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Synopsis

Hard-nosed U.S. Marshal J.D. Cahill (John Wayne) is a widow raising two sons, the 17-year-old Danny (Gary Grimes) and the 11-year-old Billy Joe ‘Budger’ (Clay O’Brien), but spends too much time away from the boys and due to his negligence they are not raised properly. While Danny is in jail on a drunk and disorderly charge, he’s in a cell with the ruthless Abe Fraser (George Kennedy) and his gang. Billy Joe gets past the sleeping sentry and frees the jailbirds, and while the town is burning the 5-man gang gets an obnoxious Danny, who is resentful of his father, to go along with robbing the bank and Billy Joe in hiding the money as they return undetected to jail. In the process the gang killed Cahill’s friend Sheriff Grady and knifed to death his deputy Jim Kane. When Cahill returns, he hires a half-breed Indian named Lightfoot (Neville Brand) to track the bank robbers. Cahill captures four outlaws in a remote mountain hideaway, but they are innocent of the crime Cahill is pursuing. Nevertheless they are sentenced to be hanged (Hey, it’s Texas). Cahill soon figures out his sons were involved as bank robbers and hopes they will lead him to the money so he can free the innocent and bring justice to the villains. —Ozu’s World Movie reviews

Director

Original

Andrew V. McLaglen

Andrew Victor McLaglen (born 28 July 1920) is a British-American film and television director and former actor.

Andrew McLaglen was born in London, the son of British actor Victor McLaglen and Enid Lamont. He was from a film family that included eight uncles and an aunt, and he grew up on movie sets with his parents as well as John Wayne and John Ford. After working as an assistant director on a few smaller films, Ford gave him the assistant director job on the film The Quiet Man (1952).

After a few more assistant or second director jobs, McLaglen directed his first film Gun The Man Down in 1956 – a western B-movie with James Arness, Angie Dickinson and Harry Carey, Jr..

He went on to work extensively in television directing, directing episodes of Perry Mason (7), Gunslinger (5), Rawhide (6), and then 99 episodes of Have Gun – Will Travel, The Lieutenant (4), The Virginian (2), and 96 episodes of Gunsmoke.

Returning to films – directing Shenandoah (1965… read more

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Another fine Wayne Western

By Henrik Schunk on February 5, 2012

One of John Wayne’s late westerns and you can tell that the golden era of the west is long bygone. Still, the Duke still got it and wouldn’t it be for him, this movie would be mediocre at best. The…  read review

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