4.6
A group of outlaws plan and execute a robbery in a small town. However, things go awry as the team attempt a getaway, when a couple of the locals attempting to follow them, are ambushed by marauding natives.
Rory Calhoun
Cully
Colleen Miller
Lolly Bhumer
George Nader
Bronco
Walter Brennan
Simon Bhumer
Nina Foch
Maggie Flannery
John McIntire
Dutch
Charles Drake
Sheriff Jim Flannery
Jay Silverheels
Yaqui
Nestor Paiva
Greasy
Mary Field
Mrs. Pritchard
Robert F. Hoy
Smitty
Bob Herron
Evans
Regis Parton
Cashier
Donald Kerr
Town Loafer
Wag Blesing
Townsman
Emile Avery
John Barton
Marshall Bradford
Paul Brinegar
Tom Coleman
Slim Gaut
George Huggins
Jack Kenny
Walter Lawrence
Buddy Roosevelt
Sailor Vincent
Director
Richard Carlson
Original Story
Louis L'Amour
Screenplay
Franklin Coen
Screenplay
George Van Marter
May 24, 2014
8
Simmering Passions In Shadow Valley.
Four Guns to the Border is directed by Richard Carlson and collectively written by George Van Marter, Franklin Coen and Louis L'Amour. It stars Rory Calhoun, Colleen Miller, George Nader, Walter Brennan, Nina Foch, John McIntire, Charles Drake and Jay Silverheels. Music is by Joseph Gershenson and cinematography by Russell Metty.
A little ole devil of an Oater is this. The Outlaw machinations and manoeuvres of Rory Calhoun's gang of outlaws is kind of secondary to the sex angle of the plotting. The pic is ripe with sexual frustrations, born out by Colleen Miller's blossoming from tomboy daddies girl into a sex-kitten. There is nary a moment missed to sexualise the stunning Miss Miller, she gets wet a lot, and looks amazing with it, she suggestively licks a candy stick, and on it goes.
It would appear on the surface that these are cheap tactics to put horny Western fan's bums on seats, but there's a relevant thread running through the piece. That of awakenings, or growing up if you like. Be it Miller's discovering and curiosity about her sexuality, to the Outlaw gang who seem perpetually stuck in a world of youthful exuberance, there's a constant "growing up" theme throughout.
"We haven't seen an Indian all day"
"Sometimes that's when they're closest"
Lest I forget to mention this is an action movie as well! Standard Oater conventions do apply in the action stakes, with Calhoun (a very under valued actor in the Western pantheon) exuding machismo at every opportunity. There's Apache attacks, fisticuffs, shoot-outs, deaths and chases, you know, the stuff we Western fans love in our 50s Oater diets. There's a running fun thread that sees Silverheels (who gets the best costume) and Nader taking each other on in friendly bouts of fighting, while a sub-plot involving Foch and Drake adds meat to the thematic stew.
Thoroughly enjoyable and not without some intelligence and racy merit as well, Four Guns to the Border is well worth checking out. 7.5/10
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$0.00
Revenue:
$0.00