An outlaw gang on the lam encounters former associate Simon Bhumer and his gorgeous daughter, who's drawn to their leader Cully.An outlaw gang on the lam encounters former associate Simon Bhumer and his gorgeous daughter, who's drawn to their leader Cully.An outlaw gang on the lam encounters former associate Simon Bhumer and his gorgeous daughter, who's drawn to their leader Cully.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 1 win total
John McIntire
- Dutch
- (as John Mc.Intire)
Bob Herron
- Evans
- (as Robert Herron)
Regis Parton
- Cashier
- (as Reg Parton)
Emile Avery
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
John Barton
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
Wag Blesing
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
Marshall Bradford
- Banker
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
6.0602
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Featured reviews
Admirable little western
Richard Carlson is more known as an actor than as a director, and that's unfair because he brought us very good surprises, unusual and charming stuff as this one now. Wally Brennan and Rory Calhoun are in the cast and several other figures such as Charles Drake, George Nader and John McIntire Universal Studios "home" actors. It is short, a bit over eighty minutes, good paced, never boring nor cheesy. So, a good moment to spend. Rory Calhoun is not really a good hero here, rather ambivalent dude and that suits him well. In real life, don't forget that he was a bad boy, former inmate in institution for young offenders. Charles Drake in a sheriff role, not far from the one he had in NO NAME ON THE BULLET, where he fought against a very ambivalent Audie Murphy in the lead. A rather good character study that concerns the outlaws around the female, daughter of Walter Brennan.
Watchable, But Underwhelming
Four bank robbers run for the border. On the way, they run into leader Rory Calhoun's old friend Walter Brennan and his gorgeous daughter, Coleen Miller. Miss Miller and Calhoun fall for each other, despite Brennan's objection.
Richard Carlson takes one of his occasional trips behind the camera to direct this shaky A western. Brennan, of course, gives a fine performance, and the other performers are good, but it all seems to be too well calculated, from the occasional grace notes for the camera, to the arc of the plot. Perhaps tighter editing would have helped. With George Nader, Nina Foch, Jay Silverheels and Nestor Paiva.
Richard Carlson takes one of his occasional trips behind the camera to direct this shaky A western. Brennan, of course, gives a fine performance, and the other performers are good, but it all seems to be too well calculated, from the occasional grace notes for the camera, to the arc of the plot. Perhaps tighter editing would have helped. With George Nader, Nina Foch, Jay Silverheels and Nestor Paiva.
More Puns to the Order!
This dull shoot-'em-up, a typical run-of-the-mill, cowboys 'n' Indians, robbers vs.posse oater, has one remarkably fascinating aspect: a bare-bones plot punctuated by surprisingly sexual imagery, much of which can be interpreted as homoerotic. Some scenes are steamingly obvious in their depiction of passion, and others are so gratuitously injected that they can only be seen as surreptitiously symbolic. (There's even a totally irrelevant pussycat with kittens). The creators must have had a bang-up good time foisting such a naughty piece on mid-fifties audiences, and modern viewers should have just as much fun ferreting out each and every nuance! Fans who favor peeking below the Production Code will have a ball!
Excellent Western
This is a really enjoyable movie, a tale of romance, self discovery and of course Native Americans.
The performances are convincing and quite passionate, which really help sell the story to the audience.
However the star of this movie is actually the musical score. It is tremendous. The music underscores the action on screen as well as any movie I have ever watched.
Highly recommended.
Surprisingly effective little western
I'm a western nut who's been watching horse-operas since the '50s and somehow I'd never heard of this before a TV showing here in England. The cast is superb, including Oscar-winner Walter Brennan in a more restrained performance than usual. Each of the four bank robbers has his own little quirks and it's fun to see Jay Silverheels in a more lively part than his legendary Tonto act, which was often so wooden you'd pick up splinters just from watching it. There's a familiar face playing the tiny role of the town barber - Paul Brinegar, who found TV fame five years later as trail-cook Wishbone on Rawhide.
Richard Carlson's direction is surprisingly effective. It's a darn shame he didn't do much else, though his 1964 low-budget Kid Rodelo was nowhere near as nifty a job as Four Guns, which must be filed as "underrated and worth a look." Both movies came from Louis L'Amour stories.
Richard Carlson's direction is surprisingly effective. It's a darn shame he didn't do much else, though his 1964 low-budget Kid Rodelo was nowhere near as nifty a job as Four Guns, which must be filed as "underrated and worth a look." Both movies came from Louis L'Amour stories.
Did you know
- TriviaBased upon the story he wrote for this film in 1954, Louis L'Amour issued a complete novel called High Lonesome in 1962. It was published by Bantam as part of a series of paperback westerns by the author. The names of most of the characters were changed (e.g., "Cully" became "Considine," "Lolly" became "Lennie", etc. - though "Dutch" remained "Dutch"). The highly prolific Louis L'amour is credited with having written 89 novels altogether.
- GoofsWhen Jay Silverheels throws his knife into the calendar for June 1881, it shows June having 31 days. When he repeats the throw a few moments later, the hole made by the first throw has disappeared and June now has 30 days.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Going Attractions: The Definitive Story of the Movie Palace (2019)
- How long is Four Guns to the Border?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 23m(83 min)
- Color
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content






