Barry Sullivan is Sheriff Horne, sent to track down two outlaws who robbed $50,000 from his town’s bank.
The town fathers doubt Horne’s commitment to the task — seems the bandits were sons of Ross Sawyer (Keenan Wynn), the man who raised him.
So they hire their own gun, Sam Swope (Scott Brady) to capture the outlaws. And if he guns down Horne in the process, oh, well, that’s fine with the town fathers, too.
As for Swope, he isn’t eager to use his gun, but he needs the reward money to care for a blind daughter.
Everyone congregates at a stage station, where Henry Parker (Lon Chaney) and his wife Myra are trying to scrape up enough money to get out of debt and stay in their home. Seems the stage is about to make its last run through these parts.
The family also includes young Julie, who dreams of traveling to more exciting places; and her older sister Leah, who’s been to those more exciting places and wound up selling her principles and her body in order to survive, though she told her parents she was teaching school.
Leah has a thing for Horne. In fact, she sees him as a chance to start living the type of life she’s dream of.
But he’ll have none of it until after his fateful showdown. That’s if someone in the stage station doesn’t turn on him and help the prisoner — or help themselves to the $50,000 — first.
There’s very little of the romantic West in this film. In fact, the tone is persistently downbeat. Very few of the characters are happy with the way their lives have turned out.
Nevertheless, it just might be the best of the many low-budget Westerns A.C. Lyles produced in the 1960s. Unlike many of those films, the plot seems plausible and the stories of several main characters are neatly interwoven.
Marilyn Maxwell and Laurel Goodwin are particularly convincing as the sisters, one of whom has seen the world and returned home looking for a fresh start, the other oh, so eager to get a taste of life beyond the confines of the small ranch where she’s lived all of her life.
Maxwell was a veteran actress, 44 when this film was released, with a career stretching back to the early 1940s. Goodwin was 22, had made her film debut in the Elvis Presley vehicle “Girls, Girls, Girls” and had credited roles in just three more films, this one included.
Directed by:
William Claxton
Cast:
Barry Sullivan .. Sheriff Horne
Marilyn Maxwell … Leah Parker
Scott Brady … Sam Swope
Keenan Wynn … Ross Sawyer
Lon Chaney Jr. … Henry Parker
Anne Seymour … Myra Parker
Wanda Hendrix … Mrs. Swope
Ralph Taeger … Reese Sawyer
John Agar … Dan Carrouthers
Laurel Goodwin … Julie Parker
Allan Jones … Mayor Ted Dollars
Robert Strauss … Bob Acres
Robert Lowery … Deputy Sheriff Barrington
Runtime: 89 min.
Memorable lines:
Leah Parker, to the town leaders: “I thoroughly enjoy knowing you’re wallowing in filth, because that’s exactly where you belong.”
Sheriff: “Sorry you couldn’t have hung around longer, Mrs. Parker. We might have gotten to know one another better.”
Leah Parker: “I’m far too expensive.”
Julie Parker: “You’re my papa.”
Henry Parker: “I know, Julie. I’m right sorry about that.”
Leah Parker: “When are you men going to stop shooting one another?”
Sheriff Horne: “When are you women going to stop being women?”
Henry Parker: “I just sat here, month after month, and let the world whip me. You can’t do that. You’ve got to fight every minute. Otherwise, there comes a day when you know there was a fight, but you lost it before you even knew you were in it.”