Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueWhen outlaws savagely murder his sister, a cowboy swears vengeance. However, before he can take the law into his own hands, an old lawman corrals the gang himself and brings the outlaws to j... Tout lireWhen outlaws savagely murder his sister, a cowboy swears vengeance. However, before he can take the law into his own hands, an old lawman corrals the gang himself and brings the outlaws to justice properly.When outlaws savagely murder his sister, a cowboy swears vengeance. However, before he can take the law into his own hands, an old lawman corrals the gang himself and brings the outlaws to justice properly.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Marshal Jethro Karnin
- (as Donald Barry)
- Jeb Sims
- (as Joseph Patridge)
Avis à la une
Only the revenge-seeker's wife is consumed by it.. by hating it... threatening to leave if he kills cold-blooded siblings Joe Patridge and Eric Matthews who, given more time and a bigger budget, would have made a classic antagonist duo...
But there's still some cool sporadic action in several dusty locales as the brothers are taken by that titular coach to/towards jail, and that's where faithfully resilient evil mom Hanna Landy comes in (as her phantom gang prepares elsewhere), going undercover under sheriff Don 'Red' Barry's nose as one of several supposedly mundane passengers, also including the ingenue/wife and a few other gun-toting cowboys, who wind up in a rushed shoot-em-up finale...
But only because so much essential time's spent building the characters and motivations since in CONVICT STAGE, everyone's got something either hidden up their sleeve or bleeding right outside it.
The American B western had vanished under the assault of television. In 1965, the TV western was not in great shape and there was still a market for the darker western. 20th Century-Fox could always use one to offer for double or triple features, and if you could keep the budget down, you could give some professionals jobs and make yourself a few dollars, just like in the old days of the cinematic west. And that is what this was: classic, simple story, competent actors (mostly; I think Jodi Mitchell as Barry's wife offers poor line readings), some decent direction by Lesley Selander and the wide-open camerawork that was often the best part of the old B Western.
In many ways, it looks like a large and gracefully shot, serious episode of a TV western. It is distinguished by Gordon Avil's black-and-white cinematography of the badlands near Kanab, Utah -- John Ford Country, but contrary to legend, a lot of people shot westerns there. Lynn Reynolds was the first in 1924, a decade and a half before Ford first went there for DRUMS ALONG THE MOHAWK. Avil was born in Philadelphia in 1899. His career as a cinematographer began in 1929. By 1930, he had worked on King Vidor's BILLY THE KID. In 1931, it was THE CHAMP, again for Vidor. Then his screen credits vanished for 16 years. He returned to the camera in B movies and television work. After camerawork on a third of the episodes of HOGAN'S HEROES, he retired. He died of a heart attack in the Barbados in 1970.
It is a rather simple plot as two young robbers, Jeb and Johnny Sims, has been arrested by the local Marshal. The Marshal wants to get the two criminals out of his territory because he knows that the two boys have many friends and will be wanting to spring them from jail. The Marshal is also dealing with a former gunslinger named Ben Lattimore. Ben's sister was killed by the two boys when they robbed a stage in the area. Lattimore is out for revenge.
The Marshal, with some help from a few people, are taking the boys to the territorial prison on the upcoming stagecoach. Lattimore gets word that the two are being transferred and he rides out to meet the stage. He wants the Marshal to release the boys so that he can take out his revenge. But when the two criminal's friends decide to free the boys, Lattimore may have to help the Marshal keep the prisoners in custody.
There is more to this tale as the wife of Lattimore is leaving him because Ben refuses to stop his gun-fighting. Also the mother of Jeb and Johnny is set on making sure that her boys are freed before they reach prison. Just by luck, or by simple writing, the two women land on the same stagecoach that the Marshal is transporting the prisoners.
Unlike others, I found this low-budget film to be watchable. Sure the acting was rough, the scenes were cheaply done and it seems that the main characters only receive flesh wounds while the no-names are killed with one easy shot -- but overall the viewer got exactly what was expected. The film was made to entertain audiences for an hour, it accomplished its task.
It opens with a couple of outlaw killers killing two people during a robbery from a stagecoach and one woman. And before the woman dies with a gunshot on the back, she initial the two killers on the sand "J J SIMS" by the time both the sheriff Jethro (Don 'Red' Barry also credited as co-writer) and a gunfighter Ben Lattimore (Harry Lauter) show up, and almost immediately they knew exactly who they were. And although the first two guys bothers Jeb and Johnny murdered and killed were nobody's the woman on the hand they shot in the back happened to be gunfighter, Ben Lattimore's sister. And he wants retribution, while the sheriff wants to bring them back to the town to face trial in Apache Wells. And when Ben goes on his own, for some odd coincidence, Johnny and Jeb's ma, Mrs. Gregory (Hanna Landy) and uncle Adams (George Sawaya) were able to knock him out while he is on pursuit, which resulted to the sheriff to capturing them first. And by the time, Ben goes back in pursuit, we then see his wife,Sally Latttimore (Jodi Mitchell) who happens to be a Quaker and is attempting to talk him out of killing Jeb and Johnny. It was at this point, sheriff manage to place both Jeb and Johnny handcuffed into a stagecoach with his two helpers of the driver, Dix (Fred Krone) and his shotgun rider, Piute (Michael Carr ) to come along with him. Except that three other passengers want to come along with them, including Ben's wife Sally, Sam Gill (Walter Reed) who claims he is a whisky drummer, and Mrs. Gregory posing as a regular citizen. And as soon as Ben found out the sheriff has the prisoners of Jeb and Johnny, he catches up to it before joining the group on their way until they stumble onto the stage station only to find that there are no new horses to exchange them with. Because Mrs. Gregory's hubby, Uncle Adam is garnering reinforcements of seven outlaws sabotaging the horse station for the purpose of slowing them down, forcing the Sheriff and Ben to seclude themselves to a nearby ghost town called "Calico"
Had I not seen better Westerns such as "High Noon" and "3:10 To Yuma" among other movies I probably would have liked this but as a result of seeing better Western movies the writers may have watched to make this one give this movie the thumbs down.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe only film of Jodi Mitchell.
- GaffesAt the end of the movie as the men are getting into the stagecoach the bandages don't match their initial injuries. For example Johnny was shot in the wrist but the bandage is on the upper arm.
- Citations
Sally Latttimore: It's not right to kill, Ben. No matter what the provocation, it's just not right.
Ben Lattimore: Sally, this is Arizona Territory, not a Quaker meeting house.
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Détails
- Durée
- 1h 11min(71 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage