IMDb RATING
5.8/10
432
YOUR RATING
A woman breaks out of jail before her hanging and a man is hired to bring her back.A woman breaks out of jail before her hanging and a man is hired to bring her back.A woman breaks out of jail before her hanging and a man is hired to bring her back.
Beulah Archuletta
- Indian Squaw
- (uncredited)
Bart Braverman
- Pablo
- (uncredited)
Edgar Dearing
- Sheriff Jenner
- (uncredited)
Joe Haworth
- Haddon
- (uncredited)
Nolan Leary
- Judge Dwight Larson
- (uncredited)
Pierce Lyden
- Culdane - Sheriff of Beldon County
- (uncredited)
Kermit Maynard
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
Dan Riss
- Walt Bodie - Lawyer
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
If you make it past the first 40 minutes you will find the remainder of the film slightly improved but only slightly.
The highlight comes in the first 10 minutes when the double speed the horse chase and it looks like they forgot to slow it back down lol.
Not much for Rory to work with here and the villains lack any real teeth.
The highlight comes in the first 10 minutes when the double speed the horse chase and it looks like they forgot to slow it back down lol.
Not much for Rory to work with here and the villains lack any real teeth.
I was amazed to see here a Ray Nazarro's film made in LBX and released - not produced, release - by Metro Goldwyn Mayer. I did not believe it. It is a truly interesting plot, very unusual, surprising, where Ann Francis's role steals the film. The directing is above average for a director such a Ray Nazarro, some kind of Lesley Selander prolific western maker. Nazzaro gave his best film during the fifties, his second part of career, after a long while for B westerns starring Charles Starrett. So, yes, this western is very worth the watch, it proves once more than B - 75 or 80 minutes - movies can from time to time good surprises. But if you replace Ann Francis by a man wrongly accused of murder, it would have been forgettable in the second after watching, as a drop of water, on a hot plate, that would evaporate.
Badly made western featuring Calhoun as a gunfighter paid $5000 to go find an escaped murderer-- who happens to be Anne Francis. He does so, and of course, everyone is trying to stop him. Terrible performances, terrible script, lack luster direction, wall to wall music-- all in all, a really bad movie. And it's only about 72 minutes long. Made back in the days when westerns ruled on the TV screens, it was shot widescreen, with only one or two well shot scenes, the rest of the time, it looked like they did one take and moved on. Classic scenes even included four Indians who were obviously white guys in grease paint. Good for a laugh, that's about it. TCM shows this once in a while-- a real hoot.
Ellen Beldon (Anne Francis) is in a Texas jail waiting to be hung for murdering her husband. Her uncle's ranch foreman Judd Farrow (Chuck Connors) breaks her out. Her father-in-law hires gunman Gil McCord (Rory Calhoun) to bring her back from New Mexico when the Texas authority drags its feet. Some believe her claims of innocence.
There is no real debate that Ellen is innocent. Anne Francis plays it so hard like a damsel in distress. Everything is play by hitting the nail right on the head. There isn't any surprises to be had in this straight forward western B-movie. It would work better in a darker road trip with the two characters. This is not that.
There is no real debate that Ellen is innocent. Anne Francis plays it so hard like a damsel in distress. Everything is play by hitting the nail right on the head. There isn't any surprises to be had in this straight forward western B-movie. It would work better in a darker road trip with the two characters. This is not that.
The 1950s were to movie westerns what the 40s was to film noir so it's always kinda shocking to see an oater made at this time be so friggin ordinary as this offering from Ray Nazarro. Although maybe not so shocking when you consider the fact that Budd Boetticher, one of the era's best western directors, called Nazarro the "ten day picture guy". And of those ten I would guess that half a day, at most, was spent on the screenplay/story since previous IMDB reviewers have written of its stunning predictability and unoriginality. I do, however, disagree with the previous reviewer who called it "beyond mediocre". Indeed, it is the very quintessence of average. Or, in other words, a solid C.
Did you know
- TriviaLa veuve et le tueur (1957) was the first film produced by Rory Calhoun and Victor M. Orsatti's production company, Calhoun-Orsatti Enterprises, Inc. The film also contained the statement "Rorvic Productions," a combination of the producers' first names.
- GoofsA clear moving shadow of the camera is visible on the floor of the gallows as it cranes up following Ellen and Judd as the drive away to the jail.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Le perroquet rouge (2006)
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $323,000 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 1h 3m(63 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content