Randolph Scott plays Marshal Dan Mitchell, who’s in charge of keeping law and order in Abilene, a wide open, end of the trail town where the saloons and businesses cater to the cowboys.
But homesteaders are starting to show up, and that’s making some ranchers and town leaders nervous, including cattle king Cap Ryker and saloon owner Charlie Fair. They set out to scare off those homesteaders, by burning homesteads and destroying crops.
And while Mitchell isn’t at all reluctant to step into the fray, the same can’t be said for Sheriff Bravo Trimble (Edgar Buchanan), who’d rather play cards than keep the peace.
Meanwhile, Mitchell has to decide between two potential lady loves, store owner’s daughter Sherry Balder (Rhonda Fleming), who represents the settled life that’s the future of Abilene; or a saloon singer named Rita (Ann Dvorak), who represents the rowdy ways that are on their way out.
The action sequences show their age, but this is an entertaining film, one of the better Randolph Scott Westerns from the 1940s. In one memorable scene, store owner Ed Balder is frantically doing calculations about how much homesteaders might spend so the businessmen in town know which side they should support in the coming showdown. But it’s the interaction between Mitchell and Trimble, who has no interest in bravery, and between Mitchell and the fiery Rita that are most entertaining. Ann Dvorak turns in a spirited performance, insisting she’ll never wear an apron, belting out dance hall tunes and kicking Scott’s character in the shins repeatedly because he’s risking his life on a daily basis for so little.
This marked just the third credited role for Fleming, whose beauty would grace many a Western to come. She winds up in the arms of another young actor, Lloyd Bridges, one of the leaders of the band of homesteaders.
There’s a neat little ending involving playing cards, too.
Directed by
Edwin Marin
Cast
Randolph Scott … Dan Mitchell
Ann Dvorak … Rita
Edgar Buchanan … Bravo Trimble
Rhonda Fleming … Sherry Balder
Lloyd Bridges … Henry Dreiser
Helen Boyce … Big Annie
Howard Freeman … Ed Balder
Richard Hale … Charlie Fair
Jack Lambert … Jet Younger
Hank Patterson …Doug Neil
Dick Curtis … Cap Ryker
Earl Schenck … George Hazelhurst
Eddy Waller … Hannaberry
Runtime: 89 min.
Songs:
“I Love it Out in the West” by Ann Dvorak
Memorable lines:
First cowpoke: “There’s not a single saloon on this side of the street.”
Second cowpoke: “What a waste.”
Bravo Trimble to Dan Mitchell: “You got the idea that you oughta kick up a fuss about things that are bound to happen anyway. I don’t figure that way … Cows get lost. Sometimes accidents happen and fellars get killed. Why get hot under the collar about it? And why go huntin’ for fellars who don’t want to be found?”
Dan Mitchell, after taking yet another kick in the shin from Rita: “What’s that for?”
Rita: “For playing target for four bucks a day.”
Dan Mitchell: “Boys, this is the way a tough street dies — not with a roar, but with a whine. You don’t want to die here with it. The tame are taking over Abilene. And they’re tougher than you think.”