14 recensioni
Rory Calhoun was a staple hero in all kinds of films during the 50s. His performances were always great, abetted by his handsome, rugged looks and the ease into which he fit into a number of hero roles. In this one, a kind of standard western, he plays an ex-lawman who returns to the trade when his partner is killed. During the time he cleans up the town, defeats bad guys played by veteran character actors Carl Betz and John Dehner, gets his semi-revenge, on the antihero, played by Cameron Mitchell, wows the French bombshell, Corinne Calvert and, of course, gets the girl. It's great 50s entertainment with a total lack of CGI action, extensive blood and gore and good honest villains and good guys. (*sigh) They just don't make movies like this any more. Watch for it on the late show. There's no DVD or video listed. Calhoun was always worth the price of admission.
This Western has two good things going for it; dialogue by Daniel Mainwaring who wrote fiction under the name of Geoffrey Homes. For those who recall ' Out of the Past, ' or alternatively titled ' Build My Gallows High, ' he was responsible for the novel it was based on, and the dialogue in the film. Some say it is the greatest Film Noir and they could be right. Turned screenwriter he wrote the dialogue for this film and it is first rate; complex, snappy and full of energy. Out of the actors in the film Cameron Mitchell as a tormented man, threatened by death and afraid of it gives a first rate performance. The story itself is the usual one of stolen gold, and tracking down the killer of a man who was protecting it. No spoilers but Rory Calhoun gets to be the man to do that, and his performance is as slick and over polished as ever. However much he tries to portray a ' good man ' the fake smile shows up the opposite and spoils the illusion. Corinne Calvet plays a saloon girl in love with Mitchell. And she does her best to make you believe in her. As a Western it is good, but as usual the town is too clean for the period and the clothes too clean. Personally I like this decade of Western mythology, and the colour is excellent, and a shootout on a boat adrift and heading for the river's rapids is first rate. There is even a carriage on the boat which gives the scene a surreal touch. I give it a 7 for Cameron Mitchell and the dialogue.
- jromanbaker
- 12 mag 2022
- Permalink
If you're thinking that you might have seen Powder River before you would be right. If you saw Frontier Marshal or My Darling Clementine and noted in Powder River's credits that it's derived from a book by Stuart Lake than you'll know the source. Rory Calhoun plays a Wyatt Earp like marshal who has quit law enforcement for prospecting.
But when his partner Frank Ferguson is bushwhacked and robbed of the gold they've panned, Calhoun takes on the marshal's job. He also makes the acquaintance of a pair of outlaw brothers Carl Betz and John Dehner. And a terminally ill and alcoholic doctor Cameron Mitchell who is lightning fast with a six gun.
There's also a bit of Destry Rides Again added to the mix with French speaking saloon owner Corinne Calvet. The good girl from back east who wants to bring Mitchell home to save his life is former Roy Rogers leading lady Penny Edwards.
The best part of Powder River is a nice action gunfight in a foiled stagecoach robbery with Calhoun and Mitchell joining forces. The guys and the stagecoach are on a river ferry with the outlaws firing on them from shore and the ferry cut loose is heading for the rapids. All nicely staged.
If you've seen My Darling Clementine or Frontier Marshal you know how this one comes out. Calhoun made several good westerns in the Fifties and Sixties. But it's Mitchell who has the best role, the Doc Holiday part is always the best one every time this story is retold.
But when his partner Frank Ferguson is bushwhacked and robbed of the gold they've panned, Calhoun takes on the marshal's job. He also makes the acquaintance of a pair of outlaw brothers Carl Betz and John Dehner. And a terminally ill and alcoholic doctor Cameron Mitchell who is lightning fast with a six gun.
There's also a bit of Destry Rides Again added to the mix with French speaking saloon owner Corinne Calvet. The good girl from back east who wants to bring Mitchell home to save his life is former Roy Rogers leading lady Penny Edwards.
The best part of Powder River is a nice action gunfight in a foiled stagecoach robbery with Calhoun and Mitchell joining forces. The guys and the stagecoach are on a river ferry with the outlaws firing on them from shore and the ferry cut loose is heading for the rapids. All nicely staged.
If you've seen My Darling Clementine or Frontier Marshal you know how this one comes out. Calhoun made several good westerns in the Fifties and Sixties. But it's Mitchell who has the best role, the Doc Holiday part is always the best one every time this story is retold.
- bkoganbing
- 22 mar 2015
- Permalink
I'm not really a fan of Rory Calhoun, but I enjoyed his character in this picture. It tells a story with a bit more depth and a few surprises, while still providing action, romance and some terrific western scenery. While Calhoun's character, Chino Bull, is still country-suave and in control, he doesn't convey the snide quality that was an undercurrent in his later television work. The story line carries some standard western baggage, but at the same time it veers away with unexpected plot developments that were a bit more sophisticated than the type of that era, presaging the so-called "adult westerns" that became the standard in the 1950s and '60s. The female characters, unfortunately, are given the usual supportive roles. Still, it's an interesting story against some beautiful backgrounds.
It demonstrates that black & white was perceived as the default position for serious postwar Hollywood cinema that this character-driven western potboiler was one of the very few colour films namechecked in Robert Warshow's 'The Immediate Experience'.
As for the film itself the most memorable characters are Cameron Mitchell as a doctor succumbing to headaches and blackouts due to a brain tumour and Corinne Calvet usually with a cigar protruding from her glossy red lips and wearing bright colours as a brassy 'businesswoman' known to the rest of the cast as 'Frenchie'.
As for the film itself the most memorable characters are Cameron Mitchell as a doctor succumbing to headaches and blackouts due to a brain tumour and Corinne Calvet usually with a cigar protruding from her glossy red lips and wearing bright colours as a brassy 'businesswoman' known to the rest of the cast as 'Frenchie'.
- richardchatten
- 10 mag 2022
- Permalink
More than Lose Remake of "My Darling Clementine" (1940) the John Ford Classic.
Rory Calhoun Vehicle with a Smattering of Gun-Play with a "Powder River" Ferry-Boat Scene a Highlight.
Good Cast with Cameron Mitchell as the Doomed Doctor and Corinne Calvet as "Frenchy" a Fiesty Saloon-Owner-Gal making an Impression.
Never Reaching Heights of its Own, the Movie is Watchable for the Cast, Technicolor, and Proven Story.
Rory Calhoun is a bit More Animated than Usual.
The First-Half is the Better Half.
But Still Maintains Enough Interest to Carry yet Another 1950's Western to its Predicable Feel-Good Exit for Post-War Western Fans who were Legion.
Rory Calhoun Vehicle with a Smattering of Gun-Play with a "Powder River" Ferry-Boat Scene a Highlight.
Good Cast with Cameron Mitchell as the Doomed Doctor and Corinne Calvet as "Frenchy" a Fiesty Saloon-Owner-Gal making an Impression.
Never Reaching Heights of its Own, the Movie is Watchable for the Cast, Technicolor, and Proven Story.
Rory Calhoun is a bit More Animated than Usual.
The First-Half is the Better Half.
But Still Maintains Enough Interest to Carry yet Another 1950's Western to its Predicable Feel-Good Exit for Post-War Western Fans who were Legion.
- LeonLouisRicci
- 7 set 2021
- Permalink
- bsmith5552
- 25 ott 2014
- Permalink
Louis King means squat to me as a director: the only other film of his that I saw was DANGEROUS MISSION! And I cannot remember it in any detail though I rated it 7/10.
Rory Calhoun rules the roost here: he blends Wyatt Earp and Destry, though at the start he is a humble, no nonsense gold digger who knows who killed his mining sidekick, wants to avenge that death, takes on the role of sheriff, and never wears a gun - very much like Jimmy Stewart in DESTRY RIDES AGAIN.
In turn, Cameron Mitchell plays Mitch Hardin, an ultra quick gun hand who, like Doc Holliday, boozes far more than good health requires. As if that were not disruptive enough, he also coughs and suffers from severe headaches that disable him every so often, at times right in the middle of a shootout. I found myself laughing at his plight, but Hardin - the name of a real and famous killer among gunfighters in the Old West - is loyal to Calhoun, even if their relationship does not get off to a wholesome start, as both have their eye on the same female. In the end, poor handsome Calhoun gets no girl but Hardin - who saves his girlfriend's life by removing a bullet from her chest, so he is a qualified but often inebriated medical doctor - sounds ever more like Doc Holliday.
Good cinematography, fair screenplay. Generally good fun. 7/10.
Rory Calhoun rules the roost here: he blends Wyatt Earp and Destry, though at the start he is a humble, no nonsense gold digger who knows who killed his mining sidekick, wants to avenge that death, takes on the role of sheriff, and never wears a gun - very much like Jimmy Stewart in DESTRY RIDES AGAIN.
In turn, Cameron Mitchell plays Mitch Hardin, an ultra quick gun hand who, like Doc Holliday, boozes far more than good health requires. As if that were not disruptive enough, he also coughs and suffers from severe headaches that disable him every so often, at times right in the middle of a shootout. I found myself laughing at his plight, but Hardin - the name of a real and famous killer among gunfighters in the Old West - is loyal to Calhoun, even if their relationship does not get off to a wholesome start, as both have their eye on the same female. In the end, poor handsome Calhoun gets no girl but Hardin - who saves his girlfriend's life by removing a bullet from her chest, so he is a qualified but often inebriated medical doctor - sounds ever more like Doc Holliday.
Good cinematography, fair screenplay. Generally good fun. 7/10.
- adrianovasconcelos
- 1 lug 2025
- Permalink
When the story begins, Chino Bull (Rory Calhoun) is working his claim along with his partner. A couple jerks come to their camp and threaten to take their horses....and Chino and his partner drive them away. However, the criminals threaten revenge...and leave. A bit later, Chino leaves for town...and when he returns he finds his partner dead and their gold has been stolen. He assumes the two jerks from earlier must have been the culprits. So, he returns to town and becomes the sheriff...so he can search for the killers and bring law to this crappy little town. There's much more to the film....but you'd best see it yourself.
"Powder River" is a good western. However, I didn't score it higher since there are a bazillion good westerns from this era. The acting is nice and the story modestly interesting. And, like most westerns, it promotes several myths about the time and people...no big surprise there.
By the way, this is a very nice looking western thank to it being filmed in color AND its location shoot in Glacier, Montana.
"Powder River" is a good western. However, I didn't score it higher since there are a bazillion good westerns from this era. The acting is nice and the story modestly interesting. And, like most westerns, it promotes several myths about the time and people...no big surprise there.
By the way, this is a very nice looking western thank to it being filmed in color AND its location shoot in Glacier, Montana.
- planktonrules
- 27 mag 2021
- Permalink
- jarrodmcdonald-1
- 28 apr 2023
- Permalink
- weezeralfalfa
- 17 mag 2017
- Permalink
I have always been surprised to see that ambitionless film director Louis King gave the best of his films by the end of his career. Not masterpieces, but greater films than the bulk of what he made in the thirties, forties: I mean grade Z westerns, or crime series - Bulldog Drummond, Charlie Chan; I though make exception with this small crime flicks for Paramount Pictures starring Lloyd Nolan, J Caroll Naish and produced in the late thirties. So this one, produced by the prestigious Twentieth Century Fox - Louis King"s also prestigious brother Henry's company - is a surprise. Louis King could have worked for Allied Artists or Republic Pictures. Excellent little western, the kind that Universal Studios could have made too. Splendid location settings. However, 20 Th Century Fox gave us similar B westerns in the fifties, several directed by Harmon Jones. And a strange and unusual showdown. Cameron Mitchell in a surprisingly good villain performance.
- searchanddestroy-1
- 28 giu 2025
- Permalink