Lot McGuire es un joven pistolero que quiere probarse a sí mismo que es más rápido que el famoso sheriff Dan Blaine. Éste trata de convencerlo por todos los medios de que no malgaste su vida... Leer todoLot McGuire es un joven pistolero que quiere probarse a sí mismo que es más rápido que el famoso sheriff Dan Blaine. Éste trata de convencerlo por todos los medios de que no malgaste su vida, en vez de arriesgarse a morir.Lot McGuire es un joven pistolero que quiere probarse a sí mismo que es más rápido que el famoso sheriff Dan Blaine. Éste trata de convencerlo por todos los medios de que no malgaste su vida, en vez de arriesgarse a morir.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Dave Webster
- (sin créditos)
- Man on the Street
- (sin créditos)
- Indian
- (sin créditos)
- Bartender
- (sin créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
Glenn Ford is the town marshal and the fastest draw in these here parts and when you're the former, it sure helps if you're the latter. He's got a gal pal in Angie Dickinson who's a combination of Miss Kitty and oddly enough Grace Kelly in High Noon. Because oddly enough a confident young gun hand played by Chad Everett has come to town and he's got Angie worried.
Let's just say that Angie makes a move that Kitty would never even contemplate insofar as Matt Dillon was concerned. It costs her big time.
The western as an adult theme arrived in this film because we have a scene with Glenn and Angie sleeping in a big double bed. We never got to Ms. Kitty's bedroom in Gunsmoke and a scene of a man and woman in the same bed was something never contemplated in the past. Not even that very married couple Roy Rogers and Dale Evans would have heard of such a thing.
What happens with Glenn and Chad. You have to watch the film to find out. But I will say you'll see an ending very much influenced by High Noon.
Richard Thorpe, a reliable director of all genre, and one of MGM's most prolific filmmaker since 1935 directed and produced 'The Last Challenge'/'The Pistolero of Red River.'
Wanting a particular personal style, Thorpe never directed a great motion picture, but had a consistently acceptable batting average as a director of fine, unpretentious entertainment ranging from drama and polished adventure to comedy, musicals and westerns...
With a beautiful body and a timeless loveliness of a face, Angie Dickinson looks great in her black gown... She again figures effectively as the young lady, in love, who wants to stop the shootout... The movie has a Marshal (Glenn Ford) with a reputation as a legendary wild gunfighter, heading for a showdown with a dangerous good-looking challenger Chad Everett...
The John Sherry-Robert Emmett Ginna screenplay features Gary Merrill as a bushy-brow 'Five Card Stud' player, and Jack Elam as the hired killer with an evil leer...
Dan Blaine (Glen Ford), the Marshal of a small town in the West, has the reputation of being the fastest and most precise shot around. Since he has been sheriff, the formerly dangerous area has become calm. Blaine, whose beautiful and rich girlfriend (Angie Dickinson) owns a local saloon, is therefore highly respected in his community. One day, however, a young gunslinger named Lot McGuire (Chad Everett) comes to town, with the intention to challenge Blaine in a duel. While he wishes to duel with the sheriff, McGuire is an otherwise friendly and likable guy. Blaine therefore wants to dissuade the young man from his wish...
Glen Ford is very good in the lead, and Chad Everett also delivers a solid performance as the young gunslinger. Beautiful Angie Dickinson is, as always, great in the female lead. The supporting cast includes the great genre actor Jack Elam, who also fits in his role very well. The film is overall entertaining and definitely worth the time. When it comes to Westerns from the late 60s, however, the Italian Westerns are usually incomparably better than those from the United States. While everybody is a bastard in Italian Westerns of the time, all characters are kinda good in this film, which makes it less interesting to me. "The Last Challenge" sure is a solid and entertaining little western, but it also confirmed what I already knew - American Westerns from the late sixties can not compete with their Italian counterparts, as the Spaghetti Westerns beat them in all respects. Nevertheless, a decent film. 6/10
This is an old fashion western. It's simple. It's classical. It's standard. It doesn't do anything special. Glenn Ford is the old guard. Everett has his hair. Angie Dickinson could have been special but she isn't given much to do. There may be nothing wrong with this western but it's not one that stands above the crowd.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaMcGuire was able to tell Squint was cheating in the poker game because the game was "jacks or better" for openers, and Squint showed a straight flush in clubs, ace through five, after drawing one card. To open the pot, Squint had to have a pair of aces in order to qualify to open, as his other cards were too low, and therefore had to have discarded an ace to draw his one card. But McGuire had three aces, so Squint could not have had the necessary two aces to open, so he was cheating. The other players commented that they too wanted to see Squint's openers, so they too suspected something fishy.
- ErroresDuring the ambush shoot-out, Scarnes shoots McGuire's rifle stock. In subsequent scenes, the stock is intact.
- Citas
Marshal Dan Blaine: Of all the people I know who ain't worth saving, you're the first one to come to my mind.
- ConexionesReferenced in Password: Angie Dickinson vs. Frank Gorshin - Day 4 (1966)
Selecciones populares
- How long is The Last Challenge?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 36 minutos
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1