Broderick Crawford plays Sheriff Frazier, the man who once cleaned up Roswell with his quick gun.
Now he’s a drunken sheriff in a thriving town, kept around for nostalgia as much as anything.
Then comes Founders Day — the day the down-on-the-luck Romer family decides to get even with cattle baron Sampson Drune (Charles Bickford) by stealing $105,000 he’s just made selling a herd he’d purchased from them a year earlier at $5 per head when they were down on their luck.
Drune sets out on their trail with his adopted son of a foreman (John Derek as Jed Clayton).
The town leaders know Drune well enough to realize he wants more than his money back; he wants blood. So they tag along.
The sheriff heads out to join the posse. He also knows Drune wants the Romers dead, and the primary reason has nothing to do with beef or stolen money.
It has more to do with a secret they’ve kept for 15 years, a secret Drune never wants to come out.
Told flashback style, the plot has enough originality to hold your interest. As he’d oft do in his Westerns, Derek plays an angst-ridden young man. Bickford is solid as always in the role of the domineering figure who controls those he loves and hates with a vengeance.
If there’s a problem with the film, it’s the role Crawford plays. He’s portrayed as a hopeless drunk through most of the film, yet he somehow musters the strength to not only lead the posse through the desert, but to climb out of his death bed to make sure the truth comes out.
It doesn’t help that the film also portrays him as one of the clumsiest sheriffs ever in a serious Western. Twice he falls off his horse while chasing the bad guys, only to bounce right back up and ride off again.
Directed by:
Alfred Werker
Cast:
Broderick Crawford … Sheriff Frazier
John Derek … Jed Clayton
Charles Bickford … Sampson Drune
Warner Anderson … Robert Emerson
Henry Hull … Ollie Stokely
Will Wright … Tom Mitchell
Tom Powers … Frank White
Raymond Greenleaf … Arthur Hagan
James Kirkwood … Judge Parker
Eddy Waller … Dr. Pryor
Skip Homeier … Art Romer
Guy Wilkerson … George Romer
James Bell … Will Romer
Wanda Hendrix … Deborah Morely
Runtime: 73 min.
Memorable lines:
Drune: “If you’re looking for improvement, why don’t you get a new sheriff?”
Emerson: “Where’s you’re civic pride, Drune? Every town should have a monument to its past. We’ve got one that walks and talks.”
Drune, about the sheriff: “What’s he trying to do? Die with his boots on?”
Emerson: “Can you think of a better way for him to go?
Clayton: “How’s it feel to track down your friends?”
Sheriff Frazier: “Sheriff’s got no friends. Just a job.”