Steve Sinclair è un ex pistolero, ora un pacifico allevatore. Le cose vanno male quando il suo selvaggio fratello Tony arriva con la sua nuova pistola, la fidanzata ed ex saloon girl Joan Bl... Leggi tuttoSteve Sinclair è un ex pistolero, ora un pacifico allevatore. Le cose vanno male quando il suo selvaggio fratello Tony arriva con la sua nuova pistola, la fidanzata ed ex saloon girl Joan Blake.Steve Sinclair è un ex pistolero, ora un pacifico allevatore. Le cose vanno male quando il suo selvaggio fratello Tony arriva con la sua nuova pistola, la fidanzata ed ex saloon girl Joan Blake.
- Joe
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- Cowboy
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- Manuelo
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- Jamie
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- Mary Ellison
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Trama
Lo sapevi?
- QuizA first score was written and recorded by Jeff Alexander but had to be replaced due to extensive re-cutting.
- BlooperThe union "squatter" Ellison is holding a shotgun in all the scenes including when he is shot. After his death, Deneen picks up the gun and it is now a Winchester that he levers a shell into.
- Citazioni
Steve Sinclair: I tried to bend that kid a certain way. I tried to shape him. He was some kind of tough leather that I had to make soft. But he didn't soften any. He wasn't made that way. He was just rotten leather and he came up hard.
- ConnessioniReferenced in The Swinging Sixties: Movie Marathon (2019)
- Colonne sonoreSaddle the Wind
By Jay Livingston and Ray Evans
Sung by Julie London (uncredited)
[Played over opening title card and credits; later sung by Joan to Tony in the house]
First, the location. There's only one long shot showing the entire Western town, but I've never seen a more decrepit or believable one- - because it's a real one. Rosita, Colorado, west of Pueblo, was well on its way to becoming a ghost town in the late 1950s (it actually is one now, in the middle of exurbs). It had only three or four wooden buildings, plus a few scattered homesteads between them and the mountains. It delivers total verisimilitude. Quite a few scenes are shot in the wilderness, too, with meadows bursting with purple wildflowers. A real Western settlement in a gorgeous wilderness-- it is iconic, far more than John Ford's Monument Valley, which is unrepresentative of any other Western landscape.
Second, the supporting cast. The faces are all more familiar than the names. Royal Dano and Irene Tedrow as squatters, Charles McGraw, Ray Teal (Bonanza's sheriff), Douglas Spencer, and as barkeeps, the wonderful Stanley Adams (Cyrano Jones, tribble salesman) and the forever-unheralded Jay Adler (Stella's brother). Adler's worth his weight in silver-- Rosita was a silver-mining settlement-- and he's in the first scene so catch that at least.
The reason that mother lode of character actors matters is because-- along with always-fine Donald Crisp and better-with-age Robert Taylor-- they carry this movie. The relative novices involved-- writer Rod Serling, actress/singer Julie London, and fish-out-of-water John Cassevetes -- handle their duties well enough. But they just can't measure up to that roster of seasoned pros, a cast that has been in so many Westerns, they feel as authentic as Rosita.
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Dettagli
Botteghino
- Budget
- 1.479.000 USD (previsto)
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 24 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 2.35 : 1