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Confession d'un tueur

Original title: Showdown at Boot Hill
  • 1958
  • Approved
  • 1h 11m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
681
YOUR RATING
Confession d'un tueur (1958)
DramaWestern

A deputy marshal kills a murderer in a town that loved him, and when no one is willing to identify him, he can't collect any reward.A deputy marshal kills a murderer in a town that loved him, and when no one is willing to identify him, he can't collect any reward.A deputy marshal kills a murderer in a town that loved him, and when no one is willing to identify him, he can't collect any reward.

  • Director
    • Gene Fowler Jr.
  • Writer
    • Louis Vittes
  • Stars
    • Charles Bronson
    • Robert Hutton
    • John Carradine
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    681
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Gene Fowler Jr.
    • Writer
      • Louis Vittes
    • Stars
      • Charles Bronson
      • Robert Hutton
      • John Carradine
    • 22User reviews
    • 16Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos5

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    Top cast28

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    Charles Bronson
    Charles Bronson
    • Luke Welsh
    Robert Hutton
    Robert Hutton
    • Sloane
    John Carradine
    John Carradine
    • Doc Weber
    Carole Mathews
    Carole Mathews
    • Jill Crane
    Fintan Meyler
    • Sally Crane
    Paul Maxey
    Paul Maxey
    • Judge Wallen
    Thomas Browne Henry
    Thomas Browne Henry
    • Con Maynor
    • (as Thomas B. Henry)
    William Stevens
    • Corky
    Martin Smith
    • Tex
    Joe McGuinn
    Joe McGuinn
    • Mr. Creavy
    • (as Joseph McGuinn)
    George Douglas
    • Charles Maynor
    Mike Mason
    • Les Patton
    • (as Michael Mason)
    George Pembroke
    • Sheriff Hinkle
    Argentina Brunetti
    Argentina Brunetti
    • Mrs. Bonaventura
    Ed Wright
    • Brent
    Stacey Marshall
    • Saloon Girl
    Shirley Haven
    • Customer
    • (as Shirle Haven)
    Nick Borgani
    Nick Borgani
    • Party Guest
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Gene Fowler Jr.
    • Writer
      • Louis Vittes
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews22

    6.3681
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    Featured reviews

    6boblipton

    Yes, I Get It

    In his first starring role, Charles Bronson is a US Deputy Marshal who comes into a small western town, hunting Thomas Browne Henry. There's a bounty on him for killing three men, and when he draws on Bronson, Bronson shoots him down. The town doesn't like it. Henry was a popular figure, ready to sell a string of cattle below price, and wait for his money, so long as you didn't ask where he got them. No one will name him, and so Bronson waits around for a positive identification, so he can collect his bounty money. While he waits, he falls in love with Fintan Mayler, the shy daughter of the town's local bad woman, Carole Matthews. While he waits, there's lots of philosophizing from John Carradine, the town's barber, doctor, and fellow who reads over graves.

    Gene Fowler Jr's movie makes its points about violence and loneliness, but does so in too obvious a manner, afraid to let the audience draw its own conclusion. There are plenty of swooping crane shots by cinematographer John M. Nickolaus Jr., straight out of HIGH NOON to make sure we realize this is an important psychological movie.

    The performances are good, but everyone tries too hard to make this a superior movie.
    wrbtu

    Solid story with some action

    This western with a message starts out fast with an early gunfight, but then slows down considerably & takes things at a leisurely pace for most of the remainder of the movie. Character development, especially of Bronson & his girlfriend, is very good, & meaningful issues are explored (e.g., "Is he a bad guy if he's a model citizen in his town, has helped his neighbors in important ways, but just happens to have killed three people elsewhere?"). The plight of short people is also explored to some extent. Overall, a solid story with some action. I rate it 8/10.
    6imranahmedsg

    If you like Western movies

    If you like Western movies then Showdown at Boot Hill will not disappoint.

    Yup, it's an old fashioned plot with the usual ingredients of gunfights, good guys, bad guys, sheriff and a love interest (no Indians here though!). That makes the movie predictable but then it was made in 1958, right?

    The acting is above average with Charles Bronson delivering on his role. That the movie was filmed in black and white makes events a little more dramatic.

    Ok, so it's an old film with a plot typical of its time. Nonetheless, if you enjoy the Western film genre then you can do a lot worse than the short (less than 80 minutes) Showdown at Boot Hill!
    5westerner357

    Decent Bronson debut that eventually bogs down

    Supposedly Charles Bronson's first starring role, this involves him playing a bounty hunter named Luke Welsh who has a warrant for a man named Con Maynor (Thomas Brown Henry). Maynor had killed two other men in another town so now he has to answer for that. Welsh meets up with Maynor in the local dining hall/saloon and out draws and kills him. It was all fair and square since Maynor drew first, and Bronson is later exonerated at a local hearing.

    The only problem is that the town is not co-operating when Welsh tries to collect proof of Maynor's death in order to collect his bounty. It's seems Maynor was very popular in this town and the people resent Welch for what he did. They take pot-shots at him in the dark while the sheriff stands by and does nothing. See, the sheriff liked Maynor, too.

    But Welsh won't leave until he collects that $200 bounty and in order to do that, he has to find out why this town is enamored with Con Maynor. It's later revealed that Maynor stole and killed in other communities and then did good things for this town with a lot of his stolen wealth. A kind of twisted 'Robin Hood' would be the best way to describe it. In other words, Welch is dealing with a corrupt, sleazy town that's in deep denial about Maynor and it's own past.

    This oater starts off well, but then it engages in histrionics and psychological emotionalism, especially when Welch tries to 'find himself' while he falling in love with a local woman named Sally (Carole Mathews). It gets to be a bit much as we see the Bronson character do a lot of unnecessary hand-wringing while getting away from all the local action at hand.

    At 73 minutes, it could have been cut to an hour which would have made the story tighter and not meander off into unnecessary directions. Besides, not much else happens at Boot Hill other than Maynor getting buried there.

    With John Carradine as the barber-undertaker and Robert Hutton as the town foil.

    5 out of 10
    7kevinolzak

    Charles Bronson and John Carradine

    Better known as a film editor over five decades, Gene Fowler Jr. earned himself a decent resume as a cult director, with seven titles over a three year period, none truly outstanding, but all deserving of praise for one reason or another. 1957's "Showdown at Boot Hill" was preceded by his debut, "I Was a Teenage Werewolf," and followed by "Gang War" (also with Charles Bronson), "I Married a Monster from Outer Space" (his best known), "Here Come the Jets," "The Rebel Set," and lastly, the mediocre Western "The Oregon Trail" (again with John Carradine). "Boot Hill" is chiefly remembered, if at all, as Bronson's very first starring role in a feature film, quickly followed by Roger Corman's better known "Machine-Gun Kelly," and already at this early stage, finds himself immersed in a role which allows him to be gritty and short on talk. Bronson's Deputy U. S. Marshal Luke Welsh arrives in Mound City with a warrant for the arrest of wanted outlaw Con Maynor (Thomas Browne Henry), guilty of killing three men in other territories. He quickly finds his man dining at the hotel and flirting with waitress Sally (Fintan Meyler), hardly batting an eye when the Marshal makes his presence known, almost bragging about his exploits as he gets ready to leave. Determined to collect the $200 bounty on Maynor's head, Welsh allows the outlaw to draw now or journey to St. Louis to be hanged; the expected result has Con Maynor dead, but the hostile townspeople unwilling to identify the corpse. Forced to stick around to try to collect his hard won bounty, Welsh learns how charitable Maynor was in this territory, and how protective they feel toward him, even acknowledging his murderous ways. Bronson's romance of waitress Sally tends to slow down an already actionless Western, but the top notch script by Louis Vittes, low key but sharp, allows the entire cast to shine (incredibly, "I Was a Teenage Werewolf" was the only Fowler title not written by Vittes). Robert Hutton gets second billing as Maynor's number one defender Sloane, praising the dead man for restoring his lost herd of cattle with one he no doubt stole himself, but allowed Sloane two years to pay off. Paul Maxey's part as the de facto judge makes the inquest appear as legal as possible considering everybody lied! Best of all is John Carradine, an old friend of the director's father (all part of the John Barrymore Rat Pack), playing the challenging role of Doc Weber, town barber, who does more shaving and undertaking than he does doctoring. Looking fairly dapper in moustache and beard, Carradine simply lights up the screen, and develops a wonderful rapport with Bronson, working together again in Carradine's very last Western, 1977's "The White Buffalo," again as an undertaker (with Irish accent). Perhaps their best scene together is in the barber shop, Weber informing the Marshal about the dead man's brother arriving at Boot Hill for the funeral, despite the protestations of his customer: "now, I didn't mention any names did I?" He had fine roles in other Westerns of the 50s ("Johnny Guitar," "Thunder Pass," "Stranger on Horseback," "The Kentuckian," "Hidden Guns," and "The Proud Rebel"), but "Showdown at Boot Hill" ranks on top as his best. As for Charles Bronson, this late 1957 production began a brief starring spree, with "Machine-Gun Kelly," "Gang War," and "When Hell Broke Loose," followed by his one TV series lead, MAN WITH A CAMERA. His feature career continued with supporting roles for another decade, but at least his vehicles would grow in stature ("The Magnificent Seven," "Battle of the Bulge," "The Dirty Dozen") before European stardom beckoned with Sergio Leone's "Once Upon a Time in the West."

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The first film in which Charles Bronson receives top billing.
    • Quotes

      Luke Welsh: Sally...

      Sally Crane: That's who I am, Sally.

      Luke Welsh: Took the day off?

      [Sally nods]

      Luke Welsh: This is what you do with it? Come up here like this and sit, all alone?

      Sally Crane: I've been alone all my life. Only most of the time people are around. So in my day off I go right away from them. On my day off, I get to be alone without them... I like that better.

    • Connections
      Edited into The Wild West (1979)

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    FAQ13

    • How long is Showdown at Boot Hill?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 1, 1958 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Showdown at Boot Hill
    • Filming locations
      • USA
    • Production company
      • Regal Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 11 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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