The Dalton girls take up where the guys left off, pulling stage holdups, robbing a bank and generally wreaking mayhem.
Holly (Merry Anders) and Rose (Lisa Davis) are the hard-nosed twosome who stayed in the West while sending sisters Columbine (Penny Edwards) and Marigold (Sue George) to school in the East.
Now they’ve reunited, and manage to stay one step ahead of the law, at least for a while. Holly’s the mastermind, holding the group together. Rose is the killer, never anxious to leave a witness alive. Truth be told, Columbine and Marigold would like to settle down.
That’s especially true for Columbine after she meets a gambler by the name of “Illinois” Grey. He’s a victim of the Dalton girls thievery twice. The second time, Rose guns down a bank manager who owed “Illinois” a $6,000 gambling debt. She tries to gun down “Illinois,” too, but he survives the wound.
Now he has two reasons to track down the Dalton girls. He wants to see Columbine again. And he wants his $6,000.
The gimmick of women outlaws has one expecting little from this film, but it’s surprisingly effective — a good example of what a little imagination can do with a small budget Western.
In one of the film’s lighter moments, “Illinois” meets Columbine in the mining town of Dry Creek, not knowing she and her sisters are in the middle of a bank holdup. He offers to help her with the upcoming job interview she says she has. When he insists on hanging around, she guides him into the bank where a job interview is the last thing she’s looking for.
Another highlight is Rose singing “A Gun is My One True Love” while the gals are gathered around a campfire.
Directed by:
Reginald Le Borg
Cast:
Merry Anders … Holly Dalton
Lisa Davis … Rose Dalton
Penny Edwards … Columbine Dalton
Sue George … Marigold Dalton
John Russell … “Illinois” Grey
Ed Hinton … Detective Hiram Parsh
Glenn Dixon … Mr. Slidell
Johnny Western … Joe
Malcolm Atterbury … Mr. Sewell
Douglas Henderson … Bank cashier
Kevin Enright … The bartender
Al Wyatt Sr. … Sheriff St. Ives
Runtime: 71 min.
Memorable lines:
Columbine to Rose: “You’re crazy. You kill like other women love.”
“Illinois” Grey to Sewell, the bank manager: “You’re not only a thief and a liar, Sewell, you’re a hypocrite. That’s about the one type of critter I can’t abide.”
Rose, when “Illinois” Grey shows up in the saloon she’s working in, after she shot him during a bank holdup: “I never believed in miracles, Holly. But this sure shakes my lack of faith.”
Rose, singing the title tune: “You can’t trust a man, cause a man will lie; But a gun stands by you, til the day that you die.”
I love this one.
A JD girl-gang, but set in the west. That’s either the worst idea ever, or brilliant. 😉