Joe Corbet is Ransom, a Union scout who’s fallen for a Confederate war widow and her young daughter.
He has to leave them to accompany Union forces as they accept the surrender of the last few bands of Rebel soldiers out West.
By the time he returns, Tess is dead, her young daughter Promise is missing.
Turns out they received a visit from Rebel deserters who wound up with a chest of Confederate gold bound for Mexico.
The trio planned to bury the loot on a piece of land out West, then return to split it up later.
They thought the property was abandoned. Then they discovered Tess and Promise and feared they might spill the secret.
Flash forward 12 years, and Ransom has become a bounty hunter on the trail of an outlaw named Zebediah Scurlock.
A young woman is on his trail too. Because he’s the last surviving member of the trio who killed her mom.
And so Promise and Ransom are reunited. And Promise is searching for that chest of gold.
They won’t be alone in the quest. One-eyed war veteran Wildeye and his partner Brick Logan want the gold.
Bill Gristy, another bounty hunter with a deadly aim, learns of the chest too and joins in the hunt.
A low-budget film most notable for the presence of veteran actor Don Murray, who was 91 when it was released and had starred in such Westerns as “From Hell to Texas” and “These Thousand Hills” during his prime.
Murray has a minor role here as the current owner of the property where Tess and Promise once lived. He fills Ransom in on what happened to them while he was off at war, at least the little he knows.
Considering his age, Murray acquits himself well. It turned out to be his final film. He died Feb 2, 2024, at age 94.
Otherwise, this is a fine looking film, but not much works well. Director Cornet is way too stilted in the lead role. Despite being orphaned as a young girl as forced to “compromise her morals” to survive in the West, Promise speaks as though she just stepped out of the finest of finishing schools.
Even less convincing is the villain Wild Eye, who lost an eye and the ability to speak in anything other than a hoarse rasp during the Civil War. He’s clearly not the brightest bulb in Las Cruces. But he breaks into Promise’s hotel room way too easily. And he discovers a clue to the whereabouts of the gold way, way, way too easily.
This marked the third Western directed by Cornet. He fares far better with his fourth, 2023’s “Gunfight at Rio Bravo.”
Directed by:
Joe Cornet
Cast:
Trista Robinson … Promise Sawyer
Joe Cornet … Ransom
Curt Lambert … Wildeye
James Henderson … Bill Gristy
Kerry Goodwin … Tess
Gene Rathswohl … Brick Logan
Maude Bonanni … Francesca
Don Murray … Zacharias
Patrick Scott Lewis … Fugitive
Matt Kelsey … Father Thomas
Christopher Beeman … Zebediah Scurlock
Ernie Ventry … Bully Bryant
Robert Amato … Highwayman
John Marrs … Sheriff Danbury
Buddy Clements … Father Raymond
Runtime: 118 min.
Memorable lines:
Saloon keeper, after watching Ransom gun down a wanted man: “I don’t get it. If you knew you were going to kill him, why did you buy him a meal?”
Ransom: “I didn’t want the son-of-a-bitch to go to hell on an empty stomach.”
Francesca, Ransom’s new lover: “Come on, you gloomy bastard … Confront your past.”
Zacharias to Ransom: “You cannot control life. Life controls you.”
Ransom: “Should a man be allowed to grieve?”
Zacharias: “For as long as he wishes.”
Ransom, having killed Zebediah Scurlock: “Your journey is at an end.”
Promise: “Not quite. There’s the cash box.”
Bill Gristly, bounty hunter, to a man with a bounty on his head: “You are wearing on my patience. You will only succeed in arousing my deeper anger. And when that occurs, hell follows.”
Promise: “You speak in vagaries.”
Ransom: “That’s part of my charm.”
Promise, having gunned down a man who was explaining, at length, why he was about to kill Ransom: “I hate verbose people.”
Ransom: “He was a might bitter. I get that from time to time.”