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IMDbPro

La ville de la vengeance

Original title: The Restless Breed
  • 1957
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 26m
IMDb RATING
5.3/10
493
YOUR RATING
Anne Bancroft and Scott Brady in La ville de la vengeance (1957)
DramaWestern

A very bright young lawyer with a very quick temper travels to Mission, a small Texas border town to even the score for the murder of his father, a secret service operator, at the hands of g... Read allA very bright young lawyer with a very quick temper travels to Mission, a small Texas border town to even the score for the murder of his father, a secret service operator, at the hands of gun runners.A very bright young lawyer with a very quick temper travels to Mission, a small Texas border town to even the score for the murder of his father, a secret service operator, at the hands of gun runners.

  • Director
    • Allan Dwan
  • Writer
    • Steve Fisher
  • Stars
    • Scott Brady
    • Anne Bancroft
    • Jay C. Flippen
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.3/10
    493
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Allan Dwan
    • Writer
      • Steve Fisher
    • Stars
      • Scott Brady
      • Anne Bancroft
      • Jay C. Flippen
    • 12User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos14

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    Top cast38

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    Scott Brady
    Scott Brady
    • Mitch
    Anne Bancroft
    Anne Bancroft
    • Angelita
    Jay C. Flippen
    Jay C. Flippen
    • Marshal Evans
    Jim Davis
    Jim Davis
    • Newton
    Rhys Williams
    Rhys Williams
    • Reverend Simmons
    Leo Gordon
    Leo Gordon
    • Cherokee
    Scott Marlowe
    Scott Marlowe
    • Allan
    Eddy Waller
    Eddy Waller
    • Caesar
    Harry Cheshire
    Harry Cheshire
    • Mayor Johnson
    Myron Healey
    Myron Healey
    • Sheriff Mike Williams
    Gerald Milton
    Gerald Milton
    • Jim Daley - Bartender
    Dennis King Jr.
    • Hotel Clerk
    Billy Miller
    • Gona
    Marilyn Winston
    • Banee
    Marty Carrizosa
    • Tohna
    • (as Marty Cariosa)
    Evelyn Rudie
    Evelyn Rudie
    • Kehta
    James Flavin
    James Flavin
    • Secret Service Chief
    John Barton
    • Barfly
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Allan Dwan
    • Writer
      • Steve Fisher
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews12

    5.3493
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    Featured reviews

    7hitchcockthelegend

    Revenge is for the weak, the cruel and the thoughtless.

    The Restless Breed is directed by Allan Dwan and written by Steve Fisher. It stars Scott Brady, Anne Bancroft, Jay C. Flippen, Rhys Williams, Leo Gordon and Jim Davis. Music is by Edward L. Alperson Junior and cinematography by John W. Boyle.

    1865 and Mitch Baker travels to Mission in Texas to find out who murdered his father who was working for the Secret Service. His father was investigating the operations of "Newton's Raiders", a gang of gun runners fronted by Ed Newton (Davis) who are supplying arms to Emperor Maximillian in Mexico. Mitch has no intention of upholding the law, he has only one thing on his mind; revenge!

    "Yer a wild eyed hooligan looking for a cheap revenge, not to satisfy the ghost of your father, but your own hurt - warped - disturbed ego".

    Another of Allan Dwan's vastly under valued Westerns, it's also the last of his genre offerings. Production value is not high end, the Pathe Color is poor, the sets sometimes wobble and it features one of the most frustratingly awful music compositions laid down for a 1957 Oater, but Dwan could quite often craft a silk purse out of a sow's ear. So it be the case here.

    The Haunted Room.

    It's a standard revenge tale at its core as angry young Mitch Baker arrives in town and promptly sets about dismantling all the scumbags who cross his path. He's quick on the draw, he bristles with machismo and he's catching the eye of the ladies. Giving this simplest of formula extra weight is a religious angle, and no it's not eye rollingly preachy. Mitch finds lodgings with Reverend Simmons (Williams great) and his adopted brood of half-breed children, the eldest of which is a sexually awakened Angelita (Bancroft).

    Mitch is quickly seen as some sort of Religio Revenger, the younger members of the Simmons gathering thinking he's an Archangel. Thus Mitch, his revenge fuelled objective at the forefront of his mind, finds a number of other emotions battling to take control of his soul. The arrival of Marshal Evans (Flippen under used but a welcome and telling addition late in the play) cranks up the story considerably and Dwan builds it skillfully in readiness for the big showdown, where we are not sure exactly how it will pan out.

    Along the way there's plenty of action, with Dwan not concerned with over-kill sequences, plenty of sexual tension, and there's devilish nods towards the perils of temptation. No masterpiece here, but for Western lovers this has so much to recommend. Sadly it's under seen and the only existing print available doesn't do it any favours. 7/10
    9discount1957

    A marvellous film

    For his last western, veteran director Dwan transforms Fisher's crude revenge plot into a gentle comedy. Brady is the son of a government agent out to revenge his father's death, Davis the outlaw leader who inhabits a Mexican-American border town and Bancroft the girl who gets her man. Made on a minuscule budget, the film has an austerity and formality about it that few films achieve. As a delightful touch (and a throwback to the days of silent cinema)Dwan has the characters appear to be perpetually eavesdropping on each other. A marvellous film.

    The music is by the producer's son, Edward Alperson Jr.

    Phil Hardy
    4rsoonsa

    THE BEST THAT IT CAN BE WITH SUCH A POOR SCRIPT.

    Stalwart Scott Brady plays Mitch Baker, an attorney whose father, a Secret Service agent, has been slain in a southern Texas town by the leader of a renegade band of Americans that is selling arms to Emperor Maximilian's army in Mexico, and Mitch treks to the site of his father's death with a design of vengeance in this film set in 1865. The script is weakly composed with markedly inferior dialogue that is responsible for denying the actors an opportunity to interpret their roles, and with a considerable amount of anachronism, such as when the local marshal berates Mitch for behaviour stemming from an overwhelming "ego", a word not introduced into public parlance until Sigmund Freud culturally explicated it in the 20th century. Veteran director Allan Dwan is as effective as his scenarios will allow, accounting for his slack helmsmanship here in a work that begs for more substantive editing, denied instead because of its pronounced musical emphasis including three songs penned by producer Edward Alperson to the pleasing melodies of Raoul Kraushaar, used almost without reprieve to the point of characters whistling the tunes and having a reductive effect during moments of plotted suspense. The acting is uneven with Brady impressive in his scenes, brief but first-rate turns from Myron Healey and James Flavin, while Rhys Williams creates a defined part as a lay preacher; but Anne Bancroft's lines are too trite for her to make believable, Jim Davis is too little used, and fey Scott Marlowe is woefully miscast as a twitchy would-be gunfighter who eavesdrops during most of his scenes, a recurring event in the film since virtually all of the action follows upon someone overhearing private conversations, a tedious ploy following from unimaginative writing. Only a slender budget was available for the production made in southern California's high desert region near Apple Valley where a small set was created with notable contributions from Ernst Fegte for interior design and Howard Bristol for his detailed sets, able John Boyle being responsible for the camerawork in luminous Eastmancolor.
    7stuart-432

    Miniscule budget but who cares...

    There is an obvious absence of finance behind this film but it excels for all that. Somehow, even the obvious stage/studio setting enhances the experience of this modest effort. It is a play... and if the audience is to be drawn in... it will be through the characterization, the dialogue and the drama... not through stunning visuals and computer generated crowd scenes.

    The fundamental flaw is the age of the two principals. Bancroft was 26 at the time this was filmed and Brady 33. Angelita (Bancroft) is supposed to be a "child" of about sixteen and Mitch (Brady) is playing the part of an educated young man (late teens ?) so incensed by his father's murder that he is in danger of "taking the wrong road". It's remarkable... when you contemplate that this detail of age is fundamental to the story and to the drama... that the principals carry the thing so well and that it still works.

    For its time, it must have been something of a "blood fest" with people being killed from the outset. And again, they get it right. Lots of blood, guts and gore does not add significance to the fact that someone is killed or murdered.

    Some nice touches of humour and some becoming self-parody by some of the actors adds to the stage play quality of the film.
    6ma-cortes

    Passable and low-budgeted Western by the veteran director Allan Dwan

    In the Old west there are always the men who live breathe violence and the women who hold their breath. This is a Western with a magnificent Scott Brady and a splendidly young Anne Bancroft . This exciting picture tells the story of a respected citizen and educated advocate named Mitchell, Mitch Baker (Scott Brady) who seeks vengeance against his father's killer and no one in town is willing to help him . Mitch has sworn revenge and detain to undercover gunfighter , taking on the gang leader and his hoodlums (Leo Gordon , Scott Marlowe as watcher gunman). The leader band is smuggling weapons to Maximilian emperor against the rebel Juarez and Mitch intents to detain it . At the border little town called Mission he meets the reverend Simmons (Rhys Williams) who has adopted various Indian children and a daughter named Angelita (Anne Bancroft) . Later on , Mitch falls in love with Angelita and is appointed deputy by the marshal (Jay C . Flippen ) to bring peace . At the end the kingpin gunslinger named Newton (Jim Davis) appears and attempts to murder Mitchell with his own hands.

    Compelling tale of a secret service drifter hired by government authority to protect townspeople from revenge-seeking outlaws and avoid arms contraband . This classic western is plenty of suspense as the dreaded final showdown approaches and the protagonist realizes he must stand alone against impossible odds as the sheriffs are shot , as his fellow town people for help , nobody is willing to help him ; meanwhile he attempts to clear the killing his father who was wrongfully murdered . This is a tremendously exciting story of a sheriff-for-hire who had only one more killing to go. It begins as a slow-moving Western but follows to surprise us with dark characters and acceptable plot. This short runtime tale is almost ordinary , a pacifier comes to a town just in time to make sure its citizenry but later the events get worse . Although made in low budget by the producer Charles B Fitzsimons , who financed Batman TV series, is a quite efficient film and entertaining . The highlights are the showdown at Saloon and the climatic gun-play at the ending. Phenomenal and great role for Scott Brady as avenger angel and impulsive gunfighter, he's the whole show. Vivid and lively musical score with wonderful songs and spectacular dancing by Anne Bancroft . Atmospheric and colorful cinematography in Technicolor , though is necessary a remastering.

    This quickie is middling directed by Allan Dwan , a craftsman working from the silent cinema . Dwan directed over 1400 films, including one-reels, between his arrival in the industry (circa 1909) and his final film in 1961. Among them some good Western as ¨ Restless breed, The rivers edge,Cattle Queen of Montana,and Montana Belle¨ , being ¨Silver Lode¨ is his unqualified masterpiece. Watchable results for this offbeat Western.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Quotes

      Angelita: Where do you come from? Where did you learn how to use a

      [gun]

      Angelita: ?

      Mitch Baker: Now there you go, just like a woman, askin' questions.

    • Crazy credits
      Opening credits prologue: A LEGEND OF THE EARLY WEST . . .
    • Soundtracks
      The Restless Breed
      Lyrics by Dickson Hughes (as Dick Hughes) and Richard Stapley (as Richard Stapley), music by Edward L. Alperson Jr.

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 1957 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • La funèbre vengeance
    • Filming locations
      • Victorville, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Edward L. Alperson Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 26m(86 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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