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Four Fast Guns

  • 1960
  • Approved
  • 1h 12m
IMDb RATING
6.0/10
314
YOUR RATING
Four Fast Guns (1960)
DramaWestern

In 1873, the town of Purgatory hires a town-tamer, but the evil saloon owner hires three gunfighters to kill him.In 1873, the town of Purgatory hires a town-tamer, but the evil saloon owner hires three gunfighters to kill him.In 1873, the town of Purgatory hires a town-tamer, but the evil saloon owner hires three gunfighters to kill him.

  • Director
    • William J. Hole Jr.
  • Writers
    • James Edmiston
    • Dallas Gaultois
  • Stars
    • James Craig
    • Martha Vickers
    • Edgar Buchanan
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.0/10
    314
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • William J. Hole Jr.
    • Writers
      • James Edmiston
      • Dallas Gaultois
    • Stars
      • James Craig
      • Martha Vickers
      • Edgar Buchanan
    • 14User reviews
    • 7Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos19

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    Top cast15

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    James Craig
    James Craig
    • Tom Sabin
    Martha Vickers
    Martha Vickers
    • Mary Hoag
    Edgar Buchanan
    Edgar Buchanan
    • Dipper
    Brett Halsey
    Brett Halsey
    • Johnny Naco
    Paul Richards
    Paul Richards
    • Hoag
    Richard Martin
    Richard Martin
    • Quijano
    Blu Wright
    • Farmer Brown
    John Swift
    • Zodie Dawes
    Paul Raymond
    • Bob - Bartender
    James Hurley
    • Haggerty
    • (as Jim Hurley)
    Grizzly Green
    • Grady
    Roger Anderson
    • Jack
    Joe Enna
    • Don Perkins
    H. Tom Cain
    • Red the Blacksmith
    • (as H. Thomas Cain)
    Michael West
    • Elmer
    • Director
      • William J. Hole Jr.
    • Writers
      • James Edmiston
      • Dallas Gaultois
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    6.0314
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    Featured reviews

    6boblipton

    If You Say So

    James Craig rides into Purgatory when they're taking up a collection for a town tamer. He takes the pot, then has troubling doing the job. The problem seems to be wheelchair-bound Paul Richards, who runs one of the saloons and spends most of his time playing the piano and reading poetry. Craig can't bring himself to shoot an educated, kindly, helpless man despite the waves of lust sent off by Richards' wife, Martha Vickers. So Craig moves into the dilapidated Marshal's office with Edgar Buchanan, and begins to renovate the place while four hired guns come into town seriatim to earn Richards' money.

    The comedic elements work pretty well in this film, especially when Richard Martin shows up in the movie, playing a Mexican. The serious elements..... well, I'm sure they're there, I just can't take any of it particularly seriously when we don't see any gunfights, just people knocking memorials into the ground, while the good townfolk who want Craig to shoot a cripple mock him for cowardice.

    Perhaps it has something to do with the fisheying of he image whenever cinematographer John Nickolaus moves the camera. Perhaps it's all a burlesque of the psychological and symbol-laden A westerns that the 1950s threw up occasionally. That would explain why they decided to call the place Purgatory, when the two towns that actually bear the name are in New England.
    6daoldiges

    Short & with Just a Touch of Sweet

    The film's striking poster, the title, it just kind of drew me in. Four Fast Guns started off kind of slow for me but oddly enough as the film progressed I was actually starting to become involved. The basic story is kind of fun, but as is often times the case with these old westerns, and maybe with the old west in general, there are so many contradictions to how and when the law is actually enforced. This is something I have noticed about many westerns, and this one in particular. I don't recall ever seeing James Craig before, and while he does a decent job here, I do think he lacks the charisma to carry the lead role here. Who knows though, perhaps he was so focused on being the stoic, unfeeling, tough-guy cowboy that he forgot to bring the rest? Anyway, the remainder of the performances are nothing special but adequate. It's kind of a slight film and yet I did find it kind of entertaining. Check it out and see for yourself.
    5bkoganbing

    Paul Richards knows his limitations

    Four Fast Guns is an interesting if not completely successful B western, done at a time when these kinds of films and stories were finding more of a home on the small screen. I could have seen this one as an episode on The Virginian for instance which was a 90 minute show.

    James Craig has an encounter with a 'town tamer' on the trail and when he gets prodded into a fight he kills the prodder. Craig goes on into the town with the name of Purgatory and proceeds to take the job of town tamer.

    Who Purgatory wants to eliminate is Paul Richards, once a fast gun himself, but now limited to running the saloon and all the organized outlawry in the area. Richards is limited also because he's in a wheelchair due to a broken back. And apparently he's also limited as far as wife Martha Vickers is concerned.

    Richards sends a series of gunmen against Craig, Four Fast Guns to be precise. Three come up short, but the fourth is Brett Halsey who presents some unique problems no one foresaw on both sides.

    The B western had certainly moved way beyond the Saturday matinée kiddie trade. You wouldn't have a Roy Rogers western dealing with something like impotence. Four Fast Guns probably would have been more explicit but for the Code.

    Four Fast Guns was done on the cheap so it won't get a higher rating from me. Still it's an interesting work.
    7coltras35

    An odd and interesting western

    The false town tamer (James Craig who had killed the real one and takes his place) has to wipe out the town from a crippled saloon owner who seems to hire any gunslinger in the whereabouts. We see Craig killing one by one all those supposed to kill him. Until the last one who happens to be his one kid brother (Brett Halsey)!

    An odd little Western in which the four fast guns of the title include Sabin and the three men hired to kill him. Not the fastest pace, but not dull either. It's quite interesting with some nice flourishes such as three fast guns coming to take care of James Craig's false lawman, and one of them generates a twist, the rather bleak look of the town, it's inhabitants and the landscape - there's an air of brutishness prevalent and only the humour by Edgar Buchanan as the deputy lightens things. The most interesting element is Paul Richard's character- a disabled villain who has a penchant for poetry and piano playing. But there's a twisted aura about him, especially when he plays a discordant note when something annoys him. It's an interesting and above average western which can appear boring but it isn't. It reminds me of Terror in a Texas Town, another odd western with that bleakness.
    8pensman

    Guns are fast but not the film

    Grade C story, grade B+ direction, grade B- actors, grade C- acting, and grade B+ ending, so a grade C+ film.

    I really stumbled across this "Western" film. I had clicked on a Charlie Chan film while searching through YouTube and Four Fast Guns popped up instead.

    Edgar Buchanan had star billing. Yes, Uncle Joe from Petticoat Junction and from over 150+ films and TV shows where he earned fame from being listed as uncredited or with characters named: Bartender Dan, Applejack, Uncle Willie, Old Willy, Dr. Samuels, Uncle Harry, and Will "Bill" Dowdy to name a few. So, when the credits began for Four Fast Guns and Buchanan was the star, I had to watch. Especially as Buchanan intoned the opening lines with "This man came along the trail one Sunday morning in '73, taking it slow and easy, keeping his eyes open and his gun hand ready. He came from nowhere, I guess. Anyhow, he never said from where and we never asked. He was going to stop off in Purgatory, to make his stand like he lived - alone. This is Number One. He called himself Sabin."

    And then there was the action from the get go as Sabin is about to be gunned down by what is termed "a town tamer." After killing the man who would have murdered him, Sabin rides into the town of Purgatory where he is taken for the sent for town tamer.

    The plot is typical in that there is a villain (monster) holding a town (castle) captive, and the townsfolk gather enough money to hire a fast gun (knight errant) to save them and free the villain's wife (damsel-in-distress).

    For the most part it works. The director, William J. Hole Jr., makes the most of shooting in black and white, and he know how to "show" the audience by not showing them. But he doesn't know how to keep the story tight and focused. Most of the "starring" actors are recognizable-James Craig, Brett Halsey, Richard Martin, Paul Richards-but aren't names you know. Usually, they turn in a good performance, but here there is a feeling they could have all done better.

    The ending is true to the film and could have been powerful and memorable but instead it comes off as mediocre. The final shot was worthy of a Clint Eastwood Western, but here it comes close to laughable.

    With someone else at the helm, this might have had a chance to be a High Noon. Instead Four Fast Guns has ended up a forgotten film.

    I still recommend giving this film a viewing because the majority of what's there on the screen is pretty darn good.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Final film of Martha Vickers.
    • Goofs
      Mary Hoag pulls a Winchester 1894 rifle from behind the bar, which won't be made for another 21 years at least. However, it is similar to other Winchester lever action rifles of the era in general looks. All of the handguns appear to be Colt Single Action Army revolvers which began in 1873. While it is possible for some to be there, it is doubtful that everyone would have one as they are new and guns were expensive for people then.
    • Quotes

      [first lines]

      Dipper: [narrating] This man came along the trail one Sunday morning in '73, taking it slow and easy, keeping his eyes open and his gun hand ready. He came from nowhere, I guess. Anyhow, he never said from where and we never asked. He was going to stop off in Purgatory, to make his stand like he lived - alone. This is Number One. He called himself Sabin.

    • Connections
      Featured in Best in Action: 1960 (2018)

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 10, 1960 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Vier schnelle Colts
    • Filming locations
      • Sonoran Desert, Arizona, USA
    • Production company
      • Phoenix Film Studios Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 12 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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