Agrega una trama en tu idiomaIn Texas, drifter Cruze becomes the marshal of the town of Marlpine but he must face the murderous Moran brothers alone when the scared town refuses to back him up.In Texas, drifter Cruze becomes the marshal of the town of Marlpine but he must face the murderous Moran brothers alone when the scared town refuses to back him up.In Texas, drifter Cruze becomes the marshal of the town of Marlpine but he must face the murderous Moran brothers alone when the scared town refuses to back him up.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Robert J. Wilke
- Hort Moran
- (as Robert Wilke)
Arthur Berkeley
- Townsman
- (sin créditos)
Wheaton Chambers
- Deputy Tuttle
- (sin créditos)
Cecil Combs
- Townsman
- (sin créditos)
Bill Coontz
- Townsman
- (sin créditos)
Jerado Decordovier
- Juan
- (sin créditos)
Joe Dominguez
- Alfredo
- (sin créditos)
Herman Hack
- Townsman
- (sin créditos)
Al Haskell
- Townsman
- (sin créditos)
Jack Kenney
- Townsman
- (sin créditos)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
George Montgomery is an ex-marshal when he rides into town and soon he puts on the badge and is seen tackling the villains played by Douglas Kennedy , neville Brand and Robert wilke.
An efficient western, the lone gun progresses with tautness and ends with a well-done action finale.
The Lone Gun is directed by Ray Nazarro and written by Don Martin, Richard Schayer and L. L. Freeman. It stars George Montgomery, Dorothy Malone, Neville Brand, Frank Faylen, Skip Homeier, Robert Wilke, Douglas Kennedy and Fay Roope. Music is by Irving Getz and cinematography by Lester White (color by Color Corporation of America).
"The history of any frontier region . . . such as the great expanses of the new State of Texas . . . offered many examples of the strange way in which a few men of great evil could dominate whole communities of well meaning, but passive citizens...
...And examples, too, of men who rode out alone for law and order, with badges on their vests and handcuffs in their pockets . . . playing a lone gun against great odds"
It is pretty much as one would expect for a 50s "B" Western, there's nothing remotely new here, it's a good old honest Oater where a good man takes up a law badge in a town that doesn't deserve him, he takes on the bad guys and there's a pretty lady on his mind. Cue fisticuffs and shootings (including a particularly cold blooded murder), some nifty ambush sequences, a tension packed poker game and some neat dialogue - "one yell and you'll be waking up in a devil's cookhouse".
Cast are fine, with Montgomery doing his usual reliable and likable guy act, Brand doing another in his line of scumbags - backed by Kennedy and Wilke, and even though she's saddled with the token lady role that's sparsely written, Malone leaves a nice impression regardless. Bonus is Faylen, who as card conman Fairweather, shines in a cheeky chappie role, with quips and a glint in his eye even when he's in danger, Faylen enjoys himself in creating this fun character. Some good stunt work rounds it out as a safe and enjoyable Oater for fans of such. 6.5/10
Tidbib: Bizarrely the end credits have Wilke and Kennedy listed as playing each others roles?!
"The history of any frontier region . . . such as the great expanses of the new State of Texas . . . offered many examples of the strange way in which a few men of great evil could dominate whole communities of well meaning, but passive citizens...
...And examples, too, of men who rode out alone for law and order, with badges on their vests and handcuffs in their pockets . . . playing a lone gun against great odds"
It is pretty much as one would expect for a 50s "B" Western, there's nothing remotely new here, it's a good old honest Oater where a good man takes up a law badge in a town that doesn't deserve him, he takes on the bad guys and there's a pretty lady on his mind. Cue fisticuffs and shootings (including a particularly cold blooded murder), some nifty ambush sequences, a tension packed poker game and some neat dialogue - "one yell and you'll be waking up in a devil's cookhouse".
Cast are fine, with Montgomery doing his usual reliable and likable guy act, Brand doing another in his line of scumbags - backed by Kennedy and Wilke, and even though she's saddled with the token lady role that's sparsely written, Malone leaves a nice impression regardless. Bonus is Faylen, who as card conman Fairweather, shines in a cheeky chappie role, with quips and a glint in his eye even when he's in danger, Faylen enjoys himself in creating this fun character. Some good stunt work rounds it out as a safe and enjoyable Oater for fans of such. 6.5/10
Tidbib: Bizarrely the end credits have Wilke and Kennedy listed as playing each others roles?!
Better than average b-western from 1954 which sees surly loner George Montgomery hired as the sheriff of a town as he is the only man prepared to stand up to a trio of bad-guy brothers led by a chunky Neville Brand. A brisk pace and competent performances. Frank Faylen stands out as an amiable gambler who befriends Montgomery, and Dorothy Malone provides the obligatory love interest.
In The Lone Gun, George Montgomery rides into town and immediately inherits the job as marshal after he handles the Moran brothers, the local toughs who are into a lot of the crime in the area. The Morans are played by tough guy actors Robert J. Wilke, Douglas Kennedy, and Neville Brand.
Among their criminal enterprises is cattle rustling and they've got a perfect hideout on the spread of brother and sister Dorothy Malone and Skip Homeier. Homeier is into the Morans on some gambling debts and they're holding that over his head.
The other main character in this western is tinhorn gambler Frank Faylen who has a ready wit and a fast shuffle for all occasions. He and Montgomery form a Wyatt Earp/Doc Holiday like partnership. Faylen also took the Morans for plenty so they have it in for him as well.
The Lone Gun is an entertaining western in which all the players acquit themselves well in their performances. The story moves well and the direction is taut. A good one for B western fans.
Among their criminal enterprises is cattle rustling and they've got a perfect hideout on the spread of brother and sister Dorothy Malone and Skip Homeier. Homeier is into the Morans on some gambling debts and they're holding that over his head.
The other main character in this western is tinhorn gambler Frank Faylen who has a ready wit and a fast shuffle for all occasions. He and Montgomery form a Wyatt Earp/Doc Holiday like partnership. Faylen also took the Morans for plenty so they have it in for him as well.
The Lone Gun is an entertaining western in which all the players acquit themselves well in their performances. The story moves well and the direction is taut. A good one for B western fans.
Formulaic oater with George Montgomery in the straight shootin', straight talkin' , singular expression role of new town marshall, doing his best to clean up the lawlessness factor, best represented by a trio of reprobate brothers led by that eternal 50's B western expert scoundrel actor, Neville Brand. Every thing is quite predictable, but I like the way director Ray Nazzaro keeps propelling the story forward with an absolute minimum of padding , whilst maximising the action and proving once again, that the bad guys can never shoot straight. (LOL! Even one of the brothers notes this of one of his compadres, after a pathetically ordinary, failed dry gulch attempt.)
For extra amusement listen for Montgomery's mispronunciation of what I gather was meant to be "shady", as in "shady tree" in the third act, as a turncoat felon is handcuffed to a tree. To my finely tuned ears , it sounds like a very commonly used, coarse, 6 letter epithet, that just may have slipped past both the sound editors and the censors at the time. Another reason to see a movie, the likes of which they don't seem too inclined to make anymore.
For extra amusement listen for Montgomery's mispronunciation of what I gather was meant to be "shady", as in "shady tree" in the third act, as a turncoat felon is handcuffed to a tree. To my finely tuned ears , it sounds like a very commonly used, coarse, 6 letter epithet, that just may have slipped past both the sound editors and the censors at the time. Another reason to see a movie, the likes of which they don't seem too inclined to make anymore.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaIn Uruguay, as other countries in Latin America, this film was released in black and white.
- ErroresAs Cruze is riding back with one of the outlaws, he's arrested; tracks of a large earth-moving vehicle are visible at the bottom of the frame in one shot. Such vehicles didn't exist in the days of the Old West.
- Créditos curiososOpening credits: The history of any frontier region . . . such as the great expanses of the new State of Texas . . . . offered many examples of the strange way in which a few men of great evil could dominate whole communities of well-meaning, but passive citizens . . .
. . . And examples, too, of men of a different breed . . . men who rode out alone for law and order, with badges on their vests and handcuffs in their pockets . . . playing a lone gun against great odds.
- ConexionesFeatured in Frances Farmer Presents: The Lone Gun (1959)
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- How long is The Lone Gun?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 16 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.66 : 1
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By what name was The Lone Gun (1954) officially released in India in English?
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