| Index | 6 reviews in total |
9 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
Good western with romance,action and gunplay., 30 May 2006
![]()
Author:
ma-cortes
The movie is a semi-autobiography adding a love story with standard
eternal love triangle(Dekker-Claire Trevor-Sullivan),musical numbers
and numerous shoot outs.The movie is inspired on true events.Thus
Bartholomew ¨Bat¨Masterson(1853-1921) spent the last twenty years of
his life as a popular sports writer on New York newspaper.Previously he
had taken part in the battle of Adobe Walls in 1874 in which a small
party of hunters beat off a fierce attack by hundreds of Indians,events
narrated in the encounter among Bat and the oldman at the beginning
film.In 1878 the marshal of Dodge City was shot by two cowboys
,Bat(Albert Dekker) rushed to the scene and gunned down the killer.Bat
was appointed as deputy U.S. marshal by the Mayor(Porter Hall)and
shortly after captured noted outlaw(in the film King Kennedy featured
by Barry Sullivan).Along with Bat were hired to keep the peace as
lawman Wyatt Earp and Bill Tilghman.In 1902 he settled in N.Y.City and
became a successful sports writer on the Morning Telegraph(at the movie
even appear working with Louella Parsons),he died at his desk from a
heart attack .Masterson said he has not killed as many men as was
popularly supposed though he had experienced a great many difficulties.
The picture is set in Dodge City,Kansas,the most celebrated of the
cowboy cattle towns,became a major railhead cowtown for the cattle
driven up from Texas over the long trails,during the cattle boom(at the
time film)Dodge shipped more than 250.ooo head a year.The free-spending
cowboys attracted professional gamblers ,badmen,saloon and brothel
keepers and became a rough town in the best traditions of the wild
west.Dodge City reigned as ¨Queen of the Cowtowns¨ until final XIX
century when the free range cattle industry came to an end.Also we find
the protagonists(Trevor and Dekker) at the town's cemetery gained fame
as the last resting place where gunmen,drifters or usually victims of
gunfights or brawls were buried with their ¨boots on¨and a little
ceremony.
The film is an enjoyable western narrated with flashbacks and well
written by Aeneas McKenzie.Agreeable music nominated for Academy Award
by the classic Miklos Rozsa.Production is at charge of Harry Sherman
,an usual western producer.The motion picture is rightly directed by
George Archainbaud. The flick will like to western moviegoers.
8 out of 10 people found the following review useful:
bat masterson cleans up dodge city, 15 March 2006
![]()
Author:
dougbrode from United States
An underrated western, and much disliked by people who mistakenly believe that B oaters ought to stick to the traditional pattern. Everyone involved tried to do something original and unique and, for the most part, they succeeded. Slowly paced, to be sure, but then again this was not made for the moron crowd that only wants action, action, action - this is a melancholy movie that favors characterization over plot, and needs to be seen as a one of a kind film to be appreciated. One example of the novel approach - the film begins with Bat as an elderly newspaperman in New York City, circa 1919 (he died later that year), close friends with the young gossip columnist Louella Parsons, who in real life idolized him. There's a flashback to 'the old days,' when young Bat cleaned up Dodge City as town marshal. Actually, Bat never was that - he served as Wyatt Earp's deputy (Earp was the marshal in Dodge) then ran for sheriff and won. In fact, much of what's attributed to Bat here actually happened to Wyatt, who is never seen and mentioned only once. The film collapses the killing of two different real life saloon girls into one fictional character, the title one, and likewise combines the killers of the two women - a tough army sergeant named king and a cattle baron named Kennedy - into 'King Kennedy.' In this version, Bat became a newspaper man owing to the "woman's" pleas - though historically he got the idea on his own. The point is, this is historical fiction, a drama based on reality, and the historicity of the piece is evident less in the story per se but in the remarkably accurate portrait of Dodge at that time, including things most westerns leave out - like the arrival of stage star Eddie Foy (played, incidentally, by one of his descendants), church services, etc. The underrated Albert Dekker, usually cast as villains, makes a fine Bat, cane and derby hat intact. Fans of routine westerns will want to stay away, but those who appreciate something out of the ordinary? Catch this appealingly little understated film!
3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
"You can't run a town with laws for some and none for others.", 4 September 2006
![]()
Author:
classicsoncall from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
The only other times I've seen Claire Trevor in a movie she was
portraying a fallen woman; as Humphrey Bogart's ex-girl friend turned
hooker in 1937's "Dead End", and as Edward G. Robinson's moll in "Key
Largo" from 1948. Her occupation of choice in "The Woman of the Town"
is a 'dance hall belle', in an attempt to separate herself from a
common saloon singer. Actually she does a fine job of winning over the
citizens of Dodge City, Kansas with her professional manner and
charitable works, even helping to fund the town's first hospital.
The conflict in the film arises from her sharing feelings for the
town's Marshal, Bat Masterson (Albert Dekker), and the leader of a
rowdy cattle gang named King Kennedy (Barry Sullivan). I hadn't been
aware of Masterson's real life newspaper career, so was caught off
guard with the film's opening. The book ends of Masterson's flashback
occur in New York City of 1919, while he recalls his wild west days in
Dodge of 1869.
I got a kick out of Clem Bevans' portrayal of Bat's friend and former
frontier partner Buffalo Burns. When members of the congregation at
church get stingy, Burns takes up the collection at gun point, praise
the Lord.
I don't think I've ever seen a goofier outfit on a bad guy as the one
worn by Sullivan's King Kennedy. He hardly had the demeanor or
temperament of a villain, and often came across as comical. When he
slapped Masterson near the end of the flashback portion of the story, I
felt myself wincing from embarrassment.
Though Masterson is never conflicted about his profession as a lawman,
Dora Hand (Trevor) certainly is, and she spends a good deal of time
trying to talk him out of it. She even strikes a deal with her uncle,
the publisher of the Kansas City Clarion, to woo Bat away from Dodge
with a job offer on the strength of his editorial for the Dodge
newspaper. One thing must have led to another, as Masterson finished
his career as a writer for New York's 'The Morning Telegraph', the way
we're introduced to him as the film opens.
"The Woman of the Town" probably won't appeal to fans expecting shoot
outs, bar room brawls and stampedes. There's some of that, but by and
large, it's a more thoughtful character study of a woman who helped
build her community and how she impacted those around her. Every now
and then, that's not such a bad story to see.
4 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
a western which feels more like what it was like than the typical, 31 July 2006
![]()
Author:
s_pendergast from United States
I just finished watching this in a DVD collection of westerns. It gave
a lot more of the feeling of what it must have been like in Dodge City
when they were struggling to move from anarchy to civilization. "Bat
Masterson" is more along the lines of Jimmy Stewarts "Six Shooter"
who'd rather reason out of a problem than shoot, but will shoot when
necessary. Claire Trevor and Albert Decker do a good job on the leads,
and the supporting cast contribute some key bits. Barry Sullivan is an
interesting Texas cowman.
Unfortunately the print used was dark and punched full of holes from
having been marked for TV breaks.
3 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
Pop Sherman expands, 29 September 2004
![]()
Author:
bkoganbing from Buffalo, New York
This B western was the product of Producer Harry "Pop" Sherman and
Director George Archaimbaud, both who worked prodigiously on the
Hopalong Cassidy series. Pop Sherman was trying to expand his horizons
with this one.
Claire Trevor who played innumerable bad gals with hearts of gold
reprises another one here. She's caught between two men lawman Bat
Masterson and Cattleman King Kennedy played by Albert Dekker and Barry
Sullivan respectively. Barry Sullivan is a thing of beauty, all decked
out in his drugstore cowboy outfit. He was competent actor, but he must
have felt like a fool in that outfit.
Albert Dekker played a lot of supporting roles opposite some of the
biggest Hollywood names. He rarely was a lead, this and Dr. Cyclops two
major exceptions. He's good in the title role. Masterson tells this
story in flashback to a young actress playing aspiring reporter Louella
Parsons. Didn't hurt in 1943 to give her a plug in any film.
Albert Dekker was one of the great tragedies in Hollywood. In 1968 he
hung himself after completing his last role in The Wild Bunch. He hung
himself and he was all decked out in woman's clothing. I've always felt
that he was a transgendered person and back in 1968 those issues were
NEVER discussed. I think Mr. Dekker wanted to go out as the real person
he was, a woman in a man's body.
A great cast of supporting players rounds out this film, a lot of
familiar faces you'll spot. Nice entertainment.
0 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
Boring Grade B western with uncomfortable cast., 29 January 2001
![]()
Author:
Arne Andersen (aandersen@landmarkcollege.org) from Putney, VT
Not even the Miklos Rozsa Oscar nominated score (a mediocre one at that) can save this boring, Grade B western. Despite Mr. Maltin's high opinion and despite Claire Trevor's desperate attempts to act, this is pretty poor stuff. Albert Dekker is a boring Bat Masterson and Barry Sullivan is his befuddled rival. The girlfriend they share - Trevor - tries to get Bat to give up his guns and take up journalism. This is not a very exciting plot premise. Avoid this one unless you have insomnia.
| Ratings | Awards | Plot keywords |
| Main details | Your user reviews | Your vote history |