob Steele in uncredited walk-ons?
Pretension free, work like the Scott-De Toth series made going to the movies a rewarding, addictive habit.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesThe stagecoach with the fancy scroll-work painting and large yellow rear wheel brake also appears in Tall Man Riding (1955).
- PifiasAbout 10 minutes into the movie when the Marady gang ties up Randolph Scott, they tie his legs right at the knees as clearly visible when they pick him up. But in the next several scenes as he lays on the ground, there is no rope around his knees.
- Citas
Larry Delong: [interior monologue] I could have taken that shotgun away from Lewellyn and wrapped it around his fat ears, but it might have meant shooting some misguided people who might have thought the right thing was to keep me in town. There was only one person left who might help me: Fritz, who ran a dirty little cantina which few self-respecting people ever entered. He'd do anything for a fast dollar.
- ConexionesReferenced in Peligroso (1995)
Selecciones populares
- How long is Riding Shotgun?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idiomas
- Títulos en diferentes países
- La soga siniestra
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Empresa productora
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
- 1.400.000 US$
- Duración1 hora 13 minutos
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1