VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,3/10
1243
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Ingiustamente accusato di aver rapinato il treno che stava tornando a casa, Bill Doolin, si riunisce di nuovo alla sua vecchia banda, partecipa ad altre rapine e diventa un fuorilegge ricerc... Leggi tuttoIngiustamente accusato di aver rapinato il treno che stava tornando a casa, Bill Doolin, si riunisce di nuovo alla sua vecchia banda, partecipa ad altre rapine e diventa un fuorilegge ricercato.Ingiustamente accusato di aver rapinato il treno che stava tornando a casa, Bill Doolin, si riunisce di nuovo alla sua vecchia banda, partecipa ad altre rapine e diventa un fuorilegge ricercato.
Yvette Duguay
- Cimarron Rose
- (as Yvette Dugay)
David Bauer
- Sam Swanson
- (as David Wolfe)
Noah Beery Jr.
- Bob Dalton
- (as Noah Beery)
Carl Andre
- Posse Member
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Emile Avery
- Posse Member
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Joe Bailey
- Jed
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Eugene Baxter
- Tilden
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Stanley Blystone
- Train Passenger
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
John Bromfield
- Tulsa Jack
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
Recensioni in evidenza
May be of interest that Audie Murphy (and momentarily Noah Berry Jnr) rides James Stewart's horse Pie in this movie. Stewart rode him in many movies over 22 years. I believe Glen Ford ride him in one movie too, but he bucked Ford off.
I never saw an Audie Murphy film I didn't like & this one is no exception. It is a real action packed shoot-em-up, but it also has a better than average plot to hold your attention between the action sequences that were Audie's trademarks. I knew Audie quite well, we used to shoot together at the various "fast draw" contests in CA that were popular back in the '60's. I can tell you this, anything you saw Audie do on film, he could do for real. He was one of the fastest guns in the movies, & he could do it with real bullets, not just blanks or wax bullets! He became a fine horseman, even riding some of his own horses in his films. Watch for Flying John, his horse that he rode in "Night Passage". Audie was a much better actor than he was ever given credit for, or allowed to be in Universal's films.
With the completion of The Cimarron Kid Audie Murphy played three of the Old West's legendary outlaws, Billy The Kid in The Kid From Texas, Jesse James in Kansas Raiders, and Bill Doolin in this film. I'm not sure any other player earned that distinction.
Not that this is a true story of Doolin any more than those other two Universal western classics. Still Murphy makes an appealing and misunderstood hero who tries to go straight but the elements and his destiny work against him.
True enough his running buddies were the Dalton gang and in this film Doolin who was picked up by the railroad detectives after his release from prison when the Daltons held up the train he was riding. He was just a paying passenger, but the railroad cops thought he was in on it.
Standing out in the supporting cast is Hugh O'Brian who plays Murphy's rival for gang leadership. The fact that Murphy shoots better and has more upstairs than O'Brian fazes him not a wit. He's a mean and surly man miles from the upright Wyatt Earp he played on television.
Budd Boetticher directed Murphy in good polished style and this western delivers on both action and plot.
Not that this is a true story of Doolin any more than those other two Universal western classics. Still Murphy makes an appealing and misunderstood hero who tries to go straight but the elements and his destiny work against him.
True enough his running buddies were the Dalton gang and in this film Doolin who was picked up by the railroad detectives after his release from prison when the Daltons held up the train he was riding. He was just a paying passenger, but the railroad cops thought he was in on it.
Standing out in the supporting cast is Hugh O'Brian who plays Murphy's rival for gang leadership. The fact that Murphy shoots better and has more upstairs than O'Brian fazes him not a wit. He's a mean and surly man miles from the upright Wyatt Earp he played on television.
Budd Boetticher directed Murphy in good polished style and this western delivers on both action and plot.
Parolee Audie Murphy violently resists a crooked district attorney's latest attempt to railroad him, based on his friendship to members of the notorious Dalton gang. Breaking parole, he ends up having to join the gang for real and becoming the new leader.
Though not quite as good or well-written as director Budd Boetticher's later series of Randolph Scott pictures, The Cimarron Kid is still a fairly entertaining, muscular pulp-western, with Boetticher's usual flair for excellent photography.
With his good looks, youthful appearance, and short stature (not to mention his hero status), I'm a little surprised at how many times Audie Murphy was given a chance to play an anti-hero (Night Passage, The Texican) or even a nasty villain (No Name On The Bullet). He's charming enough though, that the audience forgives the Cimarron Kid long before the law ever does.
Noah Beery Jr. gives an amiable, though far-too-short performance as the fun-loving Bob Dalton, while a young James Best and Yvette Dugay are pretty good too as a fellow member of the gang and his beautiful, though savvy love interest.
Though not quite as good or well-written as director Budd Boetticher's later series of Randolph Scott pictures, The Cimarron Kid is still a fairly entertaining, muscular pulp-western, with Boetticher's usual flair for excellent photography.
With his good looks, youthful appearance, and short stature (not to mention his hero status), I'm a little surprised at how many times Audie Murphy was given a chance to play an anti-hero (Night Passage, The Texican) or even a nasty villain (No Name On The Bullet). He's charming enough though, that the audience forgives the Cimarron Kid long before the law ever does.
Noah Beery Jr. gives an amiable, though far-too-short performance as the fun-loving Bob Dalton, while a young James Best and Yvette Dugay are pretty good too as a fellow member of the gang and his beautiful, though savvy love interest.
This emerges as a pretty good example of the typical Audie Murphy Western vehicle though of lesser quality to the only one I had previously watched, NO NAME ON THE BULLET (1959) and, being Budd Boetticher's first Western, clearly a minor effort in his canon. Many films of this era treated (in a heavily romanticized manner) the exploits of famous outlaws of the Old West: Murphy appears as Bill Doolin and, at one point, he is told by the leader of The Dalton Gang that "They'll be writing ballads about us" and, sure enough, their exploits were later immortalized in music by the Country Rock band Eagles in "Doolin-Dalton", a song off of their second album "Desperado" (1973). Typically, Murphy is seen forced into a life of crime by circumstances or, more precisely, the persecution of a law-enforcement officer (while another, played by Leif Erickson, is more sympathetic to his plight). As ever, the gang is an eclectic assortment of characters: affable Noah Beery Jr. is their leader, Hugh O'Brian the red-headed hot-tempered challenger, James Best the ladies' man, Frank Silvera the half-breed, etc.; interestingly, we get a couple of romances going on (Murphy with the daughter of a man who shelters them and Best with a fiery Mexican girl) and the female characters are surprisingly strong for this type of film. Reassembling themselves in the wake of a bank hold-up gone awry (the film's best action sequence, climaxing in Beery's memorable come-uppance with the spilling coins a graphic substitution for blood), the gang is subsequently betrayed by the 'inside man' in a train robbery they try to pull off. Murphy is eventually persuaded to give himself up, with Erickson promising him a fair trial this time around. Shot in pleasant Technicolor, the generically-titled THE CIMARRON KID serves up compact, pacy and unpretentious entertainment perfect viewing after a hard day's work.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizFilm debut of William Reynolds.
- BlooperBill Doolin walked out of the house and took a double load of double-ought buckshot to the chest. He was killed 24 Aug 1896 in Quay, OK. He is buried in the Boot Hill section of Summit View Cemetery, Guthrie, OK. He was killed by the famous lawman, Deputy U.S. Marshall Heck Thomas.
- Citazioni
Bill Doolin: I've got a rule of my own that might do you good to remember: there will be no killing unless it's forced upon us.
- Curiosità sui creditiJames Best and Hugh O'Brian, who performed in this movie, were set to perform in Old Soldiers, but both passed away while the movie was in development.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Biography: Audie Murphy: Great American Hero (1996)
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 24min(84 min)
- Proporzioni
- 1.33 : 1
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