Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaWhen gunslinger Jagade arrives in a law-abiding god-fearing town he manages to turn the townsfolk into scoff-law sinners while the town Marshal is powerless due to a moral debt to Jagade.When gunslinger Jagade arrives in a law-abiding god-fearing town he manages to turn the townsfolk into scoff-law sinners while the town Marshal is powerless due to a moral debt to Jagade.When gunslinger Jagade arrives in a law-abiding god-fearing town he manages to turn the townsfolk into scoff-law sinners while the town Marshal is powerless due to a moral debt to Jagade.
- Barfly
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Gaunt Farmer
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- Townsman
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
Anyhow, I gave the movie a 6-star rating. I guess that's kind of the going rate.
Talking of which, John Dehner (so often the villain or rascal) did this very successfully as the Parson.
I never did grasp what was Jagade's motivation for his behaviour, and perhaps the motives of Miss Timmons (the school-teacher) could have been made a little clearer.
Dale Robertson is a better actor than his reputation, but all 3 leads are limited in range. The best role and performance are the Preacher by John Dehner, who helps any film in which he appears. Most Westerns present ministers either as comic-cowardly milquetoasts or as unrealistic studs who give up their guns for the good book. When changes unsettle the town, Day of Fury's Preacher is the first to lose his temper and threaten violence, but then he's embarrassed by his own failing and horrified that his parishioners turn into a lynch mob.
The plot plays an interesting variation on the classic Western formula of the Old Wild West struggling to survive in or against the Cleaned-Up Bourgeois Town. The taciturnity of Robertson's Jigade fairly inverts the man-of-few-words Sheriff typically played by Joel McCrea or Randolph Scott into a Mephistophelean villain who quietly but steadily chips and shatters the thin veneer of civilization until the townsfolk break down into drunken irresponsibility, foolish greed, and vengeful terror. Jagade's opportunistic power compromises the town's Sheriff, played by the physically imposing Jock Mahoney, whose taciturnity can only dwindle to mute puzzlement until the wild card in Jagade's deck--the punk gunman Billy Brant--changes the game and creates a clear path of action for the law.
The sets are few, but the director keeps moving the characters across each other in well-defined space. The film's most impressive quality is to open with an atmosphere of uncertainty that steadily escalates into tension or dread. But its most interesting feature is that the anti-hero Jagade seems to have orchestrated the story as a suicide note.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizIn scene where the ladies are coming back into town when they pull up in front of saloon. One of the cowboys has a fitted ball cap on.
- BlooperIn almost every scene you can see that Dale Robertson is obviously reading off of cue cards.
- Citazioni
Preacher Jason: That man is a creature of hell. If he stays here, he'll turn this town into a hell.
Marshal Allan Burnett: But he can't do it alone. Our problem is to keep him from stampeding us into helping him.
- ConnessioniReferenced in Get a Life (2006)
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- Deuda saldada
- Luoghi delle riprese
- Azienda produttrice
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 18min(78 min)
- Proporzioni
- 2.00 : 1
- 2:1