Town Tamer (1965) Poster

(1965)

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5/10
Routine and standard Western with the exception of cameos of veteran actors
ma-cortes19 August 2014
An average and low-budgeted motion picture by prolific Lesley Selander , filled with presences of old Western-movie . Kansas 1879 , the life of sheriff Tom Rosser (Dana Andrews) , takes a turn when a bullet meant for him , from the gun of an outlaw called Lee Ring (Lyle Bettger) , kill's Rosser's spouse, Carol (Coleen Gray) , instead. Ring, had been sent by nasty Riley Condor (Bruce Cabot) , to kill Marshal Rosser . Two years later , the latter goes to Montana , supposedly to look over lands to but his agenda is to murder Condor and his gunslinging henchmen ; he then will use the law to eliminate him . Once there , he has to straighten out a few bad guys (Richard Jaeckel , Phil Carey , DeForest Kelley) led by Bruce Cabot . Rosser gets involved in shootouts , gun-play and betrayal . There he uncovers a land-grabbing plot led by the pillar of the community and Saloon owner . As Rosser is in town and Condor realizes that his hoodlums are no match for him , and he sets in motion a scheme to finish his power .

This ordinary and sometimes laughable western is plenty of thrills , go riding , shootouts and suspense as the dreaded final showdown approaches and the protagonist realizes he must stand alone against impossible odds , as his fellow town people for help , nobody is willing to help him ; meanwhile he attempts to clear a dark issue . This routine Western has the customary story of a sheriff-for-hire who takes the law on his own hands and based on a story and screenplay by expert Frank Gruber. It begins as a slow-moving Western but follows to surprise us with dark characters and passable plot . This short runtime tale is almost ordinary , a pacifier comes to a town just in time to make sure its citizenry but later the events get worse . Although made in low budget by the producer A.C. Lyles , it has its good moments here and there . Acceptable acting by Dana Andrews as a town-taming gunman-for-hire who takes a dangerous job . Notable for the presence of old Western-movie veteran such as Pat O'Brien ,Lon Chaney Jr. , Bruce Cabot , Lyle Bettger , Richard Arlen , Richard Jaeckel , Philip Carey , Sonny Tufts , Coleen Gray , DeForest Kelley ,Don 'Red' Barry , Barton MacLane , Bob Steele , and James Brown . Atmospheric and colorful cinematography in Technicolor , though is necessary a remastering.

This horse opera was realized in low-budget by producer A.C. Lyles and distributed by Paramount Pictures . Lyles produced a lot of Western in short or average budget such as ¨Black spurs¨(1965) , ¨Apache uprising¨(1966); ¨Johnny Reno¨ , ¨Waco¨ , ¨Red Tomahawk ¨and ¨Hostile guns¨(67) , among others ; many of them directed by R.G. Springsteen or Lesley Selander and starred by old glories such as Dana Andrews , Rory Calhoun , George Montgomery and Howard Keel . This quickie was middlingly directed by Lesley Selander , a craftsman working from the 30s . Selander is generally considered to be the most prolific director of feature Westerns of all time, with at least 107 to his credit between 1935 and 1967 . He realized his first feature in 1936, a horse opera , genre in which he would not only excel but one where he would spent much of the rest of his career . He began in this genre with series starred by Buck Jones and ¨Hopalong Cassidy¨ series starred by William Boyd such as ¨Silver on the sage¨ , ¨Three men from Texas¨ and ¨Wide open town¨. In Republic production he directed his better movies such as ¨Panhandle¨and ¨Stampede¨ starred by Rod Cameron and in RKO he directed Tim Holt in 20 films such as ¨Rio Grande patrol¨ and ¨Overland telegraph¨. He subsequently shot B-movies such as ¨Fort Vengeance¨, ¨Arrow in the desert¨, Shotgun¨, ¨Town tamer¨ and his last picture ¨Texas Kid¨. Although Selander couldn't be deemed an "A"-list director, his movies had a professionalism and a verve that many of those made by his fellow B directors lacked . He also filmed detective thrillers , action/adventure motion pictures and even a horror film or two . Rating : 5,5 . Acceptable and passable , though mediocre ; being of interest for star-watching only .
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7/10
Veteran character actors lift this above the budget and director
a6663336 December 2017
This is far from being a high budget blockbuster with sweeping cinematography, high level production values and innovative writing. It has to rely on the actors working on sets that could have and probably were used in television westerns. Fortunately, the actors, most being solid character types, deliver the goods very professionally and carry the story and the viewer's interest. That acting even manages to overcome some dull and predictable directing.

Dana Andrews shows the effects of years of alcohol by this point and although that actually plays to the lead character, one suspects the movie would have been elevated with someone like Glenn Ford in that role but no doubt he would have needed a higher pay cheque as well. Terry Moore could have been given more to do as they downplayed romance in favour of the building confrontation. But she definitely looks good handles what she is given well.

Pat O'Brien, Lon Chaney Jr., Bruce Cabot, Lyle Bettger, Richard Arlen, Barton MacLane, Richard Jaeckel all show up like old friends who have done these roles a dozen times each but what could have been stale characterizations are instead well dished out from practised professionals still trying to earn their pay and their next job.
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6/10
Dana Andrews and Lon Chaney
kevinolzak30 November 2014
1965's "Town Tamer" was the fifth of producer A. C. Lyles' run of 13 Paramount B-Westerns from the mid 60s, and one of the best, with a cast filled with more veteran performers than usual (Sonny Tufts?). Author Frank Gruber adapted from his own novel, starring Dana Andrews in the title role of Tom Rosser, whose wife (Coleen Gray) was accidentally shot by hired gun Les Ring (Lyle Bettger), on behalf of gambling house troublemaker Riley Condor (Bruce Cabot). Years later, Rosser is hired by businessman James Fenimore Fell (Barton MacLane) to take down Condor in a different town, where the corrupt judge (Pat O'Brien) and lawmen are in his pocket, leaving the citizens to hope that Rosser will succeed; if not, vigilantism will become the last dreaded resort. The most intriguing aspect is the town marshal, Les Parker, the very same gunman who murdered Rosser's wife, his unpredictable behavior keeping both sides guessing. Lon Chaney, now 5 for 5 for Lyles, enjoys a major role as Mayor Charlie Leach, who doubles as livery stable owner, Richard Arlen returns as town doctor, Richard Jaeckel makes for a despicable deputy, Bob Steele, Philip Carey, and Roger Torrey among Condor's men. In his second of four Lyles Westerns, DeForest Kelley often told the story of how he was doubled in an early fight scene opposite Dana Andrews, and how Michael Landon volunteered to do it without permission, and with his back to the camera remains easily recognizable taking the spills! (they just happened to be shooting on the same sets as his BONANZA series).
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7/10
Fun Gun-Slinging Action
Rainey-Dawn13 June 2016
For a western film, it's a pretty fun watch. Two of my favorite actors are in this one which makes it all that much better: Lon Chaney and Deforest Kelley.

Tom Rosser is hired to help clean and straighten up a town where some of the folks in the area want to keep the town as wild as possible - and running it the way they want it ran, not the way mayor and law want it to be. It's up to Rosser take the men out get the town back to good.

The movie does take a few turns which keeps the story on the interesting side. All the actors give fine performances - so it's worthwhile watching if you like a good old fashioned gun-slinging western film.

7.5/10
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Pass the Bullets and the Denture Cream
inspectors717 May 2007
Oh, I love this movie. For all the wrong reasons. It's a creaking, crawling mess of clichés, enlivened by a geriatric cast. Town Tamer is surprisingly bloody (without the actual blood, of course). It all looks like a mid-sixties (and I mean that in more than one way) TV western with Dana Andrews and crew appearing to be dying from dyspepsia.

And yet, you might pick up on the ease in which all these many veteran actors and actresses fall--or totter--into their respective parts. I guess I have a weakness for movies that beg the MST3000 treatment.

If you ever get to see it, I'd suggest cutting out a silhouette of the guy and the two robots and taping them to the bottom of your TV screen.

C'mon, it'll be fun.

Town Tamer can only get better.
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6/10
Cabot owns both sides of the law
bkoganbing28 November 2012
Dana Andrews stars in Town Tamer and in the title role of a man hired by railroad entrepreneur Barton MacLane to clean up a town. Usually Andrews operates within the law, but not here because town boss Bruce Cabot owns both sides of the law. That leaves Andrews little room to maneuver.

But Andrews doesn't care, he and Cabot have some bad history which is topped off by Cabot hiring someone to bushwhack Andrews, but instead kills his wife Coleen Gray. That makes it personal.

Cabot is really some piece of work, as John Wayne said to Ed Asner in El Dorado 'you don't wear a gun so I guess you hire it done'. Cabot has quite a few gunslingers on the payroll and a couple peace officers in sheriff Lyle Bettger and punk deputy Richard Jaeckel. Only Bettger has a habit of going off the reservation every so often. He's the wild card in this deck.

Town Tamer is a pretty violent AC Lyles 'geezer' western and this one is directed by western veteran Lesley Selander who must have a couple of hundred directorial credits. Besides those already mentioned you'll find such people as Philip Carey, Terry Moore, Jeanne Cagney, Lon Chaney, Jr., Richard Arlen, and Sonny Tufts. And least we not forget Pat O'Brien as a most corrupt town judge. O'Brien has only one scene and I wish we saw a bit more of him.

I saw Town Tamer as a kid in theaters as the back end of a double feature. I liked it then and I like it now.
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4/10
Another A.C. Lyles "geezer" western
frankfob5 August 2002
Producer A.C. Lyles made a spate of westerns in the mid-'60s that employed a lot of veteran actors who were, frankly, too old to get work anywhere else. While it was nice of him to give them jobs, the least he could have done was to not embarrass them, and I'm afraid that's what most of these movies do, especially this one. It's about a marshal hired to clean up a town, and the troubles he has and some long-ago secrets he's afraid might come out. Dana Andrews, like pretty much everyone else in this picture, is too old for the part; he was almost 60 when he made this, and age and a lifetime of drinking problems (which he has freely admitted to) had taken a toll on his physical appearance. He's just not even remotely believable as the kind of fast gun you'd hire to clean up your town. Although the cast is filled with old veterans, only a few of them, notably Lyle Bettger, can muster up the energy to turn in good performances. It's not their fault, of course, and the hack script and limp direction by Lesley Selander (who himself was 65 years old by then and had been making B westerns for more than 30 years) doesn't help either. The film has the look of someone who got some old friends together and said, "Let's make a western." While that may be a nice gesture, it doesn't make for a good movie. This one isn't. Avoid it.
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7/10
Best Of The Geezer Westerns
boblipton19 September 2023
Barton Maclane used to own all the land around, but he sold off a lot of it to build a town, and is having a railroad built to it. But wile he's been working on that, saloon owner Bruce Cabot and his pals have taken over the town, installing a corrupt judge and marshal. So Maclane hires retired town tamer Dana Andrews to come in and settle things down. Andrews is agreeable, but what he wants is to kill the man who hired a killer to kill him, and who killed his wife by accident. That man is Cabot.

But the honest folks in town aren't lined up neatly behind Maclane. Some of them want to form a vigilante group, and Maclane and Andrews know that's a cure that can be worse than the disease.

It's a fine and intelligently written script by Frank Gruber, with many moving parts. The story is that Gary Cooper owned it, but he died several years earlier, and A. C. Lyles produced this version as one of the "geezer westerns" he did for Paramount at the time, with a lot of old-line talent, including Terry Moore, Pat O'Brien, Lon Chaney Jr., Richard Arlen, and DeForest Kelly. Lesley Selander, no stranger to the B western, directs efficiently, but the good script and practiced performers come through.
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3/10
It's funny watching geezers fight!
planktonrules8 September 2012
I live on the border of the two counties with among the oldest average age in America--seriously. Here in Florida, things are beautiful and you can see why folks retire here. However, because the people are so old, sometimes it gets a bit surreal. About a year ago, I saw a minor accident--and then watched two 80+ year old men get out of their cars and have a fistfight in the roadway...seriously. Part of it was sad and I felt a bit embarrassed. Part of it was incredibly funny--especially when I called the police to report the old crazy old guys duking it out in traffic! Well, to make a long story short, this all reminds me of "Town Tamer"--a film that is embarrassing, at times, for its geriatric cast and at other times, kind of funny. This film is made up of a bizarre assortment of older actors. Dana Andrews is in the lead. Now he was a fine and highly underrated actor--but NOT a western star and not a man to 'clean up the town' when he was clearly pushing 60 (and inexplicably say he's 40 in the film). As for the supporting cast, it consists of the likes of Lon Chaney Jr., Barton MacLane, Pat O'Brien, Richard Arlen and Sonny Tufts--all of which just seemed a bit too long in the tooth for this film. Sure, there are a few 'younger' folks like Richard Jaekel (39) and DeForrest Kelley (in his mid-40s), but they seem to be the exception in "Town Tamer". In some ways, it's like a western that's set in a retirement village! The film begins with Andrews a sheriff in some western town. Almost immediately, someone tries to plug him and kills Andrews' wife instead. A couple years pass. Andrews arrives in a nasty town--a town where the law seems to be amazingly cozy with the crooks. And you know, based on the film's title, that Andrews will eventually bring law and order to this crappy town. But in the meantime, you get to see him beat up folks, get beat up and mosey about the town. It's all very standard--the sort of quickie western film with a familiar plot that you wouldn't think twice about EXCEPT for the extreme age of the actors and the occasional silliness of the production. A few of the funny scenes are the scene where Terry Moore tries to pump Andrews for information (it's badly written and funny when Andrews tries to tip his hat but misses!) as well as the fight between Andrews and Kelley--where it is VERY obvious the guy Andrews is beating up is a stuntman (though I was surprised they DID let Andrews do the strenuous scene). Overall, it's not a terrible movie but it is a funny one.
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6/10
Town saved by personal revenge
discount195710 June 2017
This is Selander's first film for Producer Lyles and his best Western for years. Like all of Lyles' Westerns, the main fault is the pedestrian screenplay which features Andrews as the hired killer seeking revenge for the death of his wife at the hands of Bettger and Cabot. He finds them ensconced as sheriff and saloon owner respectively, from which positions they're bleeding the town dry. Thus Andrews can liberate the town as well as secure his revenge in a corpse-strewn finale. Jaeckel has a marvellous part as Bettger's sadistic deputy.

Phil Hardy
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4/10
The Wild West Darby and Joan Style!
kalbimassey30 August 2020
'All old men,' was my Mum's comment on viewing this western in the 1960's. Out of curiosity, I recently decided to investigate for myself and discovered that she was absolutely correct. Ironically, the title is not far off the mark. It's hard to imagine a Wild West town, tamer than one populated by an ageing Dana Andrews, Bruce Cabot, Lyle Bettger, Lon Chaney Jr., Barton McLane and Pat O'Brien.

By the time this mild bunch had spent the morning queuing for their pensions and the afternoon grumbling and grouching about rheumatism they would be too bushed for a shoot-em-up. More likely, off to bed with a mug of cocoa, dentures in the glass, followed by a gentle drift into the land of nod for several blissful hours of Snore-along-a-Max, dreaming of gun fights and two fisted tussles from decades gone by. On that basis one is left to speculate whether Town Tamer was a certificate A, AA, U, X or ZZZZ!

The plot revolves around Andrews' mission to avenge the fatal shooting of his wife, killed by a bullet meant for him. There is an old score to be settled with Bruce Cabot, who runs the saloon as well as everything else in town. He's a man so crooked that he couldn't be trusted to run a bath! A decent premise, but the build up is so ponderous and leaden-footed one can almost picture Andrews strapping on an incontinence pad ahead of his gun belt before wading into the inevitable final showdown.

Redeeming features are thin on the ground. The opening song is cliched and banal. Get this for a bunch of insipid lyrics.

'He needed eyes in the back of his head As he walked into Condor's place. The town was still. You could feel the chill As he met him, face to face.'

A reworking of The Rolling Stones iconic track of the period as 'I can't get no Sanatogen' would have been more fitting!
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8/10
Respectable Western With Classic Stars
longchamps23 February 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Having just seen this movie for the first time, I am surprised by the amount of skepticism thrown at it by other reviewers. I found the movie to be quite captivating, not only by virtue of the constant intensity, but also the deep relational intrigue between the characters. The hatred between Dana Andrews and Bruce Cabot is scathing. DeForrest Kelly is excellent as the cowardly, wife-beating "tin-horn" without an ounce of decency. Dana Andrews is gives an appropriately sullen performance, in light of his wife's death the first scene. Silent Star Richard Arlen gives a solid performance as the honorable town doctor. The most compelling performance in the movie without doubt was Lyle Bettger's. The viewer is never quite sure where his tormented character's allegiance lies. Colleen Gray's appearance here is similar to her minor but famous appearance as John Wayne's love interest in Red River. Bruce Cabot is excellent as the perpetually conniving and cold-blooded arch villain. The tension between the two town factions is perpetual, with Andrews character always caught in the crossfire. Solid Western feature with a fantastic cast.
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6/10
A Hired Gunman Seeking Revenge
Uriah4320 April 2022
This film begins in Kansas with a gunslinger by the name of "Tom Rosser" (Dana Andrews) having been hired to rid a small town of various criminal elements. Unfortunately, in the process of doing this his wife "Carol Rosser" (Coleen Gray) is accidentally shot and killed by an unknown assailant instead. To that effect, knowing only that a wealthy businessman by the name of "Riley Condor" (Bruce Cabot) paid the mysterious gunman, Tom makes it his mission in life to find and kill Riley regardless of what it takes. That being said, the scene then shifts to two years later with Tom riding on a stagecoach to Montana and while traveling he happens to strike up a conversation with an attractive woman named "Susan Tavenner" (Terry Moore) who tells him that she is joining her husband "Guy Tavenner" (DeForest Kelley) who works at a saloon in the same town in which Tom has been hired to clean up. She then informs him that her husband just happens to be employed by a man named Riley Condor-and this is exactly what Tom wanted to hear. Now, rather than reveal any more, I will just say that this film was made during a time in which the American Western dominated the drive-in movie circuit and it wasn't until the 70's that pictures of this type essentially went into decline and were replaced by their low-budget cousins from Italy and Spain. Be that as it may, although I happen to like both of these styles, those viewers who enjoy films of the Classic Western variety might want to check this one out and I have rated it accordingly. Slightly above average.
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6/10
Town tamer
coltras3529 March 2023
Saloon owner Riley Condor pays Lee Ring $2000 to kill aged gunman-for-hire Tom Rosser. In attempting to shoot Rosser in the back at night, Ring misses and kills Rosser's wife instead. Rosser goes to Great Plains, supposedly to look over property, but his agenda is to kill Condor. Word gets around that Rosser is in town and Condor realizes that his gunslinging henchmen, Horsinger, Tavenner, Slim Akins, Flon and Ring, are no match for Rosser, and he sets in motion a plan that will use the law to eliminate Rosser.

Based on a Frank Gruber novel, Town Tamer is far from being boring film. Yes, it trails the usual tropes of the genre and Dana Andrew's character just roams around reacting to trouble rather than trying to actively tame the town, but it has some interesting characters, a mildly engaging plot and some edgy action. Dana Andrews does well in his role, Terry Moore adds some glamour, and Deforest Kelly does some scene chewing as a tinhorn gambler and An abusive husband of Terry Moore's character.
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6/10
The Over the Hill Gang Rides Again!
bsmith55526 January 2014
Warning: Spoilers
"The Town Tamer" was another of those nostalgic westerns produced by A.C. Lyles featuring a cast of recognizable performers from the past. Modestly budgeted and filmed in color and wide screen they gave many of the performers their last hurrahs.

This one was directed by veteran "B" western director Lesley Selander and is the story of a veteran town tamer marshal Tom Rosser (Dana Andrews) who is hired by the railroad boss James Fell (Barton MacLane) to clean up a town that soon will have the railroad coming in.

The town is under the control of gambler Riley Condor (Bruce Cabot) with whom Rosser has an axe to grind. The town marshal (Lyle Bettger) also has a past he wishes to hide. Rosser meets Susan Tavenner (Terry Moore) on the stagecoach into town and takes a liking to her. Unfortunately, she is married to a tin horn gambler (Deforest Kelley) who is also a wife beater in the employ of Condor.

The town mayor/livery stable owner Charlie Leach (Lon Chaney Jr.) and doctor (Richard Arlen) are trying to raise a vigilante group to take back their town. Condor on the other hand has Deputy Johnny Honsinger (Richard Jaekel)and gunfighter Atkins (Phil Carey) and several allies lined up against them. Rosser not now being a lawman, wants to kill Condor "in his own way".

In addition to those mentioned above, several other veteran performers are in the cast. Pat O'Brien, in an all too brief appearance, plays a dishonest judge, Sonny Tufts and Bob Steele as Condor's vigilantes, Jeanne Cagney as café owner Mary Donley, Donald Barry and Robert Ivers as Texas cowboys and James Brown and Richard Webb as railway workers. Veteran stuntman Dale Van Sickel, who plays a bartender, can clearly be seen doubling for Dana Andrews in the fight scenes.

There's plenty of action including fights, bushwhacking and gun play to satisfy the viewer. It's better than most of the similar films of the period due in large part to the veteran director and the large cast of seasoned veterans.
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8/10
Dana Andrews in his better/best 1960's Western
TheFearmakers8 April 2021
In the sixties, A. C. Lyles produced a cram-session of "Old Fogey Westerns" using once leading men well past their prime, gussied-up as newly-revived leads: And like all Dana's Westerns there's either a kangaroo/rigged court or possible hanging like he and Lyles's following years' JOHNNY RENO...

But here Andrews is far more loose and intrepid: a revenge-driven former gunman reanimated following wife Coleen Gray's accidental death i.e. A bullet meant for him, set up by casino-owning villain lording over another TOWN (cheating newly paid miners), using local loser DeForest Kelley to initially thwart Dana's mission to rid his decades-earlier FALLEN ANGEL rival Bruce Cabot...

And the real scene-stealer is his hired gun/thug played by enigmatic rogue Lyle Bettger: As the prologue slayer of Andrews's wife Coleen Gray, the audience knows what our hero doesn't, and, since Cabot is far more crooked/deadly than his own assassin, the hired killer (posing as a Marshal) provides Andrews random advice in-step with neatly paced suspense leading to an inevitable, predictable yet above-average gun-blasting/falling-from-rooftop finale...

Also, Terry Moore, as a fast-talking lass, provides a romantic interest (in a bad marriage with Kelley) more interesting than most. Making this a nifty character-driven time-filler also including Barton MacClane, Richard Jaekel, Lon Chaney Jr., Pat O'Brien, Roger Torrey (a giant baddie providing the best fist-fight)...

And while not the brooding and existential, ultra-violent Spaghetti Western the genre had morphed into, TOWN TAMER, with sudden deaths around every corner, definitely isn't tame.
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Typical from AC Lyles productions
searchanddestroy-118 May 2023
If you are used to AC Lyles westerns, this one will bring nothing new, nothing at all. Old western - or not - stars: Dana Andrews, Richard Arlen, Bruce Cabot, Lon Chaney Jr, Lyle Bettger, De Forrest Kelley.... All used to AC Lyles westerns. And a topic already seen hundreds of times before, and especially in AC Lyles in particular. A new sheriff or hired gun arrives in a corrupted town, a man paid to clean it up...You see, nothing specially new. Everything is predictable, lousy, but not that bad after all, good time waster. Lyle Bettger role is maybe the only surprise of tis western, not the best from AC Lyles stuff.
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