7/10
"This badge is a magic piece of metal son!"
27 November 2008
Warning: Spoilers
This is one of the better 'B' Westerns you're likely to come across, featuring Jim Davis in the role of a somewhat ambiguous outlaw who takes up a badge after he comes upon a dying marshal in Apache territory. Their brief conversation provides an ever present backdrop to the story, with constant references to a man's inability to outrun his shadow. The 'new' Marshal Brennan finds himself in the town of Banock, where a doctor (Harry Lauter) suspects that an outbreak of black spot fever might be about to overrun the town. Together with Sheriff Carl Smith (Carl Smith, can you believe that?), the pair manage to hold off the villainous Donaphin forces, whose diseased cattle threaten the entire territory.

I liked the pacing and development of the story, with some rather unique elements that I haven't seen in a Western before. The most interesting was the scene where Shad Donaphin (Lee Van Cleef) breaks Doc Hale's vial of blood, and the contents are shown dripping down the face of the camera lens to give added emphasis. There was also that scene when the Donaphin goons were about to hang the Doc just before the marshal makes the save - just how tall a tree was that where they rigged up the noose - and how did they get the rope up there? Holy cow, it looked like the branch was a hundred feet high! One of the bad guy posse even remarked how this tree should hold, which made me wonder why they couldn't find a normal size tree. They're like everywhere aren't they?

I have to say, this was definitely the most intelligent role I've ever seen Harry Lauter in. I best remember him as a kid from watching 'Tales of the Texas Rangers', and have usually seen him in either dubious good guy roles or as an inept villain in classic TV episodes of Roy Rogers, Gene Autry and a host of others. He actually did a commendable job here as a wise and brave country doctor who wasn't afraid to mix it up with the baddies when necessary.

It was also gratifying to see that the local sheriff wasn't in the pocket of town boss Colonel Donaphin (Louis Jean Heydt), although you couldn't really tell during his first screen conversation with Brennan. It looked like a classic set up for the figurehead lawman to try and thwart the good guy from getting the upper hand, as all the while, it was repeatedly teased that the marshal would just ride off into the sunset instead of getting mixed up with the locals.

One thing I'm always on the lookout for in older films is the sense of life in simpler times, as in the price of goods at Murdock's Café. How about ham and eggs for a quarter, red beans for a dime, and cup of coffee for a nickel! Arleen Whelan did a fine job as Miss Murdock, although I still find it a little difficult to think that Brennan would allow himself to be roped into a romance by the show's finale.

For an almost prophetic insight into the spaghetti Western genre of the Seventies, keep your hearing tuned to the musical score throughout the film. The frequent strumming of an electric guitar was a constant thread, and the reverberating drumbeat during the massing of Donaphin's men on the cliff just before the cattle drive were great accompaniments to the action. There was even that lively theme song to bookend the story about a man on the run, very ambitious for a 'B' flick.

The one thing that had me scratching my head though occurred right at the very end of the picture. As the good guys make there way back in to town following the clash with the Donaphin's, they're shown heading to Murdock's café, standing alone almost at the edge of the river. Correct me if I'm wrong, but all throughout the picture, Murdock's was right in the middle of town!
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