Civil War veteran and former newspaperman Ned Britt returns to Fort Worth after the war is over and finds himself fighting an old friend who's grown ambitious.Civil War veteran and former newspaperman Ned Britt returns to Fort Worth after the war is over and finds himself fighting an old friend who's grown ambitious.Civil War veteran and former newspaperman Ned Britt returns to Fort Worth after the war is over and finds himself fighting an old friend who's grown ambitious.
Dickie Jones
- Luther Wicks
- (as Dick Jones)
Michael Tolan
- Mort Springer
- (as Lawrence Tolan)
James Adamson
- Barman
- (uncredited)
Victor Adamson
- Wagon Train Member
- (uncredited)
Carl Andre
- Drover
- (uncredited)
Gregg Barton
- Clevenger's Man
- (uncredited)
George Bell
- Wagon Train Member
- (uncredited)
Stanley Blystone
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThree train scenes are taken directly from Les conquérants (1939) - the race with the horse-drawn stagecoach along the tracks; the burning carriage and subsequent escape on horseback; the triumphal arrival of the train in town at the end.
- GoofsWhen the train is attacked, the attackers come from the right of the train. But the bullet holes in the woodwork inside the train show that the shots came from the left.
- Quotes
Luther Wicks: [Seeing a rider approach from the distance] Whoever that be?
Ned Britt: Somebody with a taste for solitude. Texas Trail makes lonely riding for a man alone.
- SoundtracksI've Been Workin' on the Railroad
(uncredited)
American folk song first published in 1894
Heard on soundtrack during parade sequence.
Featured review
Randolph Scott plays a pacifist who has given up the gun for the pen – or the printing press – and he's not entirely convincing, perhaps simply because we're so used to seeing him blazing away at the bad guys in the seemingly endless succession of Westerns he made in the 1940s and 50s. He returns to Fort Worth with his business partner to start up a local newspaper with the prime objective of ridding the dying town of slimy bad guy Clavenger (Ray Teal) who is riding roughshod over the place and driving away the peace-loving residents. Scott's character also re-unites with Blair Lunsford, one of film history's more ambiguous villains in the reassuringly swaggering form of David Brian. Lunsford is capitalising on Clavenger's terrorising of the locals by buying their property cheap when they decide to move out.
The story is fairly unusual and not without interest, but it's Brian's character who leaves the most lasting impression. Is he a bad guy, or just an ambitious man making the most of the misery of others without actually contributing to that misery? The film never really tells us, and doesn't really seem able to make up its mind. He genuinely likes Scott's ramrod-straight good guy, and only turns when he finds himself backed into a corner. Anyway, despite its rather unique storyline, the film's conclusion is fairly predictable.
The story is fairly unusual and not without interest, but it's Brian's character who leaves the most lasting impression. Is he a bad guy, or just an ambitious man making the most of the misery of others without actually contributing to that misery? The film never really tells us, and doesn't really seem able to make up its mind. He genuinely likes Scott's ramrod-straight good guy, and only turns when he finds himself backed into a corner. Anyway, despite its rather unique storyline, the film's conclusion is fairly predictable.
- JoeytheBrit
- Jun 9, 2011
- Permalink
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $689,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 20 minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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