Robert Mitchum is Martin Brady, a man torn between two countries. As a teenager, he avenged his father’s killing and fled to Mexico, where he’s become a paid assassin for the Castros, helping run guns across the U.S. border.
But he breaks a leg on one of those trips and is forced to recuperate in Texas.
There, he makes friends with the doctor who treats him, gets a job offer from the Texas Rangers, and catches the eye of Helen Colton, a pretty young woman unhappily married to cavalry Maj. Stark Colton.
He’s thinking of settling down in the U.S. when he comes to the defense of another new friend and winds up gunning down a bully in a fair fight.
Instinctively, he flees back to Mexico and the safety of the Castro family.
But there have been changes in Mexico. One Castro is now governor; another leads the army, and the latter is jealous of the former’s power.
Brady soon realizes that no matter how fast he is with a gun, he’s perceived as little more than a servant — a gringo, no less — in his adopted land.
He helps Costas and Colton in a joint campaign against the Apache, only to find himself a wanted man again.
Interesting concept, but way too tedious and short on action to be entirely successful. And, as a character study, it’d help if you cared about what happened to Mitchum’s Martin Brady. But you really don’t.
The film is rare in its depiction of the black buffalo soldiers. And this marked the only film role for Hall of Fame pitcher Satchel Paige, who plays a sergeant serving in the cavalry in a south-of-the-border mission to fight the Apache.
Julie London plays the love interest, Gary Merrill is her hard-to-love husband and veteran actor Albert Dekker plays the Texas Ranger captain who tries to convince Brady his home is north of the border.
Directed by:
Robert Parrish
Cast:
Robert Mitchum … Martin Brady
Julie London … Helen Colton
Gary Merrill … Maj. Stark Colton
Albert Dekker … Capt. Rucker
Jack Oakie … Travis Hyte
Charles McGraw … Dr. Stovall
Leroy “Satchel” Paige … Sgt. Sutton
Max Salten … Ludwig Sterner
Anthony Caruso … Santiago Santos
Mike Kellin … Pancho Gil
Victor Manuel Mendoza … Gen. Marcos Castro
Jay Novello … Diego Casas
John Banner … Ben Sterner
Max Slaten … Ludwig “Chico” Sterner
Memorable lines:
Dr. Stovall: “Do you speak English?”
Martin Brady: “Yes.”
Stovall, as he’s about to set Martin’s broken leg: “Drink a lot of this in English. You’re going to need it.”
Martin Brady: “Doc, look, how am I going to pay you?”
Dr. Stovall: “My other patients aren’t worrying. Why should you be a pioneer?”
Capt. Rucker of the Texas Rangers to Martin Brady: “You belong with us. You know that? As long as you stay out of trouble.”
Martin Brady: “What kind of trouble?”
Rucker: “Oh, there are all kinds of trouble. You know one kind. You’ve been living it all your life. Then there’s another kind of trouble that doesn’t look like trouble at all. Sometimes, it looks as pretty as a picture.”
Helen Colton, wife of Major Stark Colton walks up.
Rucker: “Mrs. Colton, you look as pretty as a picture.”
Gov. Castro: “Where will you go? Your Americans have a price on your head. They will put you in jail and let you rot. You belong here.”
Martin Brady: “No, senor, not anymore.”
Gov. Castro: “Then you belong nowhere.”
One of the best movies this 75 year old American has ever seen. Well acted. Sincere. Realistic. Not the fake and boring bravado and hoopla that pervails in most westerns. most westerns
I recall seeing this as an eight year-old long ago. The two-three scenes I recall are the murder of one of Mitchum’s friends; the exciting, drawn-out chase near the end, which featured my first-ever glimpse of “buffalo soldiers” in a western, and several lines of dialogue from Negro Leagues star pitcher Leroy “Satchel” Page, who was acting in his first-ever movie; and the decision Mitchum makes for his beautiful horse, who is as important a character as any of the humans. A memorable western from my youth. . .