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The Stranger Wore a Gun

  • 1953
  • Approved
  • 1h 23m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
Randolph Scott and Claire Trevor in The Stranger Wore a Gun (1953)
A former spy moves to Arizona to join a gold robbery, but when he gets there decides that it's not for him and tries to change his life.
Play trailer1:28
1 Video
45 Photos
Classical WesternWestern

A former spy moves to Arizona to join a gold robbery, but when he gets there decides that it's not for him and tries to change his life.A former spy moves to Arizona to join a gold robbery, but when he gets there decides that it's not for him and tries to change his life.A former spy moves to Arizona to join a gold robbery, but when he gets there decides that it's not for him and tries to change his life.

  • Director
    • André De Toth
  • Writers
    • Kenneth Gamet
    • John W. Cunningham
  • Stars
    • Randolph Scott
    • Claire Trevor
    • Joan Weldon
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    1.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • André De Toth
    • Writers
      • Kenneth Gamet
      • John W. Cunningham
    • Stars
      • Randolph Scott
      • Claire Trevor
      • Joan Weldon
    • 31User reviews
    • 18Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:28
    Trailer

    Photos45

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    Top cast67

    Edit
    Randolph Scott
    Randolph Scott
    • Jeff Travis
    Claire Trevor
    Claire Trevor
    • Josie Sullivan
    Joan Weldon
    Joan Weldon
    • Shelby Conroy
    George Macready
    George Macready
    • Jules Mourret
    Alfonso Bedoya
    Alfonso Bedoya
    • Degas
    Lee Marvin
    Lee Marvin
    • Dan Kurth
    Ernest Borgnine
    Ernest Borgnine
    • Bull Slager
    Pierre Watkin
    Pierre Watkin
    • Jason Conroy
    Joseph Vitale
    Joseph Vitale
    • Shorty
    Clem Bevans
    Clem Bevans
    • Jim Martin
    Victor Adamson
    Victor Adamson
    • Barfly
    • (uncredited)
    Richard Alexander
    Richard Alexander
    • Townsman
    • (uncredited)
    Roscoe Ates
    Roscoe Ates
    • Jake Hooper - Stage Driver
    • (uncredited)
    Rayford Barnes
    Rayford Barnes
    • Raider Todd
    • (uncredited)
    • …
    Dick Benjamin
    • Minor Role
    • (uncredited)
    Barry Brooks
    • Undetermined Role
    • (uncredited)
    George Bruggeman
    George Bruggeman
    • Riverboat Passenger
    • (uncredited)
    Bob Burns
    Bob Burns
    • Townsman
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • André De Toth
    • Writers
      • Kenneth Gamet
      • John W. Cunningham
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews31

    5.91.6K
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    Featured reviews

    rmax304823

    They don't make them like this . . .

    The location shooting was done at Movie Flats off Route 395 near Lone Pine, California, and, along with a lot of faces in this film, will be familiar to experienced moviegoers. They've been making movies up there for years. The rocks themselves are studded with bolts and adhesions of cement left over from early productions, which date back at least to "Gunga Din." And it's easy to see why it was used so often in inexpensive Westerns like this. The jumbo-sized boulders seem made of stucco and the Sierra Nevadas in the background include Mt. Whitney, as colorful as a painted backdrop. The whole place looks as if nature had put it there to be used as a spectacularly realistic phony movie set.

    Yes, it's alive with history. The ghosts of a thousand extras in sombreros haunt these rugged trails, and at night when the wind moans you can hear the hoofbeats of yesteryear. Zzzzz.

    Some of the ghosts must surely include Randolph Scott, who spent so much time before the cameras here in so many movies. In this one, he's an ex-confederate who allows himself to be hired out to save a stagecoach company that ships gold to -- well, never mind.

    Scott is in his burnished Western middle age and rides his usual horse, a beautiful mount, a kind of rusty brown animal with a white face, white maine, and white tail. (I was momentarily tempted to call the horse a "roan" but hesitated to do so because I don't know what the word means.) Anyway, the horse will be almost as familiar as Scott. Scott's hat will look familiar too. So will Ernest Borgnine and Lee Marvin, the two outstanding heels of "Bad Day at Black Rock," but they don't get enough screen time. Alfonso Bedoya, Gold Hat from "The Treasure of the Sierra Madre," has more screen time. He can't act, but he doesn't have to. If you think he did curious things to the word "badges" in "Treasure," you absolutely must hear how he wraps his speech organs around "foreigner" in this one. George MacReady is the chief villain. I prefer it when his villainy is of a slyer, more boardroom-bound sort.

    Claire Trevor is a hooker with a heart of gold. I know it's hard to believe, but hookers come in all different varieties. Joan Weldon is pretty and was a singer rather than an actress. There is a marvelous scene in which Scott introduces his old girl friend, Trevor, to Weldon, the new young beauty he's just met, and the two women trade the kind of insults and suspicious queries that only women know how to sling about. "It's funny he never mentioned you to me." And, "From the way he described you, I thought you'd be much older." Scott, meanwhile, is standing there with this dumb smile, looking back and forth at his two friends, as if pleased that they are being so nice to one another, giving an excellent impression of a man who hasn't the slightest idea of what's going on between them.

    Movies like this don't crop up on TV very often and sometimes, remembering how much I enjoyed them as a child, I find myself missing them. Then sometimes they DO show up, as this one did, and I watch it out of curiosity and wind up realizing that there are a lot of things to be nostalgic about but Westerns like this aren't among them.
    4JimB-4

    Scott, Marvin, Borgnine: Woulda, Coulda, Shoulda

    With Randolph Scott in his best outfit riding his best horse (Starlight) and looking and acting his dusty old best, and with Lee Marvin and Ernest Borgnine at their early villainous peaks, this could have been something. With Andre de Toth directing, it really should have been something. But it's not something. It's not anything, except a mess. Horrendous dialogue, terrible editing (the big gunfight in the mountains is unintelligible until the principals gather to rehash what just happened), and some really bad acting (not so much from Scott, Borgnine, or Marvin, but pretty much everybody else. Alfonso Bedoya is a joy to watch, as always, not because of his acting, which is abominable, but because it's so much fun trying to figure out what it is he's doing with his mouth to make him sound that way. George Macready, who belongs in things like "Gilda" rather than oaters like this, kept getting shoved into Randolph Scott Westerns (four of them). He's incredibly out of place in all of them. And Claire Trevor, so wonderful in "Dead End" and "Key Largo," is wasted here and one's heart goes out to the Oscar-winning actress for having to do such pot-boiling dreck as this a scant five years after winning that Oscar. The attempts at 3-D effects are pretty laughable in their earnestness, and for an action movie, an awful lot of the actual action occurs just off-screen -- saving money on stuntmen and stagecoaches, I suppose, but diluting the feel of the down-and-dirty Western this clearly wants to be taken for. I'll watch anything Randolph Scott did in the Fifties and Sixties, but this one was an absolute chore. I'd sure like to know where to get a coat like that, though.
    5hitchcockthelegend

    Jeff Travis – Quantrill's Conscience.

    The Stranger Wore a Gun is directed by Andre De Toth and adapted to screenplay by Kenneth Gamet from the story Yankee Gold written by John W. Cunningham. It stars Randolph Scott, Claire Trevor, Joan Weldon, George Macready, Alfonso Bedoya, Lee Marvin, Ernest Borgnine and Pierre Watkin. Technicolor/3-Dimension production, music is by Mischa Bakaleinikoff and cinematography by Lester White.

    Jeff Travis (Scott) was a spy for Quantrill's Raiders, but after disagreeing with the savagery he witnessed during The Lawrence Massacre, he decides to head off to Prescott, Arizona to start a new life. Unfortunately his reputation precedes him and it's not long before he is in the middle of robberies and murder as the hunger for gold rears its ugly head.

    As anyone who has seen it in its 2D print will attest, the 3D moments in this look rather bad, some films have been able to get away with it, but this is not one of them. However, mercifully this isn't a production that throws things at the screen every five minutes, or one that films every action sequence in depth perception. As it is, the 3D scenes are the least of the problems on show here, where were it not for the stoic Scott, the lovely Trevor and the novelty value of early turns from Marvin and Borgnine, then this would actually be a below average disaster.

    It's sometimes fun, but not always intentionally, and it looks very nice from a location perspective (Alabama Hills, Lone Pine), but the cast are saddled with a mediocre and unadventurous screenplay. The subject of Travis' past is briefly dangled, intriguingly so, with the fact that he is scarred from his "work" as a soldier of the Civil War grabbing the attention, but it's quickly dispensed with to pitch this interesting character into a cliché riddled "town rascals at work" plot. There's a boorish love triangle that's as pointless as it is obvious as to where it will end up, and Bedoya is irritatingly awful to the point his scenes are practically unwatchable.

    De Toth seems strangely off form on this one, you would tend to think the 3D filming had him losing his focus, but in this same year he crafted the hugely successful House of Wax in 3D. So he obviously had a knack for depth filming. He also this same year made Thunder Over the Plains with Scott, a significantly better Western than what is on offer here. In one fight scene between Scott and Borgnine, the director struggles to hide the fact that Borgnine has suddenly lost 50 pounds and Scott is 15 years younger! It's very poor from a director who undoubtedly had great talent.

    It's one for fans of the name actors only this one, a picture to tick off your lists, to be forgotten and consigned to Cinema Boothill. 5/10
    w8s

    First movie I saw Lee Marvin

    I saw this movie in a naval base movie theatre, in, I think, 1956. It was the first thing I recall seeing Lee Marvin in. This guy just absolutely fascinated me. Randolph Scott had been a "Semi-hero" of mine in the late thirties and the forties. In this movie, he was so old, and so slow drawing his gun, that they had to speed up the film to make it look like he was drawing his gun fast. Lee, on the other hand didn't need any "camera" tricks to make him look fast. Lee Marvin, as he was dying from having been shot by this amazingly slow lawman (Randolph Scott), looked down at his two hands, as if to say, "Hands -- how could you have failed me". I thought, facetiously, "Boy oscar is written oll over that!" Really a neat scene. That began a continuing admiration for Lee Marvin,, who could do bad guys, good guys, good guy-bad guy (Cat Ballou), Comedy, Drama, Action, He was a craftsman, and a master at it.
    6krorie

    Borgnine dressed as a dude

    Having been shot in 3-D, expect a lot of guns to be pointed at you and sometimes shot, fire coming at the camera, and even rock formations in Lone Pine to appear to have shelves. Outside of this minor distraction, the story is a good one concerning the aftermath of Quantrill's Raiders involving one of his spies, Jeff Travis (Randy Scott), who is determined to run away from his past and begin a new life. Following a fracas on a riverboat, he ends up in Prescott, Arizona, just as the capital of the territory is being moved to Phoenix because of the lack of law and order in the town. Somewhat of a mentor to him as well as lover is the soiled dove Josie Sullivan, played knowingly by Claire Trevor. He rides into Prescott loaded for bear, hence the title "The Stranger Wore a Gun." That he can't shake his past even in an out of the way western hamlet becomes obvious when both Josie and Jules Mourret (George Macready), another ghost from yesterday, turn up there. It's not quite clear where the stranger is heading until a close pal is murdered by Jules' henchmen. To muddy the water a damsel in distress appears, pretty Shelby Conroy (Joan Weldon), who seems shy and innocent. The stranger begins falling in love with her to the displeasure of Josie. Newcomer Jules is holding a Mexican gang at bay led by the colorful Degas (Alfonso Bedoya). The stranger begins playing one gang against the other to almost be gunned down in the crossfire.

    Two of Jules' henchmen would go on to win Academy Awards a few years later, Lee Marvin as Dan Kurth and Ernest Borgnine as Bull Slager. Borgnine wears one of the loudest cowboy outfits ever, including a green shirt. He looks like a dude from the east. This doesn't stop him from being the sadistic bully he usually played in those days. Marvin too is his usual twisted demented character fans loved to hate. To see these two in action is worth the price of admission.

    Postscript: Look for Tap Canutt, son of famous stunt man Yakima Canutt, in a bit part. He was also one of the stunt men for the film.

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    Related interests

    Gary Cooper in High Noon (1952)
    Classical Western
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    Western

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Although the film was another 3-D film by director Andre De Toth, he only had one eye and would never be able to see the result of the process. The other 3-D film he directed was "House of Wax."
    • Goofs
      Colt 1873 revolvers were used but the Civil War ended before those revolvers were developed.
    • Quotes

      Jeff Travis: A man's only as good as his cards.

    • Connections
      Referenced in The Fifties (1997)
    • Soundtracks
      Oh Dem Golden Slippers
      (uncredited)

      Written by James Alan Bland

      Heard as a theme

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • 1953 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • I Ride Alone
    • Filming locations
      • Whitney Portal, Lone Pine, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Scott-Brown Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,600,000
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 23m(83 min)

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