In the final days of the Old West, a former desperado faces down a now drunken ex-sheriff, who was his long time nemesis.In the final days of the Old West, a former desperado faces down a now drunken ex-sheriff, who was his long time nemesis.In the final days of the Old West, a former desperado faces down a now drunken ex-sheriff, who was his long time nemesis.
- Awards
- 1 win & 5 nominations
James Defelice
- Farmers Bank Manager
- (as James DeFelice)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaJames Coburn took over from an ailing Burt Lancaster.
- GoofsWhen Bess is performing Shakespeare for Harry, she indicates that the scene is from "Macbeth". It's actually from "The Winter's Tale".
- Quotes
Harry H. Holland aka Handsome Harry Holland: Oh, just sew me up.
Doctor West: The only thing I ever sewed up was the buttons on my shirt when my wife took off with the traveling preacher.
Harry H. Holland aka Handsome Harry Holland: What the hell does that mean?
Doctor West: I ain't no doctor.
Harry H. Holland aka Handsome Harry Holland: Huh?
Doctor West: I'm a dentist.
Featured review
I think perhaps both Kirk Douglas and James Coburn might have wished they had left their guns in their holsters if they ever got round to watching this really mediocre and tired drama that rather sells the genre short. The former is ageing outlaw "Holland" who has just been released from a long term in prison. He heads to a local town where he alights on a crooked poker game. He proceeds to fleece "Bell" (Derek McGrath) but in a contretemps afterwards, kills the sheriff and himself is shot before fleeing into a local hotel. It's the traditional Mexican stand off - and to Mexico, they got to find the solution. An equally aged and past his use-by-date "Starret" (Coburn) who is coaxed from his bottle to come and face down "Holland" on behalf of the petrified townsfolk. It tries it's hand at humour, and there is no getting away from the fact that both actors do exude lots of charisma, but the whole thing just looks cheap and cheerful. The dialogue is pedestrian, and the gunfights look more like circus performances than than anything we would have seen at the "OK Corral". Unlike John Wayne's last effort "The Shootist" (1976) which respected the genre and his part in it's development, this really just provides two screen legends with a poorly thought out, semi-comic, series of escapades that make for a really disappointing made-for-television swan song for both.
- CinemaSerf
- Jun 7, 2023
- Permalink
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $4,200,000 (estimated)
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