Blaise Starrett es un ranchero que tiene problemas con los campesinos cuando llegan los forajidos. Estos sólo escuchan a su líder, pero está herido mortalmente y la ciudad es polvorín a la e... Leer todoBlaise Starrett es un ranchero que tiene problemas con los campesinos cuando llegan los forajidos. Estos sólo escuchan a su líder, pero está herido mortalmente y la ciudad es polvorín a la espera de explotar.Blaise Starrett es un ranchero que tiene problemas con los campesinos cuando llegan los forajidos. Estos sólo escuchan a su líder, pero está herido mortalmente y la ciudad es polvorín a la espera de explotar.
- Denver
- (as Frank deKova)
- Larry Teter
- (as Elisha Cook)
- Mrs. Preston
- (as Betsey Jones-Moreland)
- Bobby
- (as Mike McGreevey)
- Clagett
- (sin acreditar)
Argumento
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesAndré De Toth had the town built in Oregon several months before filming so that the structures would be naturally weathered by rain and snow, not artificially dressed by crewmen. When De Toth learned that the workers had neglected to follow his compass headings for the layouts of the streets, he had them rebuild it.
- PifiasAt numerous times when they are going through the mountains, it is obvious that the horses are walking in plowed trenches.
- Citas
Helen Crane: [Dancing with Bruhn] Why did you have to do this terrible thing?
Jack Bruhn: There are things worse, ma'am, than dancing with lonely men.
Helen Crane: Please, let us go.
Jack Bruhn: Soon.
Helen Crane: Why did you have to come here?
Jack Bruhn: You should be grateful. Our coming saved the life of your husband.
Helen Crane: I don't believe Blaise would have gone through with it.
Jack Bruhn: Mrs. Crane, when my men and I leave here, there will be a showdown and you will be a widow.
- ConexionesReferenced in Las aventuras de Ozzie y Harriet: The Ladder (1953)
"Day of the Outlaw" (1959) is a B&W psychological Western shot in the Oregon Cascades. It's similar to Westerns from the same period by Anthony Mann and Budd Boetticher, not to mention just as good or better. The protagonist (Ryan) isn't a hero, but rather a tortured man ready to make a last stand; meanwhile Bruhn (Ives) isn't wholly corrupted and still has some sense of nobility. Several of his hardened men, however, have clearly crossed over into the dark side.
Tina Louise, who would play Ginger from Gilligan's Island in 5-6 years, is younger & cuter here while Venetia Stevenson is nimble and winsome. You might remember Venetia from her jaw-dropping role in "The City of the Dead," aka "Horror Hotel" (1960).
Director Andre DeToth was having personal problems at the time of shooting and it affected the mood of the set, plus there were other issues, like snowstorm delays, Ryan missing a week due to pneumonia and DeToth changing his mind about scene locations at the last minute, etc. Perhaps the biggest problem was that the budget was low and, when they ran out of finances, DeToth & crew just packed-up and went back to Los Angeles.
Producers & editors had to make do with what was shot, which explains some weaknesses here and there. Scriptwriter Philip Yordan lamented "what could have been."
The movie runs 1 hour, 32 minutes, and was shot in central Oregon at Dutchman Flat & Todd Lake Meadows about 20 miles east of the town of Bend in late November thru early December, 1958.
GRADE: B+/A-
- Wuchakk
- 26 dic 2021
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- How long is Day of the Outlaw?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- 400.000 US$ (estimación)
- Duración1 hora 32 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1