Alan Ladd plays Chad Morgan, an ex-Confederate soldier turned cattleman. He’s tired of killing and needs to get his beef to market.
So he convinces other Texas ranchers to join him in a cattle drive to Missouri, only to discover a corrupt buyer named Brog (Anthony Caruso) has cornered the market.
Instead of the expected $10 per head, Brog is willing to pay $1.50. Branded a traitor by the fellow ranchers Morgan rides off alone.
He isn’t alone for long. He finds a friend in architect Joe Jagger (Edmund O’Brien), who has a problem with booze and a problem finishing projects he starts as a result.
But a spell drying out and an encounter with Kansas wheat farmers gives Jagger a new idea: A rail spur to Kansas to transport Kansas wheat and cattle driven there from Texas.
What’s more, Jagger’s pretty sister Helen (Virginia Mayo) is engaged to a railroad man named Draper.
Morgan and Jagger sell Draper on the plan. Jagger and the farmers begin building the town that will be required for the rail spur.
But two questions remain. How will Brog respond to the potential loss of his beef market? And can Morgan convince those Texas ranchers to follow his North again?
A delightful Western with Ladd effectively slipping back into the persona of the reluctant gunman that served him so well in 1953’s “Shane.”
Director Gordon Douglas interjects some humor into the film — two youngsters who echo one another for instance (one played by Ladd’s son, David).
Fine performances by O’Brien as a reformed drunk and Mayo, looking especially lovely, help the film along.
Directed by:
Gordon Douglas
Cast:
Alan Ladd … Chad Morgan
Edmund O’Brien … Joe Jagger
Virginia Mayo … Helen Jagger
Anthony Caruso … Brog
Don Kelly … Billy Tyler
Don Castle … Tom Draper
John Qualen … Swen Johnson
David Ladd … ‘Echo’ Johnson
Jake Wrather Jr. … Olaf Johnson
Julie Bishop … Kate Johnson
George J. Lewis … Dawson
James Anderson … Bob Cole
Charles Watts … Dick McCullough
Runtime: 92 min.
Song:
“I Leaned on a Man”
by Bonnie Lou Williams
dubbing Virginia Mayo
Memorable lines:
Joe Jagger: “In war, you’re supposed to kill.”
Chad Morgan: “Yeah, but I’ve had my fill. Seems like the war’s never over though.”
Joe Jagger, on the trail with Chad Morgan: “I’ve eaten so much rabbit, when I sleep at night I dream about carrots.”
Helen Jagger: “Mr. Morgan, just don’t count on me to help you sell him (her fiance on a railroad spur).”
Chad Morgan: “i wouldn’t count on you for anything.
Billy: “I use the Tyler brand so people will know my cattle. I’m gonna put the ‘t’ on you. For traitor!”