The Hangman (1959)
7/10
An Unusual Black & White Western from Michael Curtiz
7 March 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Robert Taylor plays a cynical lawman in director Michael Curtiz's offbeat but interesting western "The Hangman" who has a habit of getting his man and bringing him to face justice. Taylor doesn't look like the usual U.S. Deputy Marshal this time around. He dresses business-like in a jacket with his six-gun holstered on his pants' belt well out of sight so he looks like he isn't packing a revolver. Believe it or not, this gruff character in dark apparel starts out as one kind of hombre and ends up as a different one by fadeout. This 1959 black & white western reminded me a little of the Charles Bronson bounty hunter western "Showdown at Boot Hill." Bronson gunned down his quarry, but nobody wanted to pay him off for his work. Similarly, after he delivers one outlaw to be hanged to his immediate superior, Marshal Clum Cummings (soon to be "Bonanza" star Lorne Greene), our hero, Marshal Mackenzie Bovard sets out to track down the last renegade named Jim Butterfield. The only problem that confronts Bovard is that nobody knows what Butterfield looks like except the man who is destined to swing in a week's time for the murder of another deputy. Bovard knows that Butterfield served in the calvary so he rides out to the nearest fort where the outlaw served. Unfortunately, the only man who can identify Butterfield is an orderly (Regis Toomey) but the fort commandant cannot release him to ride with Bovard for at least a month. The orderly recommends that Bovard look up a woman, Selah Jennison (Tina Louise of "The Good Guys and the Bad Guys") because she can recognize him. Bovard offers her $500 in gold if she will follow him to a nearby town and identify Butterfield. Bovard sets out on a stage to that town where he meets up with the town lawman, Sheriff Buck Weston (Fess Parker of "Davy Crockett") and asks around about Butterfield. The most obvious candidate is a well-liked teamster who works for a freighting firm, but he Jim Butterfield (Jack Lord of "Hawaii 5-o") has changed his name to Jim Bishop and nobody knows about his notorious past. Initially, Selah doesn't show up when she is supposed to and Bovard begins to have doubts about his cynical outlook on people. He assures Sheriff Weston that everybody has a price. Meantime, Curtiz and scenarist Dudley Nichols of "Stagecoach" fame struggle to work in some uneven humor. During the stage ride, a mature woman older than Bovard, Amy Hopkins (Mabel Albertson of "The Cobweb") struggles to attract Bovard's attention, but he ignores her. Just as Bovard is about to give up hope that Selah will show up, Selah shows up and Amy is surprised and affronted by her presence. Selah doesn't want to identify Butterfield and sneaks off to warn him. Not even Bovard can convince one of Butterfield's enemies at the teamster firm to testify against him. A harmless Mexican Pedro Alonso (Jose Gonzales-Gonzales of "Rio Bravo") who works alongside Butterfield tries to kill Bovard twice but fails to succeed each time. Eventually, even Bovard relents, turns in his badge, and decides to head for California to live the life that he has always dreamed up. Surprisingly, Selah turns down Sheriff Weston's offer of marriage and accompanies Bovard to California. This is not a terrain western with horsemen charging back and forth across the landscape. Most of the action occurs in a western town. Ironically, Bovard brandishes his revolver, but he doesn't kill anybody. Similarly, director Michael Curtiz doesn't display his usual flair in this Paramount Pictures release.
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