AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,0/10
271
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
John Drum mata um xerife em um tiroteio, e é obrigado a fugir e juntar-se ao bando do foragido Whit Lacey.John Drum mata um xerife em um tiroteio, e é obrigado a fugir e juntar-se ao bando do foragido Whit Lacey.John Drum mata um xerife em um tiroteio, e é obrigado a fugir e juntar-se ao bando do foragido Whit Lacey.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
Lorna Gray
- Julie Ann McCabe
- (as Adrian Booth)
Louis Faust
- Fort Sentry
- (as Louis R. Faust)
Chuck Baldra
- Townsman
- (não creditado)
George Bell
- Townsman
- (não creditado)
Hank Bell
- Buck - Stagecoach Driver
- (não creditado)
Rudy Bowman
- Townsman
- (não creditado)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
At a lesser scale than DARK COMMAND, which I commented a few minutes ago. Not the same actors either, but at least this is an outdoor western, unlike so many other westerns from this company. Anyway, it is action packed, pense, rough, very entertaining. However don't expect any surprise on the story. Jo Kane was a western maker who worked entirely for Republic during his entire career, he knew his job, and was familiar with Rod Cameron and Forrest Tucker; they will work together several more times for Republic. But here, you can not avoid cabaret sequences, a trademark of westerns at Republic, but there are not too long, as it was for JUBILEE TRAIL, with river boats and cabaret scenes, too many for a western, if my memory is faithful. So, enjoy this western. One more thing, as in many Republic westerns, if you removed riding sequences, scenes where you watch cow boys on their horses thru sierras, plains, mesas, desert, valleys, if you removed those long scenes, you will remove one third of the film. This was a trick used by many film makers for western, to fill up the feature length. Ha ha ha.
I always found Rod Cameron a solid actor, and it was a shame he didn't star in bigger scaled B-westerns a la Randolph Scott throughout the 50's. He was an archetypical cowboy, tall and deadly, but with a twinkle in his eye. And this appeal is showcased in the Plunderers, an energetic film where he plays an undercover agent who befriends Forrest Tucker so he could capture Tucker and his gang of robbers pilfering from wagons.
It's great entertainment, irrespective of the year it was made, and it's a buddy western punctuated with some romance, quick-witted dialogue, great saloon songs, and well-staged action scenes. It was good for 1948, and it's good for now.
Watched this movie last night for the first time, and I thoroughly enjoyed it. As one reviewer said, they sure don't make them like this anymore.
The pace was good......the romances were given just the right amount of screen time (I'm a softie that way), along with the fisticuffs.
I only have one nagging feeling about this film: the title it was given. Okay, I understand (I guess) that "The Plunderers" could be considered the white bad guys in cahoots with the Indian bad guys to wreak some havoc; but, for me, the title seems to not hit the mark of this film. It seems to me that there was not really the "feeling" of plundering being the main attraction here. As other reviewers point out, it's the friendly relationship between the good man lead and the bad man lead characters that is the thrust of this story. And that is something that sets this film apart from other standard westerns.
As if the plundering were just a side event.
Wish they could have come up with something more meaty for a title.
The pace was good......the romances were given just the right amount of screen time (I'm a softie that way), along with the fisticuffs.
I only have one nagging feeling about this film: the title it was given. Okay, I understand (I guess) that "The Plunderers" could be considered the white bad guys in cahoots with the Indian bad guys to wreak some havoc; but, for me, the title seems to not hit the mark of this film. It seems to me that there was not really the "feeling" of plundering being the main attraction here. As other reviewers point out, it's the friendly relationship between the good man lead and the bad man lead characters that is the thrust of this story. And that is something that sets this film apart from other standard westerns.
As if the plundering were just a side event.
Wish they could have come up with something more meaty for a title.
The Plunderers has Rod Cameron on detached duty pretending to be an outlaw. His mission is to get outlaw Forrest Tucker who's been causing such mayhem in the territory that the army has an interest in his capture, conviction, and execution.
To establish his credentials with Tucker, a fake killing of sheriff George Cleveland is carried out and that does put him in solid with Tucker. It also puts him in solid with Tucker's girlfriend Lorna Gray and her companion Ilona Massey. By the way Massey looks completely lost in a western. Maybe Herbert J. Yates had Vera Hruba Ralston shooting another picture at Republic.
There's a nicely staged Sioux attack as a climax where both Cameron and Tucker find out who's been selling rifles to the Sioux. Selling weaponry to the Indians is a cardinal sin in all western films.
Yates put a bit more budget into this western than normal, possibly thinking that Cameron, Tucker or both might be a breakout star from the B westerns. Of course that never happened as it did with John Wayne. It should have had a better story with better drawn characters. Paul Fix for instance when we first meet him is a back shooting rat. For no apparent reason he becomes downright noble in the end.
Not the best western Yates ever turned out of his horse opera factory.
To establish his credentials with Tucker, a fake killing of sheriff George Cleveland is carried out and that does put him in solid with Tucker. It also puts him in solid with Tucker's girlfriend Lorna Gray and her companion Ilona Massey. By the way Massey looks completely lost in a western. Maybe Herbert J. Yates had Vera Hruba Ralston shooting another picture at Republic.
There's a nicely staged Sioux attack as a climax where both Cameron and Tucker find out who's been selling rifles to the Sioux. Selling weaponry to the Indians is a cardinal sin in all western films.
Yates put a bit more budget into this western than normal, possibly thinking that Cameron, Tucker or both might be a breakout star from the B westerns. Of course that never happened as it did with John Wayne. It should have had a better story with better drawn characters. Paul Fix for instance when we first meet him is a back shooting rat. For no apparent reason he becomes downright noble in the end.
Not the best western Yates ever turned out of his horse opera factory.
6bux
A tight script, decent dialogue, and good supporting cast, separate this one from the routine shoot 'em ups. Sort of a "buddy movie" with Cameron, the lawman and Tucker the outlaw, forced to set aside differences to avoid a sioux massacre. Fix, as one of the bad guys, delivers cynical wit throughout. They just don't make 'em like this anymore.
Você sabia?
- Citações
Sam Borden: Tap, it ain't every man that gets the chance to see his own funeral. I don't know that I rightly like it, though. It seems kind of ghostly like. There's my cousin, Pete, all red-eyed... mostly from corn, not from grief. And there's banker Havens sad as can be, but probably wondering will my house bring money enough at auction to cover the mortgage.
Principais escolhas
Faça login para avaliar e ver a lista de recomendações personalizadas
- How long is The Plunderers?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 27 min(87 min)
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1
Contribua para esta página
Sugerir uma alteração ou adicionar conteúdo ausente