Five years before the film starts, Case Britton (Jim Davis) was shunned from Rock Valley for killing two sons of a wealthy rancher named Carl Avery (Barton McLane).
Now he’s forced to return to warn the town of impending trouble. He’s discovered that Jack Cantrell (Ted de Corsia) and his band of bandits plan to steal a $75,000 stagecoach shipment, and he can’t let that happen because his fiance (Lyn Thomas as Della Haines) is aboard the stage.
The welcome in Rock Valley is anything but warm. There’s still a noose hanging from a tree as you enter town. A sign on the tree makes it clear: The noose is waiting for Case Britton.
But with the $75,000 stashed in the bank and Cantrell’s outlaw gang sure to hit the town to get it, the good folks of Rock Valley just might need a fast gun on their side.
The town marshal is the first to realize that.
Another of the low-budget Westerns director Edward L. Cahn churned out in the early 1960s; he directed 21 films in 1960 and 1961 alone.
Ted de Corsia lends some gusto to the role of outlaw Jack Cantrell, but Jim Davis lays the bravado on just a little too thick and some silly dialogue doesn’t help.
In 1964, the Audie Murphy film “The Quick Gun” would cover much of the same ground.
Harry Carey Jr., still looking surprisingly young at 39, has a key role. So does Barton MacLane as a respectable rancher who turns out to be a scoundrel. Come 1965, he’d land the recurring role of Gen. Peterson on “I Dream of Jeannie.”
Director:
Edward L. Cahn
Cast:
Jim Davis … Case Britton
Lyn Thomas … Della Haines
Harry Carey Jr. … Jim Ferguson
Walter Sande … Marshal Tom Evans
Barton MacLane … Carl Avery
Ted de Corsia …. Jack Cantrell
Leo Gordon … Link Roy
William Tannen … Willetts
William Challee … Gorse
Runtime: 69 min.
Memorable lines:
Marshal Evans to Avery: “You’ve got a lot of say in Rock Valley, Mr. Avery. But not enough to kill a man.”
Marshall Evans: “Right now, I’d accept help from the devil himself.”
Councilman: “So would I, if we could trust the devil behind our back.”
Case Britton: “Hi, Della.”
Della: “Hi, tall fella.”
Jim Ferguson to Case Britton: “You sure called the turn on Cantrell.”
Britton: “That’s easy. All you have to do is think like a corkscrew.”
Ferguson to the townsfolk: “All these years, you’ve been wanting to hang him. Now, with the fear of death grabbing your puny souls, you want him to fight for you, maybe die for you.”