अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंA ranch worker becomes entangled in a conflict between an honorable rancher and violent land thieves.A ranch worker becomes entangled in a conflict between an honorable rancher and violent land thieves.A ranch worker becomes entangled in a conflict between an honorable rancher and violent land thieves.
- निर्देशक
- लेखक
- स्टार
Robert Lowery
- Harry Odell
- (as Bob Lowry)
Robert Barrat
- Walt Garnet
- (as Robert H. Barrat)
Robert J. Wilke
- Sledge
- (as Robert Wilke)
Chuck Courtney
- Tom
- (as Charles Courtney)
Chuck Roberson
- Stubby
- (as Brett Houston)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
Period piece. It's the 1870s, and the market for cattle prices is dropping like crazy. The people of garnet basin meet to come up with a plan. Unfortunately, everyone is still looking out for their own best interest. The banker, the shipper, the farmer, the cattle men. When things escalate, people start turning up dead. Someone is rustling cattle and selling the hides on the sly. Ed o'brien is ben, who's willing to take on the rustlers. If only someone will help him stand up to the thugs. We know there's going to be a big showdown at some point. The sound and picture quality are quite excellent. After the big grand start, this ends up as just another western. It's good, with no hokey, drunk sheriff that never goes after the bad guys. From allied artists. It's your typical western, but a little better. Story by curtis bishop. Directed by les selander, king of the westerns. O'brien was part of some pretty big films.. liberty valence, barefoot contessa, white heat. He won the oscar for contessa!
Nothing special in this western speaking of a topic so common in this genre: war between cattle owners. It is so predictable that you can't expect any surprise, only watch it to waste time. Edmond O'Brien does his job, a good job as usual. Lesley Selander was a prolific western specialist and this feature will not be a milestone in his career.
As Monogram Pictures morphed into Allied Artists, they tried to raise the quality of their projects. As the demand for their B westerns disappeared, they hired some good actors -- among them the incomparable Edmond O'Brien -- and produced this western, directed by long-time Western director Lesley Selander.
I wasn't expecting O'Brien to be convincing as a cowboy, but he is astonishingly good as an ex-cowpoke who is building an express business -- and given a huge oversupply of cattle, he's shipping an awful lot of tallow and hide, all the scrubs are good for. There's a lot more history intelligently explained here than is usual for a B western, the photography is crisp and clean and there are fine supporting actors carrying the roles -- John Millicam is particularly affecting in, for him, a large role.
Selander directs very efficiently -- you can tell that villain Barton Maclane shot his interiors in a block and the action sequences near Lone Pine, where Selander spent most of his professional career are handled to advantage.
The net effect is that everything is much better than a B western, yet the obvious economies make it at best a shaky A. Still, overall it is a superior effort and worthwhile for western fans and a surprisingly unexpected sidetrack for Edmond O'Brien.
I wasn't expecting O'Brien to be convincing as a cowboy, but he is astonishingly good as an ex-cowpoke who is building an express business -- and given a huge oversupply of cattle, he's shipping an awful lot of tallow and hide, all the scrubs are good for. There's a lot more history intelligently explained here than is usual for a B western, the photography is crisp and clean and there are fine supporting actors carrying the roles -- John Millicam is particularly affecting in, for him, a large role.
Selander directs very efficiently -- you can tell that villain Barton Maclane shot his interiors in a block and the action sequences near Lone Pine, where Selander spent most of his professional career are handled to advantage.
The net effect is that everything is much better than a B western, yet the obvious economies make it at best a shaky A. Still, overall it is a superior effort and worthwhile for western fans and a surprisingly unexpected sidetrack for Edmond O'Brien.
Cow Country is directed by Lesley Selander and adapted to screenplay by Adele Buffington from Curtis Bishop's novel "Shadow Range". It stars Edmond O'Brien, Helen Westcott, Robert Lowery, Barton MacLane, Peggie Castle, Robert Barrat, James Millican, Don Beddoe and Robert J. Wilke. Music is by Edward Kay and cinematography by Harry Neumann.
Texas ranchers led by floating cowboy Ben Anthony (O'Brien) fight to save their land from crooked banker Marvin Parker (MacLane) and his hired thugs.
We are at the beef collapse of 1875 and this forms an interesting narrative backdrop. Pic is conventional, though, yet it never lacks for in efforts to entertain. There's a ready amount of chases, punch-ups and shootings, all laced with nefarious or heroic deeds, and although the ladies are beautiful, they unfortunately fall foul of under written romantic arcs - though we do get a quite glorious whipping sequence courtesy of Melba (Castle).
It's all very routine but there's enough here for the undemanding Western fan to enjoy, with good casting and performances helping things along. 6.5/10
Texas ranchers led by floating cowboy Ben Anthony (O'Brien) fight to save their land from crooked banker Marvin Parker (MacLane) and his hired thugs.
We are at the beef collapse of 1875 and this forms an interesting narrative backdrop. Pic is conventional, though, yet it never lacks for in efforts to entertain. There's a ready amount of chases, punch-ups and shootings, all laced with nefarious or heroic deeds, and although the ladies are beautiful, they unfortunately fall foul of under written romantic arcs - though we do get a quite glorious whipping sequence courtesy of Melba (Castle).
It's all very routine but there's enough here for the undemanding Western fan to enjoy, with good casting and performances helping things along. 6.5/10
"Cow Country" ends up being a pretty good western but I'm not sure I'm going to remember it for very long. It has a good story and a strong cast but it don't have enough to separate it from all of the other B-westerns made around that time. I enjoy a lot of those westerns but some of them don't really standout. "Cow Country" doesn't really standout. Edmond O'Brien does a nice job. His supporting cast is fine including the dreamy Peggie Castle. "Cow Country" was an enjoyable enough movie but with the exception of a great whip beatdown, there's nothing that memorable about it. (IMDB has a 600 character minimum.)
क्या आपको पता है
- गूफ़At the 9 minute mark after Linda says goodbye to Ben, the boom mic shadow moves across the ivy-covered lattice to the right.
- भाव
Ben Anthony: Well... been gone a long time, Linda.
Linda Garnet: Yes, but you look just the same... yet you've changed somehow.
Ben Anthony: Ohh... Texas sun does that... or have you forgotten that too.
Linda Garnet: No one ever forgets anything about Texas... or anyone in it.
टॉप पसंद
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- रंग
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 1.33 : 1
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