6.4
Smith is an iron-willed railroad detective. When his friend Murray is fired from the railroad and begins helping Rebstock wreck trains, Smith must go after him. He also seems to have an interest in Murray's wife (and vice versa).
Alan Ladd
Whispering Smith
Robert Preston
Murray Sinclair
Brenda Marshall
Marian Sinclair
Donald Crisp
Barney Rebstock
William Demarest
Bill Dansing
Fay Holden
Emmy Dansing
Murvyn Vye
Blake Barton
Frank Faylen
Whitey Du Sang
John Eldredge
George McCloud
Ward Wood
Leroy Barton
J. Farrell MacDonald
Bill Baggs
Will Wright
Sheriff McSwiggin
Don Barclay
Dr. Sawbuck
Eddy Waller
Conductor
Ashley Cowan
Brakeman
Jimmie Dundee
Karg
Ray Teal
Seagrue
Bob Kortman
Gabby Barton
Eric Alden
Irving Bacon
George Barton
Hank Bell
Danny Borzage
John Bose
George Bruggeman
Paul E. Burns
Nora Bush
Ann Cameron
Noble 'Kid' Chissell
Tom Coleman
Waiter (uncredited)
James Davies
Mike Donovan
Lester Dorr
Woody, Train Brakeman (uncredited)
Clint Dorrington
Tom Fadden
Telegrapher at Coyete Creek (uncredited)
Budd Fine
Terry Frost
Wrecking Crew Member (uncredited)
Gary Gray
Frank Hagney
Frank - Wrecking Crew Member (uncredited)
Earle Hodgins
Perry Ivins
Roberta Jonay
Jack Kenny
Milton Kibbee
Train Engineer (uncredited)
Ethan Laidlaw
Pat Lane
Don Lynch
William Meader
Anton Northpole
Broderick O'Farrell
Ed Randolph
Robert St. Angelo
Chalky Williams
Hank Worden
Fred Zendar
Director
Leslie Fenton
Novel
Frank H. Spearman
Screenplay
Karl Kamb
Screenplay
Frank Butler
October 8, 2017
7
Guys like Smitty they don't make anymore!
Whispering Smith is directed by Leslie Fenton and co-adapted to screenplay by Frank Butler and Karl Kamb from Frank H. Spearman's novel. It stars Alan Ladd, Robert Preston, Brenda Marshall, Donald Crisp, William Demarest and Frank Faylen. Music is by Adolph Deutsch and cinematography by Ray Rennahan.
Famed railroad detective Whispering Smith (Ladd) becomes conflicted when his latest case pits him up against one of his best pals.
It's somewhat surprising to find Whispering Smith is not more well known, given that it's Ladd's first full length Western feature and that it's really rather good. With its opening scene of Ladd riding towards camera, with glorious landscape in the background, and the thematics of how Smith operates around women and children, this signposts towards Shane five years down the line. In fact this very much works as a tasty appetiser for that superb 1953 picture.
Ladd cuts a fine figure as Smith, giving him the right amount of calm toughness so as to not over play the role, and Preston is on fine form, very ebullient and able to act heaps with only his eyes. Marshall on the surface doesn't impact greatly, in what is a key role, but the character is very shrewdly written and sits in the story as more than a token. The villains headed by Crisp are not very inspiring, while Faylen looks laughably out of place with a blonde wig!, but with Preston erring on the side of badness the good versus bad axis of plotting thrives well enough.
Pic is filled with a number of shoot-outs, banditry and awesome locomotive action, all set to the backdrop of beautiful - Technicolor enhanced - California locales. The running theme of railroad progression in the West is interestingly written, managing to not take sides and let the viewer enjoy both sides of the coin, though a moral equation that Smith ultimately arrives at doesn't quite add up. Add in Fenton's unfussy direction, Rennahan's location photography (see also night sequences) and Deutsch's pleasingly compliant score, and Western fans are good to go.
This doesn't pull up any tress or have the psychological savvy of what many Oaters of the next decade would explore, but it's very well mounted and engages from the get go. 7/10
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$0.00
Revenue:
$0.00