Guy Madison plays Frank Madden, a man with a dream and a secret.
The dream: He’s scrapped and saved and gambled until he has enough money to buy a small ranch.
The secret: He’s a half-breed; his mother was an Indian and, that being the case, he has no right to own land if his true identity is discovered.
Problem is, he’s decided to settle down in the town of Kendell, where Indians can be hanged for a crime as minor as trespassing and where the killers won’t be convicted.
The killers in this case are Madden’s neighbors, the Shipley brothers — played by Wayne Mallory, Michael Pate, and Edward Platt. They take offense to Madden’s plans to fence his land, and to the fact that he treats Indians decently.
Edward Shipley resents Madden even more than his brothers, because Madden seems to be getting along well with a pretty Indian squaw named Taini (Kathryn Grant).
In spite of his family’s feelings toward Indians, Ed Shipley wants Taini for himself.
Felicia Farr plays Catherine Cantrell (Felicia Farr), who grew up with Indians and is incensed by the way they are treated in Kendall. She falls for Madden, partly because he doesn’t seem nearly as bigoted as most of the people in town.
Taunt, effective little film and one of Madison’s more serious Western roles. He’s a man caught in the middle, trying to act white though the only people showing him much kindness are from the race he wants to abandon.
Pate and Platt turn in fine performances as two of the Indian-hating Shipley brothers. Pate’s character is nearly as torn as Madison’s, because he can’t stay away from a pretty Indian girl. Platt, of course, would go on to play The Chief in the hit TV series “Get Smart.”
This was one of four Westerns in which Farr starred in 1956, including “The Last Wagon” opposite Richard Widmark. She would later marry actor Jack Lemmon, a marriage that lasted nearly 40 years until his death.
Directed by:
George Sherman
Cast:
Guy Madison … Frank Madden
Felicia Farr … Catherine Cantrell
Otto Hulett … Sheriff Jim Dixon
Wayne Mallory … Tom Shipley
Michael Pate … Bert Shipley
Edward Platt … Neil Shipley
Kathryn Grant … Taini
Ralph Moody … Matara
Runtime: 74 min.
Memorable lines:
Frank Madden: “Good fences make good neighbors.”
Mr. Cantrell: “This is my daughter Catherine, Mr. Madden. She gets a little upset when she discovers the world is different than in books.”
Michael Pate to Taini : “You dumb squaw. Don’t you know I have to have you.”
A great movie, and a great website…
Wayne Mallory era hermano de Guy Madison.