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poster of Cole Younger, Gunfighter
Rating: 6.2/10 by 5 users

Cole Younger, Gunfighter (1958)

An outlaw must decide whether to stick his neck out for an innocent man.

Directing:
  • R.G. Springsteen
Writing:
  • Clifton Adams
  • Daniel Mainwaring
Stars:
Release Date: Sun, Mar 30, 1958

Rating: 6.2/10 by 5 users

Alternative Title:
A Terra dos Homens Maus - PT

Country:
United States of America
Language:
English
Runtime: 01 hour 18 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: two guns belt, cole younger
Subtitle   Wallpaper   Watch Trailer    

Frank Lovejoy
Cole Younger
James Best
Kit Caswell
Abby Dalton
Lucy Antrim
Jan Merlin
Frank Wittrock
Douglas Spencer
Marshal Fred Woodruff
Ainslie Pryor
Captain Follyard
Frank Ferguson
Sheriff Ralph Wittrock
Myron Healey
Phil Bennett / Charlie Bennett
George Keymas
Sgt. Price, State Police
John Mitchum
Rand City Bartender

John Chard

A remake of The Desperado (1954) In 1873 the proud citizens of Texas were humiliated and oppressed under the carpet-bagger administration of Governor E.J. Davis and his especially created state police, the corrupt and tyrannical "Bluebellies". Natuarlly they didn't take it lying down - - - R.G. Springsteen directs and Daniel Mainwaring adapts from Clifton Adams' novel, The Desperado. This is pretty much a like for like remake of Thomas Carr's 1954 version which took the title of the novel. Only difference here is that it is in De Luxe Color and filmed through the CinemaScope process. Main character change is with the outlaw Cole Younger (Frank Lovejoy), where in the 54 film it was an outlaw named Sam Garrett played by Wayne Morris. In short the pic finds James Best having to leave town due to a violent confrontation with the Bluebellie captain. On the run and having left behind the love of his life (Abby Dalton), he hooks up with outlaw Cole Younger, forms a friendship and is thankful of that friendship when treacherous Frank Wittrock (Jan Merlin) fits him up for a murder. It looks absolutely gorgeous, the colour, the Simi Valley locations, costumes and set design, but it rarely raises the pulses. It sort of plods through the story and fails to utilise what is a decent cast (it was Lovejoy's last feature length film). There's some value in the themes at work, such as refusing to bow to tyranny and that some gunmen were honourable and kept to gentlemen codes of conduct, but really it's lazy and you are strongly urged to seek out the far superior 54 film instead. 5/10


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