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The Nevadan

The Nevadan

★ 6.31950Movie1 h 21 mUnited States
Western

A mysterious stranger crosses paths with an outlaw bank robber and a greedy rancher.

1423 people rated
🔇

The Nevadan

1950

R

1 h 21 m

United States

Western

A mysterious stranger crosses paths with an outlaw bank robber and a greedy rancher.
More

6.3 /10

1423 people rated

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Top Cast(18)
starring avatar
Randolph Scott
Andrew Barclay
starring avatar
Dorothy Malone
Karen Galt
starring avatar
Forrest Tucker
Tom Tanner
starring avatar
Frank Faylen
Jeff
starring avatar
George Macready
Edward Galt
starring avatar
Charles Kemper
Sheriff Dyke Merrick
starring avatar
Jeff Corey
Bart
starring avatar
Tom Powers
Bill Martin
starring avatar
Jock Mahoney
Sandy
starring avatar
Victor Adamson
Barfly
starring avatar
Stanley Andrews
Deputy Morgan
starring avatar
Stanley Blystone
Red Sand Bank Clerk
starring avatar
John Bose
Townsman
default avatar
Jack Evans
Barfly
default avatar
Budd Fine
Bartender
starring avatar
Nacho Galindo
Mexican Stagecoach Driver
default avatar
Slim Gaut
Townsman
starring avatar
Charles Halton
Red Sand Bank Manager

User Review

author avatar

🤪الملك👑راقنر 👑

15/02/2024 16:00
A western drama with Scott as a federal agent, Tucker, Dorothy Malone, Macready as the insatiable rich man, wounded and obtuse (who has an otherwise austere life), Faylen and Corey as the henchmen, and Kemper in a supporting part as the dentist; all of it was shot in … California. The younger actors provide refreshing roles, Dorothy Malone has a glow of romance; one feels that the young woman is a great person. The movie has a delicious brio, the acting, the direction, the cinematography, the script make up an exciting yarn, each player's performance stands the expectation; the plot works with relatively few characters, no townspeople, no barroom fistfights …. It's a stylish action drama, unsentimental, with a strong psychological core, mostly delving into familial relations, and each role is nicely crafted; Tucker reminded me of Stewart more than of McQueen. Some of the things which made the quirk of the adult westerns of the '50s are already here, including the scenes of violence (done to the marshal by the henchmen, or to a henchman by the ruler) or the undertones of mischief (the precocious girl). These are plasticine characters. Kemper was a dependable character actor, deft, experienced. Tucker's role is intriguing, being simultaneously more and less likable than it could of been, as the player was indeed very likable, but despite his style here (his idea of the character seems to have been mediocre, or maybe even lacking, given that the role he got was a leading one); like he underplays the outlaw. Physically, Tucker aged quickly; like Chaney the 2nd, he also got ugly, of an expressive ugliness. Here, he was 30, he's effective, but doesn't care much about crafting his performance. There is a possibility he has been inhibited by the fact that he co-starred with a western lead, he was overwhelmed by the chance he got, he may have been taken aback, perplexed, so here he is perhaps a reluctant 2nd lead …. Scott's overall reputation today seems fair; he never made it to the hallmark of the greatest western players. Scott plays a quiet and self-controlled marshal; he cheats his partner, and has no prior life to be mentioned. The actor was unglamorous and workmanlike. Think of the westerns as of an exciting almanac. Also, think of this movie thus: its release year means to us now what 1884 could of meant then; today, its birthday is what then, by the year of its release, was 1884.
author avatar

✨KO✨

15/02/2024 16:00
Dobra glumacka ekipa, Ali zato losa prica, losa rezija,los color, neverovatno naivno kao da je film radiila ekipa mentalnozaostalih..................................................
author avatar

pabi_cooper

15/02/2024 16:00
"The Nevadan" is a standard but enjoyable Western with that ever-dependable icon Randolph Scott in the lead role. He plays a mysterious loner who bends over backwards to assist an outlaw (Forrest Tucker), who's hidden a large amount of stolen gold. The trouble is that Tucker isn't the only person out there who wants to get to this stash; other pathologically greedy types want to claim it as well. The main nemesis is a rancher (George Macready) who also owns the nearby town, lock, stock, and barrel. And the rancher has a variety of henchmen (Frank Faylen, Jeff Corey, Jock Mahoney) to help him out. Conveniently, Macready also has a lovely daughter (a radiant Dorothy Malone) who takes a shine to our tight-lipped hero. Although "The Nevadan" holds absolutely no surprises, it makes for generally agreeable entertainment, complete with an interesting protagonist role for Scott and some appropriately odious bad guys. (Faylen and Corey are a standout as they bicker while carrying out Macready's wishes.) The scenery is quite nice, the Arthur Morton score is effective, and the action well-executed. The director is the capable journeyman filmmaker Gordon Douglas; although no master stylist, he knew how to craft a good film. The giant-ant classic "Them!" is one of his best. Best of all is the finale, divided into two parts: a shootout among some rocks, and an intense fight sequence (with Mahoney doubling for Scott) inside an abandoned mine. The interplay between the irascible outlaw and the oft-smiling, amiable loner helps to create enough chemistry to keep us engaged until the end. As I already said, this is plenty predictable, but formula tales do have their place in cinema along with the more unconventional ones. Seven out of 10.
author avatar

ابولووي الشاوي

15/02/2024 16:00
A fun and exciting Western that entertains as much today as it did in wintry early 1950 when it was first released. After enjoying the film on a Saturday morning, which is the best time to enjoy films like THE NEVADAN, I read all 15 reviews posted here. Many are eager to point out how this humble film pales in comparison to the Westerns of Boetticher, Mann, and Peckinpah, lacking as it does deep psychological themes and Method actors wringing their hands and contorting their faces in painful introspection. There's an unwillingness or perhaps an inability to consider THE NEVADAN on its own merits. It's only aspiration was to entertain--and it succeeded. Now I'm not casting stones or even aspersions. I count myself among the guilty, admitting I too am unable to see this film wholly on its own. Each of us brings to the movie-going experience all we've already seen, and most people watching a 1950 Western are aging cinephiles bringing a LOT to the experience. For me, Forrest Tucker will always stir up fond memories of Sgt. Morgan O'Rourke. And when Jeff's dimwitted brother Bart pulled another boner, I was just waiting for Frank Faylen to look into the camera and mutter, "I gotta kill that boy; I just gotta" like he would a decade later on DOBIE GILLIS. Those associations added to my enjoyment. Speaking of Faylen and Jeff Corey as brothers Jeff and Bart, I suspect they were loosely based on brothers George and Lennie from John Steinbeck's 1937 novella Of Mice and Men. The script and the actors elevated Jeff and Bart far above the expendable and disposable "red shirt" henchmen of lesser Westerns. I can also see in them a foreshadowing of the memorable and scene-stealing Sam and Whit, the duo played by Pernell Roberts and James Coburn in RIDE LONESOME. The closing gunfight with Andy and Tom against Galt, Jeff, and Bart was a highlight, topped only by Andy and Tom's brawl to end it all in the collapsing mine. Karen's appearance added to the excitement, even as it allowed Tom to remind us he's the bad guy when he shoots Galt in the back. Jeff's ruthlessly shooting the mules and canteens showed the depth of his depravity, and lessened the regret I felt when he took a bullet to the brain (a surprisingly graphic scene for 1950, I thought). The grimness is balanced by lighthearted moments. An uncredited Nacho Galindo is funny as an apoplectic stagecoach driver. Also unbilled are Olin Howard and Lewis Mason as Rusty and Wilbur, two cowpokes straight out of a 1930's programmer who look for a laugh from supposed greenhorn Andy and get egg on their faces. It's a funny scene, but also serves as good character development as the audience is made aware that Andy is not the dapper tenderfoot he initially appeared to be. I saw THE NEVADAN as one of six films on Mill Creek's second Randolph Scott Round-Up DVD collection. The print is beautiful, the colors rich, and the price right--only about ten bucks! Slip it in on a Saturday morning and "forget about life for awhile," as Billy "the Kid" Joel once sang. PS: The gold fever that drove Galt to greed-driven madness and violence is a recurring theme in Westerns. No film captures it as well as A MAN CALLED SLEDGE, an under-appreciated 1970 film directed by Vic Morrow and starring James Garner, Dennis Weaver, and Claude Akins among others familiar faces to film and TV fans.
author avatar

🔥Suraj bhatta🔥

15/02/2024 16:00
Bit confusing considering who Randolph actually is But I kinda figured that out early on. In fact if it were not for the beginning this would be a 10/10 movie. And it's even open ended at the end too :) You'll figure it out. All fun with Randolph is on the scene, Quality : 7/10 Entertainment: 10/10 Re-Playable: 8/10
author avatar

wreflex22

15/02/2024 16:00
Agree with Ashew,Macready unfairly discounted in Westerns.He was definitely equal to a star like Randy Scott,and he was convincing as a Western heavy.Who else could direct a bunch of dopes to do his bidding?That he had good manners,dressed well,spoke with a commanding voice only made him more convincing as a brilliant man gone bad,perfect for any Western.This is his third movie opposite Scott,Coroner Creek when he's nastier to his wife than here,Doolins Of Oklahoma as a good lawman and the narrator,and The Stranger Wore A Gun.There's plenty of action and Dorothy Malone as Galt's daughter (pre Peyton Place for Malone and Macready)comedy with Faylen and Corey,additional menace from Tucker.I liked it!
author avatar

Singh Manjeet

15/02/2024 16:00
The calibre of this slick Cinecolor Randolph Scott western is already signalled by the presence of George Macready's name in the opening credits, here playing the father of Dorothy Malone in her early brunette days in buckskin and stetson. Both they and most of the cast (including Frank Faylen & Jeff Corey as a pair of bickering siblings) and crew had experience of working in film noirs, particularly evident in the interior scenes.
author avatar

Jackie

15/02/2024 16:00
The Nevadan is too short and formulaic to work through all its possibilities, but if plots are the hardest parts of writing, this film had some story features that were interesting at least. First, Randolph Scott's role as an undercover marshal is carefully set up to be convincing to the characters on screen but also to tip the audience off--Tom escapes from his lawman escort and the lawman acts chastened till everyone is out of sight, then smiles. Forrest Tucker's bad-boy Tom is off for hidden gold, but Scott shows up to hang close with him, advising yet protecting Tom--if something happens to Tom, the gold's lost forever. Later, Scott strategically shares his identity with his love-interest, who blurts it to her villainous dad; then when bad dad comes after Scott and Tom, Scott informs Tom and keeps the young outlaw on his side. That had to be tough dialogue to write! Another interesting plot-feature is that all the honest characters seem to like bad-boy Tom. (I too am automatically on Forrest Tucker's side if only b/c he would later carry F Troop with Larry Storch for, what, 3 seasons?) By the end of the story, Scott has helped him survive and sent him back to a few more years of prison, but everyone acts like the busted bad boy has a future. Compared to most westerns, there's something seriously moral going on here between the hero and villain, and I don't mean the usual hero-turning-villain that later 50s westerns develop--in this case, the hero's virtue and competence somewhat redeem the villain. Third place in the story's redeeming features is the relationship between brother henchmen well played by Frank Faylen (Dobie's dad!) and Jeff Corey. The screenplay can't resolve the complicated relationships between the brothers and others, but families are like that, and both actors remain convincing. As long as the subject is acting, though, I agree with other contributors who found Dorothy Malone a radiant young actress. The film's only (inadvertently) funny moment occurs when another character addresses her love interest, the 50-something Scott, as "young man."
author avatar

Princesse 👑

15/02/2024 16:00
Most Leading Star Actors Signify Their Careers Early and Ride the Characterization for as Long as it Holds. Perhaps Later On Turn to Other Roles to Broaden Their Appeal and Widen the Choices. Scott's Career is One of Reverse Order. He Starred in Movies Beginning in the Early Thirties with a Diverse Accommodation of Characters and Films. Some Adventure and Drama, but, Believe it or Not "Light" Comedies as well. He had a Modest Beginning and Continued to Work Steadily. But it was Not Until He Grew Older, Sporting a more Mature Persona and a Well-Traveled Look and a Face that Seemed Weather-Beaten from Mileage Traveling Uncharted Territory. Appearing Rugged, Confident, and Strong with a Personality to Match. One of Integrity, Honesty, and an Unwavering Sense of Justice. He had Found His Calling and a Role/Character He was Born to Play. The Movie 'Western" had Discovered Randolph Scott and Randolph Scott had Discovered the Movie "Western". It all Started around the Early to Mid Forties but it was Not Until the New Decade of 1950 where Scott Started Warming For what would be His Most Rewarding Work, both Artistically and Commercially. His Signature Role. "The Nevadan" and a Few Others from the Period were a "Workout"for Films to Follow. More Serious Drama, Violent, with Deeper Psychology. For the Remainder of His Career (12 Years) Scott Maintained a Symbiotic Relationship with the Genre. Both Benefited. A Diamond in the Rough, this Film and Others is one that would Help Steer Scott and the "Western" in a New Direction. A Solid Piece of Cinema this was Good Work from Everyone Involved. But Hold on to Your Hats "Cowboys"! You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet.
author avatar

🌚

15/02/2024 16:00
Escaped outlaw Forrest Tucker stops a stranger following him. The stranger is Randolph Scott dressed up like a greenhorn. For no good reason, Tucker decides he needs a partner and Scott fits the bill. This is the kind of plot contrivance you just have to accept from a western like this, a programmer if there ever was one. Naturally, Scott isn't who he says he is. He just wanted to fool Tucker into taking him along so he could find where Tucker hid some gold. There's also an evil rancher, George Macready, who has a pretty daughter. The daughter's played by Dorothy Malone. Of course she and Scott fall for one another. It's all serviceable enough but nothing special. If you've seen enough westerns, all of this movie's pieces will seem familiar. Still, it's a Randolph Scott western. There are far worse ways to pass the time.

User Review

author avatar

🤪الملك👑راقنر 👑

15/02/2024 16:00
A western drama with Scott as a federal agent, Tucker, Dorothy Malone, Macready as the insatiable rich man, wounded and obtuse (who has an otherwise austere life), Faylen and Corey as the henchmen, and Kemper in a supporting part as the dentist; all of it was shot in … California. The younger actors provide refreshing roles, Dorothy Malone has a glow of romance; one feels that the young woman is a great person. The movie has a delicious brio, the acting, the direction, the cinematography, the script make up an exciting yarn, each player's performance stands the expectation; the plot works with relatively few characters, no townspeople, no barroom fistfights …. It's a stylish action drama, unsentimental, with a strong psychological core, mostly delving into familial relations, and each role is nicely crafted; Tucker reminded me of Stewart more than of McQueen. Some of the things which made the quirk of the adult westerns of the '50s are already here, including the scenes of violence (done to the marshal by the henchmen, or to a henchman by the ruler) or the undertones of mischief (the precocious girl). These are plasticine characters. Kemper was a dependable character actor, deft, experienced. Tucker's role is intriguing, being simultaneously more and less likable than it could of been, as the player was indeed very likable, but despite his style here (his idea of the character seems to have been mediocre, or maybe even lacking, given that the role he got was a leading one); like he underplays the outlaw. Physically, Tucker aged quickly; like Chaney the 2nd, he also got ugly, of an expressive ugliness. Here, he was 30, he's effective, but doesn't care much about crafting his performance. There is a possibility he has been inhibited by the fact that he co-starred with a western lead, he was overwhelmed by the chance he got, he may have been taken aback, perplexed, so here he is perhaps a reluctant 2nd lead …. Scott's overall reputation today seems fair; he never made it to the hallmark of the greatest western players. Scott plays a quiet and self-controlled marshal; he cheats his partner, and has no prior life to be mentioned. The actor was unglamorous and workmanlike. Think of the westerns as of an exciting almanac. Also, think of this movie thus: its release year means to us now what 1884 could of meant then; today, its birthday is what then, by the year of its release, was 1884.
author avatar

✨KO✨

15/02/2024 16:00
Dobra glumacka ekipa, Ali zato losa prica, losa rezija,los color, neverovatno naivno kao da je film radiila ekipa mentalnozaostalih..................................................
author avatar

pabi_cooper

15/02/2024 16:00
"The Nevadan" is a standard but enjoyable Western with that ever-dependable icon Randolph Scott in the lead role. He plays a mysterious loner who bends over backwards to assist an outlaw (Forrest Tucker), who's hidden a large amount of stolen gold. The trouble is that Tucker isn't the only person out there who wants to get to this stash; other pathologically greedy types want to claim it as well. The main nemesis is a rancher (George Macready) who also owns the nearby town, lock, stock, and barrel. And the rancher has a variety of henchmen (Frank Faylen, Jeff Corey, Jock Mahoney) to help him out. Conveniently, Macready also has a lovely daughter (a radiant Dorothy Malone) who takes a shine to our tight-lipped hero. Although "The Nevadan" holds absolutely no surprises, it makes for generally agreeable entertainment, complete with an interesting protagonist role for Scott and some appropriately odious bad guys. (Faylen and Corey are a standout as they bicker while carrying out Macready's wishes.) The scenery is quite nice, the Arthur Morton score is effective, and the action well-executed. The director is the capable journeyman filmmaker Gordon Douglas; although no master stylist, he knew how to craft a good film. The giant-ant classic "Them!" is one of his best. Best of all is the finale, divided into two parts: a shootout among some rocks, and an intense fight sequence (with Mahoney doubling for Scott) inside an abandoned mine. The interplay between the irascible outlaw and the oft-smiling, amiable loner helps to create enough chemistry to keep us engaged until the end. As I already said, this is plenty predictable, but formula tales do have their place in cinema along with the more unconventional ones. Seven out of 10.
author avatar

ابولووي الشاوي

15/02/2024 16:00
A fun and exciting Western that entertains as much today as it did in wintry early 1950 when it was first released. After enjoying the film on a Saturday morning, which is the best time to enjoy films like THE NEVADAN, I read all 15 reviews posted here. Many are eager to point out how this humble film pales in comparison to the Westerns of Boetticher, Mann, and Peckinpah, lacking as it does deep psychological themes and Method actors wringing their hands and contorting their faces in painful introspection. There's an unwillingness or perhaps an inability to consider THE NEVADAN on its own merits. It's only aspiration was to entertain--and it succeeded. Now I'm not casting stones or even aspersions. I count myself among the guilty, admitting I too am unable to see this film wholly on its own. Each of us brings to the movie-going experience all we've already seen, and most people watching a 1950 Western are aging cinephiles bringing a LOT to the experience. For me, Forrest Tucker will always stir up fond memories of Sgt. Morgan O'Rourke. And when Jeff's dimwitted brother Bart pulled another boner, I was just waiting for Frank Faylen to look into the camera and mutter, "I gotta kill that boy; I just gotta" like he would a decade later on DOBIE GILLIS. Those associations added to my enjoyment. Speaking of Faylen and Jeff Corey as brothers Jeff and Bart, I suspect they were loosely based on brothers George and Lennie from John Steinbeck's 1937 novella Of Mice and Men. The script and the actors elevated Jeff and Bart far above the expendable and disposable "red shirt" henchmen of lesser Westerns. I can also see in them a foreshadowing of the memorable and scene-stealing Sam and Whit, the duo played by Pernell Roberts and James Coburn in RIDE LONESOME. The closing gunfight with Andy and Tom against Galt, Jeff, and Bart was a highlight, topped only by Andy and Tom's brawl to end it all in the collapsing mine. Karen's appearance added to the excitement, even as it allowed Tom to remind us he's the bad guy when he shoots Galt in the back. Jeff's ruthlessly shooting the mules and canteens showed the depth of his depravity, and lessened the regret I felt when he took a bullet to the brain (a surprisingly graphic scene for 1950, I thought). The grimness is balanced by lighthearted moments. An uncredited Nacho Galindo is funny as an apoplectic stagecoach driver. Also unbilled are Olin Howard and Lewis Mason as Rusty and Wilbur, two cowpokes straight out of a 1930's programmer who look for a laugh from supposed greenhorn Andy and get egg on their faces. It's a funny scene, but also serves as good character development as the audience is made aware that Andy is not the dapper tenderfoot he initially appeared to be. I saw THE NEVADAN as one of six films on Mill Creek's second Randolph Scott Round-Up DVD collection. The print is beautiful, the colors rich, and the price right--only about ten bucks! Slip it in on a Saturday morning and "forget about life for awhile," as Billy "the Kid" Joel once sang. PS: The gold fever that drove Galt to greed-driven madness and violence is a recurring theme in Westerns. No film captures it as well as A MAN CALLED SLEDGE, an under-appreciated 1970 film directed by Vic Morrow and starring James Garner, Dennis Weaver, and Claude Akins among others familiar faces to film and TV fans.
author avatar

🔥Suraj bhatta🔥

15/02/2024 16:00
Bit confusing considering who Randolph actually is But I kinda figured that out early on. In fact if it were not for the beginning this would be a 10/10 movie. And it's even open ended at the end too :) You'll figure it out. All fun with Randolph is on the scene, Quality : 7/10 Entertainment: 10/10 Re-Playable: 8/10
author avatar

wreflex22

15/02/2024 16:00
Agree with Ashew,Macready unfairly discounted in Westerns.He was definitely equal to a star like Randy Scott,and he was convincing as a Western heavy.Who else could direct a bunch of dopes to do his bidding?That he had good manners,dressed well,spoke with a commanding voice only made him more convincing as a brilliant man gone bad,perfect for any Western.This is his third movie opposite Scott,Coroner Creek when he's nastier to his wife than here,Doolins Of Oklahoma as a good lawman and the narrator,and The Stranger Wore A Gun.There's plenty of action and Dorothy Malone as Galt's daughter (pre Peyton Place for Malone and Macready)comedy with Faylen and Corey,additional menace from Tucker.I liked it!
author avatar

Singh Manjeet

15/02/2024 16:00
The calibre of this slick Cinecolor Randolph Scott western is already signalled by the presence of George Macready's name in the opening credits, here playing the father of Dorothy Malone in her early brunette days in buckskin and stetson. Both they and most of the cast (including Frank Faylen & Jeff Corey as a pair of bickering siblings) and crew had experience of working in film noirs, particularly evident in the interior scenes.
author avatar

Jackie

15/02/2024 16:00
The Nevadan is too short and formulaic to work through all its possibilities, but if plots are the hardest parts of writing, this film had some story features that were interesting at least. First, Randolph Scott's role as an undercover marshal is carefully set up to be convincing to the characters on screen but also to tip the audience off--Tom escapes from his lawman escort and the lawman acts chastened till everyone is out of sight, then smiles. Forrest Tucker's bad-boy Tom is off for hidden gold, but Scott shows up to hang close with him, advising yet protecting Tom--if something happens to Tom, the gold's lost forever. Later, Scott strategically shares his identity with his love-interest, who blurts it to her villainous dad; then when bad dad comes after Scott and Tom, Scott informs Tom and keeps the young outlaw on his side. That had to be tough dialogue to write! Another interesting plot-feature is that all the honest characters seem to like bad-boy Tom. (I too am automatically on Forrest Tucker's side if only b/c he would later carry F Troop with Larry Storch for, what, 3 seasons?) By the end of the story, Scott has helped him survive and sent him back to a few more years of prison, but everyone acts like the busted bad boy has a future. Compared to most westerns, there's something seriously moral going on here between the hero and villain, and I don't mean the usual hero-turning-villain that later 50s westerns develop--in this case, the hero's virtue and competence somewhat redeem the villain. Third place in the story's redeeming features is the relationship between brother henchmen well played by Frank Faylen (Dobie's dad!) and Jeff Corey. The screenplay can't resolve the complicated relationships between the brothers and others, but families are like that, and both actors remain convincing. As long as the subject is acting, though, I agree with other contributors who found Dorothy Malone a radiant young actress. The film's only (inadvertently) funny moment occurs when another character addresses her love interest, the 50-something Scott, as "young man."
author avatar

Princesse 👑

15/02/2024 16:00
Most Leading Star Actors Signify Their Careers Early and Ride the Characterization for as Long as it Holds. Perhaps Later On Turn to Other Roles to Broaden Their Appeal and Widen the Choices. Scott's Career is One of Reverse Order. He Starred in Movies Beginning in the Early Thirties with a Diverse Accommodation of Characters and Films. Some Adventure and Drama, but, Believe it or Not "Light" Comedies as well. He had a Modest Beginning and Continued to Work Steadily. But it was Not Until He Grew Older, Sporting a more Mature Persona and a Well-Traveled Look and a Face that Seemed Weather-Beaten from Mileage Traveling Uncharted Territory. Appearing Rugged, Confident, and Strong with a Personality to Match. One of Integrity, Honesty, and an Unwavering Sense of Justice. He had Found His Calling and a Role/Character He was Born to Play. The Movie 'Western" had Discovered Randolph Scott and Randolph Scott had Discovered the Movie "Western". It all Started around the Early to Mid Forties but it was Not Until the New Decade of 1950 where Scott Started Warming For what would be His Most Rewarding Work, both Artistically and Commercially. His Signature Role. "The Nevadan" and a Few Others from the Period were a "Workout"for Films to Follow. More Serious Drama, Violent, with Deeper Psychology. For the Remainder of His Career (12 Years) Scott Maintained a Symbiotic Relationship with the Genre. Both Benefited. A Diamond in the Rough, this Film and Others is one that would Help Steer Scott and the "Western" in a New Direction. A Solid Piece of Cinema this was Good Work from Everyone Involved. But Hold on to Your Hats "Cowboys"! You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet.
author avatar

🌚

15/02/2024 16:00
Escaped outlaw Forrest Tucker stops a stranger following him. The stranger is Randolph Scott dressed up like a greenhorn. For no good reason, Tucker decides he needs a partner and Scott fits the bill. This is the kind of plot contrivance you just have to accept from a western like this, a programmer if there ever was one. Naturally, Scott isn't who he says he is. He just wanted to fool Tucker into taking him along so he could find where Tucker hid some gold. There's also an evil rancher, George Macready, who has a pretty daughter. The daughter's played by Dorothy Malone. Of course she and Scott fall for one another. It's all serviceable enough but nothing special. If you've seen enough westerns, all of this movie's pieces will seem familiar. Still, it's a Randolph Scott western. There are far worse ways to pass the time.
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Official Link ReleaseDownload 1234money APKPrivacy PolicyUser Agreement
Disclaimer: All videos and pictures on 1234money are from the Internet, and their copyrights belong to the original creators. We only provide webpage services and do not store, record, or upload any content.