+

poster of The Plunderers
Rating: 5.8/10 by 12 users

The Plunderers (1960)

Four young toughs have ridden into Trail City and claimed it as easy pickings for their bullying and gunplay. The whole town will be overrun by lawlessness if decent folks like rancher and Civil War veteran Sam Christy don’t take a stand.

Directing:
  • Joseph Pevney
  • Eylla Jacobs
  • Robert Saunders
Writing:
  • Bob Barbash
Stars:
Release Date: Sat, Nov 05, 1960

Rating: 5.8/10 by 12 users

Alternative Title:
Kerskurit - FI
Præriens skrappe bande - DK
Οι τεσσερις λεηλατες - GR

Country:
United States of America
Language:
English
Runtime: 01 hour 34 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: saloon, murder, shootout, gunfight, fast draw, small western town, outlaw gang

Jeff Chandler
Sam Christy
Dolores Hart
Ellie Walters
Marsha Hunt
Kate Miller
Jay C. Flippen
Sheriff McCauley
Ray Stricklyn
Jeb Lucas Tyler
Roger Torrey
William 'Mule' Thompson
Vaughn Taylor
Jess Walters
Joseph Hamilton
Abilene - Barfly
Ray Ferrell
Billy Miller
John Barton
Townsman (uncredited)
Ella Ethridge
Mrs. Phelps (uncredited)
Dick Johnstone
Townsman (uncredited)
Paul Kruger
Townsman (uncredited)
Charles Morton
Townsman (uncredited)

John Chard

Captain Sam - A Phantom. The Plunderers is directed by Joseph Pevney and written by Bob Barbash. It stars Jeff Chandler, John Saxon, Dolores Hart, Marsha Hunt and Jay C. Flippen. Music is by Leonard Rosenman and cinematography by Eugene Polito. Trail City, and 4 delinquent cowboys ride into town with attitude and carefree abandon. The Trail City residents - spineless, all except one man. One man who considers himself only half a man on account of his disability. That man is Civil War veteran Captain Sam... War didn't just destroy his arm. The few critical appraisals and reviews that exist for The Plunderers are keen to associate the picture with other notable pictures released previously, which in this instance is something of a curse when they happen to be well revered classics. Yet this is no knock off, it has its own identity. The four young delinquents here are not dashing dandy types, the makers make every effort to put their failings as human beings up at the front of the portrayals. These are young men, out of their depth, even spineless, but of course the town doesn't know this as they are too busy cowering in the shadows. The messages are obvious in the play, but Pevney doesn't use his sledgehammer to enforce those parts of the narrative. It's perhaps no surprise how things pan out with Chandler's embittered war veteran, as he wrestles with both his conscience and his disability, but Pevney has a good knack for slow burning the atmosphere to bring rewards for film's finale. Chandler, in his last Western, is suitably broody, Hunt and Hart are beauties to behold, while of the bad boys it's Saxon as a diabolical Mexican - with scary eyebrows - and the only one who is old enough to shave, who strikes the highest villain chords. Elsewhere there's a great musical score provided by double Academy Award Winner Rosenman, very much akin to something that the moody Twilight Zone episodes would use. It also at times has the feel of the score Alan Silvestri would rustle up for Predator some 27 years later. Polito's photography is crisp, where in conjunction with Pevney's camera angles and lighting techniques keeps the claustrophobia factor high in this one location setting. Crackerjack! A dandy of a black and white Oater waiting to be discovered by more Western fans. It's a keeper for sure. 8/10


My Favorite

Welcome back!

Support Us

Like Movienade?

Please buy us a coffee

scan qr code