Greetings Cowboys, Cowgirls and Cowpunchers
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gordonl56 — 9 years ago(January 04, 2017 05:38 AM)
CONTAINS SPOILERS
SCHLITZ PLAYHOUSE "No Compromise" 1953
One of the more popular anthology series of early television, was, SCHLITZ PLAYHOUSE. The long running, 1951 to 1959 series pumped out over 360 episodes. Every week there was a new story starring many of the biggest stars of Hollywood. One week would be a comedy, and the next week could be a war, drama, crime or western themed episode. This particular episode is the 15th of the 3rd season. The episode is a western set in the 1880's.
This one has a Texas Ranger, Stephen McNally, in Alabama looking for a man wanted for shooting another Texas Ranger. The man, Robert Strauss, happens to be a childhood friend of Ranger, McNally. McNally has info that Strauss is about to rob a local train of a payroll.
Ranger McNally boards the train and gets the drop on Strauss before he and a partner can pull the job. He captures Strauss, and kills the partner in an exchange of lead. McNally collects a painful wound in the leg during the battle. McNally and his cuffed prisoner are soon on their way to Texas. McNally wires ahead that he has the man.
At every stop through Alabama, relatives of Strauss try to spring the man from McNally's custody. These range from a county judge to various assorted gun bearing cousins. McNally manages to keep the bunch away by planting a revolver firmly against Strauss's head. It anybody tries anything, McNally will pull the trigger. The journey to Texas takes several days and Strauss comes close several times to getting away on his own.
The journey ends with McNally delivering his prisoner to Austin Texas. A trial, followed by a long spell in a State Prison would appear to be in Strauss's immediate future.
This is an excellent little episode with decent talent in front and behind the camera. The director is Arnold Laven. Writer, producer and director, Laven produced series like, THE RIFLEMAN and THE BIG VALLEY. As a director he helmed, WITHOUT WARNING, VICE SQUAD, DOWN THREE DARK STREETS and THE RACK.
The story and screenplay are by Les Savage. His film work includes, THE HILLS OF UTAH, RETURN TO WARBOW and BLACK HORSE CANYON.
The look of the episode is top notch with 7 time Oscar nominated cinematographer, Russell Harlan at the controls. His films include, A WALK IN THE SUN, GUN CRAZY, RED RIVER, GUILTY BYSTANDER, THE THING, BIG SKY, THE LAST HUNT, RUN SILENT RUN DEEP, RRIO BRAVO, OPERATION PETTICOAT, THE GREAT RACE and TOBRUK. -
gordonl56 — 9 years ago(January 04, 2017 05:41 AM)
JOHNNY RINGO "Mrs. Ringo" 1960
JOHNNY RINGO was a western series that ran for 38 episodes during 1959-60. The series starred Don Durant as the title character with Karen Sharpe, Mark Goddard and Terence De Marney as series regulars. The series follows Durant, (Ringo) a former gunfighter who decides to go straight. He becomes the Sheriff in the small town of Velardi in the Arizona Territory. The series was one of several (Rifleman, Wanted Dead or Alive, Shotgun Slade etc) with a "gimmick gun". Durant carries a special LeMat revolver equipped with a shotgun barrel under the six gun barrel.
This episode is the 19th episode of the series.
This one starts with Sheriff Durant out of town for the afternoon taking a drunken rancher back home. The stage arrives in town and unloads a pretty looking woman, Mona Freeman. Miss Freeman calls on the Sheriff's office and asks for Durant. Deputy Mark Goddard asks if there is anything he can help with.
Goddard is floored when Freeman replies that she is here to take up with her "husband", Johnny Ringo (Durant). Goddard shows Freeman to the hotel and the woman moves right in to Durant's rooms. A couple of hours later Durant shows at the office. It is now the turn of Durant to get floored by the info he is hitched. Durant says it must be a gag of some sort. Karen Sharpe, who is stepping out with Durant does not take it as a gag.
Durant quickly beats the boots over to the hotel to get to the bottom of the deal. It turns out that Durant does indeed know Miss Freeman. Freeman was a dance hall girl back in Dodge City some years before. Freeman produces a marriage certificate and says the two are hitched. Durant has Goddard send off a telegram to Dodge City to prove that the marriage never happened.
Now another fly in the ointment appears. Gunman, Grant Richards shows up looking for Freeman. Richards has just finished a 7 year prison bit for a 20,000 dollar bank robbery. It also turns out that Richards and Freeman have been man and wife for years, even before Richards went to jail.
Richards is not in the least pleased with the news that Freeman had divorced him and hooked up with Durant. It also seems that the 20 large from the robbery was never recovered by the bank. It is now resting in a money belt Richards is wearing.
Needless to say, the whole thing is a ploy by Miss Freeman to have Richards killed by Sheriff Durant. Then she can lift the cash from Richards. Durant of course outdraws Richards and fatally wounds the man. Richards now figures out that Freeman has played him, and shoots the woman dead before he expires himself.
A much better episode than it might sound like. A couple of herrings of the red variety move the story along nicely. The look of the episode is quite sharp with veteran big screen cinematographer, Carl Guthrie in the director of photography chair. Guthrie was a film noir specialist with CRY WOLF, FLAXY MARTIN, BACKFIRE, CAGED, THIS SIDE OF THE LAW, UNDERCOVER GIRL, STORM WARNING, HELL BOUND and the superb, HIGHWAY 301 to his credit. -
Spikeopath — 9 years ago(January 06, 2017 06:03 AM)
Don't Wait Django Shoot!
Non aspettare Django, spara (1967)
Low, Low budgeted Django clone fails to ignite.
Django (Ivan Rassimov) returns to the family home to find his father has been robbed and murdered by bandits. Ignoring the advice and pleas of his sister Mary (played by Rassimov's real life sister Rada), Django sets off to town for revenge. But this is merely the beginning of things
There's enough enjoyment here for the very hardcore Spaghetti Western fan, but expectations levels really should be set at low. There's plenty of the standard Spag shootings, stand-offs and posturings, moody atmosphere and the music is pretty ace (Felice Di Stefano), but the structure of the pic is off.
Directed by Edoardo Mulargia and written by Vincenzo Musolino, the creators take a gamble by having the revenge aspect played out very early in the piece, the plot then thrusts a multitude of characters involved - in one way or another - in the search for the missing money taken when Django's pa was killed. The whole piece feels like a string of sequences stacked up against each other without a flowing sense of rhyme or reason. It doesn't help that this incarnation of Django is bland and it is in fact his side-kick Barrica (played by Ignazio Spalla) that engages more on the fun and entertainment front. The low budget shows on occasions (watch out for that deja vu feeling), whilst logic jumps and daftness are never far away.
Needlessly complex in telling and structure, pic is marginally saved by the action and some colourful characters, but really it is for those die-hard Spag fans only. 5/10
The
SpikeopathHospital Number
217 -
joscco — 9 years ago(January 09, 2017 11:48 AM)
So far, I've watched The Gunfighter, The Big Country, Hombre, Ride the High Country, and probably others I don't recall at the moment. I watch the Starz Western Channel a lot, so they tend to blend together. I'll try to keep better track of them for this thread.
"We all have it comin', Kid." Unforgiven (1992) -
joscco — 9 years ago(January 12, 2017 01:04 PM)
Hi, Spike. Yeah, I did. Hombre is one of my Top 50 movies, and The Big Country I've watched off and on since I was a kid growing up. The Gunfighter I discovered only a couple of years ago, and that was a rewatch. I hadn't ever seen Ride the High Country in its entirety and, as a big Peckinpah fan, it was fun to watch his second effort as a film director.
"We all have it comin', Kid." Unforgiven (1992) -
gordonl56 — 9 years ago(January 09, 2017 03:05 PM)
CONTAINS SPOILERS
TRACKDOWN "The Marple Brothers 1957
This is the first episode of the 1957 to 1959 western series, TRACKDOWN. Robert Culp stars as a Texas Ranger who wanders the State putting the grab on various wanted types. The series ran for a total of 70 episodes.
Texas Ranger Robert Culp is on the trail of four wanted brothers, the Marples. Culp and another Ranger had caught up with them a while back and wounded one of the foursome. Culp's fellow Ranger though had been fatally wounded.
Culp has now tracked the Marple brothers to the small town of Stockton. The men have holed up in the town church. They have has hostages, the local Sunday school group. They want a doctor pronto like or bodies of the Sunday school bunch will start to pile up. They have already killed one man to make their point.
Ranger Culp now arrives on the scene and takes charge. He has the local Sheriff, Roy Engel, keep an eye on the local men to make sure they do not do something stupid. Culp heads to the church to see about the women and kids being held inside.
A deal is reached with the villains to get the wounded brother to the town doctor. James Griffith, the eldest brother, tells Culp everyone will be okay if the townsfolk play ball. They just want their brother patched up and a head start on a getaway.
Needless to say, several of the local men decide to make a stab at a rescue. The fat is soon in the fire and bullets are flying every which way with a few finding live targets. After the smoke clears, three of the outlaw brothers are toes up, ready for Boot Hill and the other in cuffs.
This is a pretty nifty episode for a series starter. The cast is all top flight and includes, besides, Griffith and Engel, James Best, Jan Merlin, Gail Kobe and Tom Pittman.
Behind the camera, we have a pair of b film and television veterans, director, Thomas Carr and cinematographer, Guy Roe. Fans of film noir will know Roe from the excellent b-noir, TRAPPED, RAILROADED, THE SOUND OF FURY, IN THIS CORNER and ARMORED CAR ROBBERY. -
Spikeopath — 9 years ago(January 10, 2017 05:57 AM)
Fort Utah (1967)
Utah Saints.
Fort Utah is directed by Lesley Selander and written by Steve Fisher and Andrew Craddock. It stars John Ireland, Virginia Mayo, Robert Strauss, Scott Brady, John Russell, Richard Arlen and James Craig. Music is by Jimmie Haskell and cinematography is by Lothrop Worth.
Drifter Tom Horn (Ireland) teams up with Indian Agent Ben Stokes (Strauss) to help a pioneer wagon train against army deserters and Indian renegades.
Filmed in Technicolor/Techniscope out at Vasquez Rocks and Santa Clarita in California, Fort Utah, in spite of being shot in 1966, feels like a 1950s Oater. Of course the big giveaway is that the headliners in the cast are more long in the tooth than back in the day. Yet collectively they have produced a a very decent Oater with old fashioned value.
There's plenty going on in the plotting. The Indians have had enough of the reservation living arrangements so a renegade band have fled, leaving Ben Stokes the not unenviable task of trying to locate and placate. There's a gang of army deserters - The Marrauders - led by nefarious Dajin (Brady) out for what they can get their hands on, illegally of course. Right in the middle of hostile territory is a wagon train of pioneers who unbeknown to themselves are going to need help to survive, enter Tom Horn and the Fort Utah of the title.
Pic never wants for action, Horn gets into a fight pretty much every ten minutes, be it fisticuffs or shoot-outs, there's barely pause for him to take breath, well except for when he's getting smitten with Linda Lee (Mayo a gorgeous mature at 46) that is. She's travelling with the wagon train and has a secret as well as a major cleavage that gets an airing during a ferocious Indian attack on the wagon train. Whilst unsurprisingly she's getting unwanted attention by a scallywag pioneer fellow
Some of the stunt doubles are very poor, which sort of sits with Haskell's cheesy musical score, and the big finale features a WTF moment to close down the encounter. But with some very nice photography for the night time scenes, and the superb backdrop of Vasquez Rocks pleasing the eyes, one can't grumble about not having it all. It's not a classic of course, and it has some formulaic baggage to carry around, but for old fashioned Oater lovers this has much to recommend. 6.5/10
The
SpikeopathHospital Number
217 -
Spikeopath — 9 years ago(January 12, 2017 09:27 AM)
Denver and Rio Grande (1952)
Train Tribulations.
Denver and Rio Grande is directed by Byron Haskin and written by Frank Gruber. It stars Edmond O'Brien, Sterling Hayden, Dean Jagger, Kasey Rogers, Lyle Bettger and J. Carol Naish. Music is by Paul Sawtell and Technicolor cinematography by Ray Rennahan.
Two railroad companies battle for the right of way through Royal Gorge - with murderous results
In truth it's without doubt that the scenery on offer here, and if you happen to have any kink for olde steam trains, are what puts this in the above average department. Plot is based around real instances during the advancements of the Denver and Rio Grande railway. It plays out for entertainment purposes as baddies against goodies and as a notable observation of what some will do to get their way. There's strands involving wrongful accusations, simmering passions and a whole host of train sequences snaking through gorgeous locations. There's even some amazing train carnage, which is thrilling and more potent as it's not model work on show. Cast are fine and turning in perfs that we accept as viable for our enjoyment - with a pat on the back for Zasu Pitts and Paul Fix who are playing out a cute and funny mature courtship in the making - and all other tech contributions are safe and appealing enough.
Opening with a voice over narration set to scenes of the then modern D&RG railway, before whisking us back to its formative years, this is a nice nostalgia piece that overcomes its plotting failings courtesy of big heart and ocular delights. 7/10
The
SpikeopathHospital Number
217 -
joscco — 9 years ago(January 14, 2017 02:56 PM)
Just finished watching
The Unforgiven
with Burt Lancaster and Audrey Hepburn. Wow. What a powerful exploration of racism, hatred, and family. Pretty good movie although, for me, it jumped the shark about the time the Kiowa war party decided to break out the sacred flutes. No offense to anyone who loves it, but this western is crying for a remake.
"We all have it comin', Kid." Unforgiven (1992)