AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,6/10
492
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaFrustrated with the lack of opportunities in his hometown, young Jess Harker plans to leave, but sympathetic stagecoach armed guard Race Crim persuades his boss to give Jess the stage driver... Ler tudoFrustrated with the lack of opportunities in his hometown, young Jess Harker plans to leave, but sympathetic stagecoach armed guard Race Crim persuades his boss to give Jess the stage driver job.Frustrated with the lack of opportunities in his hometown, young Jess Harker plans to leave, but sympathetic stagecoach armed guard Race Crim persuades his boss to give Jess the stage driver job.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
Robert Adler
- Townsman
- (não creditado)
Chet Brandenburg
- Townsman
- (não creditado)
Joe Brooks
- Townsman
- (não creditado)
Roy Bucko
- Murdered Station Agent
- (não creditado)
Harry Carter
- Deputy Tex Rafferty
- (não creditado)
George Chesebro
- Townsman
- (não creditado)
Jack Clinton
- Townsman
- (não creditado)
Edmund Cobb
- Townsman
- (não creditado)
Clancy Cooper
- Bert Foley
- (não creditado)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
Western novelist Jack Schaefer's follow-up to SHANE, THE SILVER WHIP is turned into a "shaky A" with Dale Robertson, Rory Calhoun, and Robert Wagner in the lead as an ambitious young stage driver. While this black-and-white effort lacks the visual grandeur of George Stevens' masterpiece, and the cast all right. and.... well, this is a good B western, with some nice outdoor photography by Lloyd Ahern Sr.
Director Harmon Jones doesn't seem to push anyone too hard, but it's a well-told story. It's clear they were feeling ambitious with this one. They screenplay is pretty good. I's simply that they chose to tell the story with melodramatic intentions, rather than the simple way that George Stevens' masterpiece did.
Director Harmon Jones doesn't seem to push anyone too hard, but it's a well-told story. It's clear they were feeling ambitious with this one. They screenplay is pretty good. I's simply that they chose to tell the story with melodramatic intentions, rather than the simple way that George Stevens' masterpiece did.
"The Silver Whip" has a very good cast for a western. Rory Calhoun, Dale Robertson and a very young Robert Wagner star in this one.
Jess (Wagner) is very young but capable...so much so that Race (Robertson) recommends the stage company hire him to be their driver. But on his first run, the stage coach wanders into an ambush. Race yells at Jess to leave him behind to fight off the bandits but Jess refuses and stays to help. In the process, Jess gets himself shot (not badly) but his passengers are killed. Later, when he returns to town, Jess is fired for not listening to Race and not leaving with the coach.
Following this robbery, Race sticks behind and tracks the band of killers...all on his own. Jess goes back to town and after being fired, he's hired by the Sheriff (Calhoun) to be his deputy. Obviously Sheriff Davisson still has confidence in the young guy. Soon, the Sheriff and Deputy set out to find Race and the killers. What's next? See the film.
There's nothing great about this film but the script has some original ideas AND the acting is quite nice. After all, while not exactly A-listers, Robertson and Calhoun made some mighty good westerns during the 50s....and Wagner was just fine in one of his earliest roles. Overall, if you like westerns, you're bound to like this one...and seeing Jess grow and change through the course of the story was quite nice as well.
Jess (Wagner) is very young but capable...so much so that Race (Robertson) recommends the stage company hire him to be their driver. But on his first run, the stage coach wanders into an ambush. Race yells at Jess to leave him behind to fight off the bandits but Jess refuses and stays to help. In the process, Jess gets himself shot (not badly) but his passengers are killed. Later, when he returns to town, Jess is fired for not listening to Race and not leaving with the coach.
Following this robbery, Race sticks behind and tracks the band of killers...all on his own. Jess goes back to town and after being fired, he's hired by the Sheriff (Calhoun) to be his deputy. Obviously Sheriff Davisson still has confidence in the young guy. Soon, the Sheriff and Deputy set out to find Race and the killers. What's next? See the film.
There's nothing great about this film but the script has some original ideas AND the acting is quite nice. After all, while not exactly A-listers, Robertson and Calhoun made some mighty good westerns during the 50s....and Wagner was just fine in one of his earliest roles. Overall, if you like westerns, you're bound to like this one...and seeing Jess grow and change through the course of the story was quite nice as well.
Robert Wagner, thirty years before Hart to Hart. Here, he's young Jess Harker, waiting to leave his quiet little hometown, in one of his early roles. the stagecoach company lets him drive the stage, but of course, there will be obstacles along the way. when they get held up, they go after the gang. co-stars Dale Robertson and Rory Calhoun. Some scenes filmed in the hills east of modesto. GIANT trees on the ponderosa. Directed by Harmon Jones.. his first film as director was As Young As You Feel, with some huge hollywood names; he directed a bunch of big films, but moved into Television pretty quickly. It's good! no real surprises, but it's good.
Frustrated with the lack of opportunities in his hometown, young Jess Harker( Robert Wagner) plans to leave, but sympathetic stagecoach armed guard Race Crim (Dale Robertson) persuades his boss to give Jess the stage driver job. He accepts and gives the kid a chance to drive the stagecoach's main-line carrying $27000 dollars in gold dust and two important passengers. Crim rides as a guard, but when they arrive at a waystation, a gang of outlaws is waiting to ambush the coach. Jess panics and disobeys orders, resulting in the death of both coach passengers and the theft of the gold. Crim's love is among the dead, and he swears vengeance on Slater's gang, heading off after them. Jess is ordered back, but instead joins the posse led by Rory Calhoun's sheriff Tom Davisson, eager to make up for his mistakes. Crim however has turned vigilante, and shows no mercy for Slater's men as a hunts them down, before Tom and Jess apprehend Slater before Crim can hang him. Tom wants justice done, but not the frontier justice that the townsfolk have in mind, and as tensions simmer, friends will clash as doing the right thing becomes the unpopular option.
A fresh-faced Robert Wagner does well as a cocky man who soon goes through trial and tribulations before growing up and becoming someone, and that with the help of Dale Robertson and Rory Calhoun who both went on to have a successful career in westerns. Dale Robertson went on to make Tales of Wells Fargo. This western has plenty of Stagecoach chases, shootouts and they are quite excitingly shot, which gives this decent western a boost. Characterisation is fine, too.
A fresh-faced Robert Wagner does well as a cocky man who soon goes through trial and tribulations before growing up and becoming someone, and that with the help of Dale Robertson and Rory Calhoun who both went on to have a successful career in westerns. Dale Robertson went on to make Tales of Wells Fargo. This western has plenty of Stagecoach chases, shootouts and they are quite excitingly shot, which gives this decent western a boost. Characterisation is fine, too.
Based on a novel from the author of "Shane" and "Monte Walsh" comes a much less substantial of western, but an entertaining one none-the-less. Robert Wagner plays a young cowboy who's getting restless in his small town, so to keep him from becoming a no-good drifter the local stagecoach owner hires him as an armed guard for a large gold shipment. After the stagecoach is robbed, young hotheaded Wagner learns from the stagecoach driver (Dale Robertson) and from the sheriff (Rory Calhoun) there are two kinds of justice and he has to decide which one is right. In the hands of a director like George Stevens, this story had the potential to be something really smart, but instead it's merely a diverting western that will entertain fans of sagebrush tales.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesMovie based on the novel "First Blood" by author Jack Schaefer. This was Schaefer's second western novel. His first was "Shane".
- Erros de gravaçãoIn one scene, the telegrapher was using his thumb on the Morse code key instead of the right index finger.
- ConexõesReferenced in Segredos do Paraíso: Hair of the Dog (2013)
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- How long is The Silver Whip?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 560.000 (estimativa)
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 13 min(73 min)
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1
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