Guy Madison is Steve Daley, a cowboy framed for murder and sentenced to hang. His one way out: Agree to marry a young lady he doesn’t know, then disappear.
The young lady is Cheyenne O’Mally (Rhonda Fleming), a tomboyish young woman who wields a bullwhip and runs the O’Mally freight business. Her father has died; his will requires that she marry to inherit the company.
She’s used to being in charge, not following orders from a man, which proves a problem when Daley fails to disappear. An O’Mally rival, John Parnell, has clued Daley in on the reason for the arranged marriage — and on how much he stands to gain if he assumes his role as Cheyenne’s husband.
It’s all part of his plan to force a merger between his business and hers. But Cheyenne isn’t going to let a man take her place in charge without pulling a couple tricks of her own.
One of the most male chauvinistic Westerns you’re about to find, with a plot line that screams: Even the strongest and most stubborn woman can be tamed by the right man.
But the film’s still fun in spots, and Madison and Fleming make for a great-looking team. Fleming never looked lovelier.
Madison was wrapping up a run as the lead in the TV show “Wild Bill Hickok” the same year this film was released. It would mark his last U.S. Western before he headed to Europe, where he starred in several Spaghetti Westerns.
James Griffith plays Slope Karp, the man hired to foul up things for Daley; Burt Nelson is Pine Hawk, Cheyenne’s personal Indian body guard.
Directed by:
Harmon Jones
Cast:
Rhonda Fleming … Cheyenne O’Mally
Guy Madison … Steve Daley
James Griffith … Slope Karp
Peter Adams … John Parnell
Don Beddoe … Judge Carr
Dan Sheridan …. Podo
Burt Nelson … Pine Hawk
Al Terr … Lem Pierce
Tim Graham … Pete
Hank Worden … Tex
Wayne Mallory … Larry
Title tune:
“Bullwhip,.” sung by Frankie Laine
Runtime: 80 min.
Memorable lines:
Steve Daley, upon hearing the marriage proposal: “You know, judge, I got it figured that if say no, you’re gonna be out an awful lot of money.”
Judge Carr: “No, no. I’ll just get her another single man, and you’ll hang, per schedule.”
Daley: “Well, I guess a wedding ring is better than a noose.”
Judge: “Especially since you can forget the ring, too.”
Tex, one of Cheyenne’s trail hands: “That injun blood always has given her more confounded meanness than anything in pants that ever lived. She ain’t a woman. She’s something made out of fire and brimstone.”
Second trailhand: “Ah, you’re wrong, Tex. You take another look. She’s a woman alright.”
Cheyenne to Steve: “Don’t worry sweetheart, I won’t let them hang you. If you promise to be a good boy and not try to run everything so we can live happily ever after.”
Podo: “Imagine me. I thought you said you got married.”
Steve Daley: “I did.”
Podo: “Married? Steve, you feelin’ alright?”
Daley: “I never felt better in my life.”
Podo: “But look, fella, you were in jail, not in a church. You’re Steve Daly, always running away from hot little mavericks with wedding rings in their eyes. That’s crazy. Nobody gets married in jail.”
Daley: “Well, I did.”
Steve Daley to John Parnell: “I’ve had one bushwackin’ today. I don’t think I’ll risk another.”