6.5
A small rancher is being harassed by his mighty and powerful neighbor. When the neighbor even hires gunmen to intimidate him he has to defend himself and his property by means of violence.
Randolph Scott
Owen Merrit
Joan Leslie
Laurie Bidwell Isham
Ellen Drew
Nan Melotte
Alexander Knox
Will Isham
Richard Rober
Fay Dutcher
John Russell
Hugh Clagg
Alfonso Bedoya
Cultus Charley
Guinn "Big Boy" Williams
Bourke Prine
Clem Bevans
Pay Lankershim
Cameron Mitchell
George Vird
Richard Crane
Juke Vird
Frank Sully
Lee Repp
Don Beddoe
Love Bidwell (uncredited)
Tennessee Ernie Ford
Wrangler (uncredited)
Frank Hagney
Ned Bale (uncredited)
James Kirkwood
Sheriff Medary (uncredited)
George Lloyd
Tom Croker (uncredited)
Kermit Maynard
Gunman (uncredited)
Dorothy Phillips
Townswoman (uncredited)
Ada Adams
Bob Burns
Roydon Clark
James Dime
Frank Ellis
Joe Garcio
Curley Gibson
Herman Hack
Al Haskell
Reed Howes
James Pier Mason
David O. McCall
Kansas Moehring
G. Raymond Nye
Frank O'Connor
Artie Ortego
Carlos Rivero
Ray Spiker
Rosa Turich
Peter Virgo
George D. Wallace
Blackjack Ward
Blackie Whiteford
Director
André de Toth
Novel
Ernest Haycox
Screenplay
Kenneth Gamet
April 5, 2014
8
Rancho Skulduggery.
Man in the Saddle is directed by Andre De Toth and adapted to screenplay by Kenneth Gamet from the novel written by Ernest Haycox. It stars Randolph Scott, Joan Leslie, John Russell, Ellen Drew, Alexander Knox, Richard Rober and Guinn Williams. Music is by George Duning and cinematography by Charles Lawton Jr.
More known and rightly lauded for the series of Western films he made with Budd Boetticher, it often gets forgotten that Randolph Scott also had a long working relationship with Andre De Toth. Man in the Saddle was the first of six Western films the two men would make together, and it’s a pretty impressive start.
Sometimes you see words such as routine and standard attributed to a lot of Westerns from the 1950s, and Man in the Saddle is one such film that’s unfairly tarred with that brush. Not that the narrative drive is out of the ordinary, the plot essentially sees Randy as a peaceful farmer forced to get nasty when evil land baron flexes his muscles, but the zest of the action, the stunt work, the colour photography (Lone Pine as always a Mecca for Western fans) and Scott, mark this out as a thoroughly entertaining production.
Characterisations carry a bit more psychological smarts than your average “B” Western of the era. There’s a four way tug-of-love-war operating that is clearly going to spell misery, pain and death for somebody, a capitalist slant that bites hard with its egotistical bully boy overtones, while the obsessive behaviour of the principal players adds another dark cloud over this part of the West. Then there is the action scenes, of which De Toth once again shows himself to be a darn fine purveyor of such directional skills.
And so, we get an ace runaway blazing wagon sequence, a stampede, a quite brilliant gunfight in a darkened saloon, a mano-mano fist fight that literally brings the house down – and then continues down a steep ravine, and the closing shoot-out played out during a dust storm doesn’t lack for adrenalin rushes. Scott is once again a bastion of Western coolness, more so when he throws off the bright attire he wears for the first half of film, to then switch to black clothes that signifies he’s going all bad ass on those who have caused him grief.
Undervalued for sure, both as a Scott picture and as a Western movie in general. Don’t believe the routine and standard scare mongers, there’s good craft here and it’s a whole bunch of Oater fun. 7.5/10
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$0.00
Revenue:
$0.00