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At Gunpoint

  • 1955
  • Approved
  • 1h 21m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
712
YOUR RATING
Walter Brennan, Fred MacMurray, and Dorothy Malone in At Gunpoint (1955)
Western

The peace-loving owner of a general store, who became a town hero after he luckily killed the leader of a gang of bank robbers, is deserted by the townspeople who fear the threatened return ... Read allThe peace-loving owner of a general store, who became a town hero after he luckily killed the leader of a gang of bank robbers, is deserted by the townspeople who fear the threatened return of the vengeful bandits.The peace-loving owner of a general store, who became a town hero after he luckily killed the leader of a gang of bank robbers, is deserted by the townspeople who fear the threatened return of the vengeful bandits.

  • Director
    • Alfred L. Werker
  • Writer
    • Daniel B. Ullman
  • Stars
    • Fred MacMurray
    • Dorothy Malone
    • Walter Brennan
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    712
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Alfred L. Werker
    • Writer
      • Daniel B. Ullman
    • Stars
      • Fred MacMurray
      • Dorothy Malone
      • Walter Brennan
    • 18User reviews
    • 7Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos6

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    Top cast46

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    Fred MacMurray
    Fred MacMurray
    • Jack Wright
    Dorothy Malone
    Dorothy Malone
    • Martha Wright
    Walter Brennan
    Walter Brennan
    • Doc Lacy
    Tommy Rettig
    Tommy Rettig
    • Billy Wright
    Skip Homeier
    Skip Homeier
    • Bob Dennis
    John Qualen
    John Qualen
    • Livingstone
    Whit Bissell
    Whit Bissell
    • Clem Clark
    Irving Bacon
    Irving Bacon
    • Al Ferguson
    Jack Lambert
    Jack Lambert
    • Kirk
    John Pickard
    John Pickard
    • Alvin Dennis
    James Griffith
    James Griffith
    • The Stranger (Bob Alexander)
    Harry Shannon
    Harry Shannon
    • Marshal Pete MacKay
    Frank Ferguson
    Frank Ferguson
    • George Henderson
    James O'Hara
    James O'Hara
    • Wally
    • (as James Lilburn)
    Harry Lauter
    Harry Lauter
    • Federal Marshal
    James Anderson
    James Anderson
    • Barlow
    • (uncredited)
    Gertrude Astor
    Gertrude Astor
    • Mrs. Metcalfe
    • (uncredited)
    Roy Barcroft
    Roy Barcroft
    • Townsman
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Alfred L. Werker
    • Writer
      • Daniel B. Ullman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    6.3712
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    Featured reviews

    8rooster_davis

    Start to finish, a really enjoyable movie

    I'm not a huge Fred MacMurray fan when it comes to Westerns, I guess, but he could do a credible enough job as he did in At Gunpoint. The basic storyline involves a store clerk who shoots one of an escaping band of robbers. Only by a lucky shot does the clerk actually hit and kill one of the robbers; the dead guy's brother who is also in the gang makes it his personal business to get revenge, especially when the newspapers glorify the action of the clerk in shooting down the bad guy.

    This movie has one of my all-time favorite Western character actors, Skip Homeier, who is the bad guy seeking revenge. (Homeier and MacMurray are also a protagonist / antagonist pair in another Western, "Day of the Bad Man", where MacMurray plays a judge.) In this movie, MacMurray's son is played by Tommy Rettig of the 'Jeff's Collie' (i.e. 'Lassie') TV show and he is rather annoying in the role. Maybe the director wasn't paying as much attention to him, as Rettig was really very good in 'River of No Return' with Robert Mitchum. (The lucky kid had Marilyn Monroe's hands all over him during that movie!) Walter Brennan, another great, is in this movie and as a testy old doctor, he has some pretty funny acidic observations to make. When his best friend and checkers-partner gets shot and killed, Brennan underplays the scene where he sees that his friend is dead - and he does so masterfully. He gives only the slightest view of his anguish but you can tell he's devastated. Brennan was a giant of the Westerns and he's great in this movie as always.

    I think the premise of a story is all important and this movie has a great one - take an ordinary guy, give him beginner's luck at accidentally beating the bad guy, then have the rest of the bad guys come back seeking revenge. Don't compare this movie to High Noon as one other person did, because it's really not the same theme. Frankly if I had a choice of which one to watch right now it would be this movie, At Gunpoint. (And I do like High Noon very much, but this is also a darned good film.) You won't waste your time by watching this one. If you like Westerns, this is one you will enjoy.
    7exclusive541

    Good film - Great cast - Avoid alternate version "Smokin' Barrel"

    Acting and production (including music) are top notch. Screenplay is well written. Entire cast is made up of major stars and great character actors which made this an entirely worthwhile "Saturday Matinée" in its day. Although not noted, this is a color film of about 81 minutes in length. There are some on-screen shootings & deaths ... but no blood; it could easily have received a "General Audience" rating.

    A pirated VHS tape version of this film was distributed in the USA in 1992/1993 by "Dominican Releasing, Puerto Rico" under the title "SMOKIN' BARREL"; This version (shamefully) cut-out all original titles and credits and simply replaced them with the two-worded opening title "SMOKIN BARREL" and a two-worded closing title "THE END"; there was no other information. The quality of this tape, recorded in the EP mode, was extremely poor visually with blurred images and in high contrast; it was almost unviewable (although the sound was acceptable). The tape's box had numerous errors in the credits ... crediting Vaughn Monroe & child actor Billy Gray (I) as being in the film (they were not) ... and leaving off one of the two main stars ... Fred MacMurray ... as well as the actual child star Tommy Rettig. It also states the film is rated "R" (believe me, AT GUNPOINT is NOT an "R" film). Avoid "Smokin Barrel" ... but definitely see any other good quality legitimate versions of this very good film.
    7sol-kay

    A town is only as good as the people in it

    (Some Spoilers) Potent little morality play about a man who's left out in the cold and deserted by all those who he considered his friends after being hailed as a hero by those very same persons only days before.

    The Dennis gang checking out the quite and peaceful little town of Plainview to pull off their next bank robbery get the surprise of their lives when the towns general store shopkeeper Jack Wright, Fred MacMurray, picks up the gun that Plainview's marshal, Harry Shannon,dropped after he was shot during the bank robbery and from some 70 to 100 yards away caught the gang's leader Alivn Dennis,John Pickart, with a slug right between the shoulder blades. Still alive Dennis is done in by local resident George Henderson, Jack Ferguson, who then finished the badly wounded bank robber off with a wild furry of shots from his rifle. Being looked upon as a hero at first the people of Plainview quickly changed their minds about Jack Wright when the Dennis gang, now lead by Alvin's younger brother Bob (Skip Homeier),let it be known that they were out to take revenge for Alvin Dennis' death.

    Ambushing Henderson, who was made the new towns marshal, and gunning him down the gang later shot young Wally, James O'Hara,Jack's brother-in-law as he answered the door one evening mistaking them for Jack. The townspeople in a panic with the fear of the Dennis gang using them and their families as target practice, until they finally kill Jack, come to the conclusion in an almost unanimous vote, only old Doc Lacy(Walter Brenner) didn't vote with them,that Jack should leave town for his own safety as well as theirs.

    Tense and heart-lifting, if not predictable, ending with Jack standing alone and with no one coming to his aid facing the Dennis gang at high-noon on the main street of Plainview. Fred MaMurray is perfect as the peaceful family man who's forced to risk his life against a ruthless gang of bank robbers with nothing more then a sense of justice and determination not to let himself be run out of the town that he was born raised a family and started a business in.

    Just before the exciting conclusion of the movie Jack confronted the people of Plesentvile and with an emotional and stirring speech made them look deep into their hearts and souls about their abandonment of him when he needed them most when he was always there for them whenever they needed his help. You just knew what would happen in the movie "At Gunpoint" after that.
    7bkoganbing

    From hero to leper

    Fred MacMurray was not fond of his westerns, his most famous quote was that "the horse and I were never as one". But he rode no horses in At Gunpoint. MacMurray plays the town storekeeper who takes up a weapon and together with Frank Ferguson shoots Jack Pickard head of a gang trying to rob John Qualen's bank. He gets the outlaw leader and saves the money. The town acclaims him and Ferguson, but Ferguson is ambushed by the same gang outside town, MacMurray becomes the town leper.

    Comparisons have been made with High Noon, but I think this resembles more 3:10 to Yuma and Johnny Concho. In those two westerns we had citizen heroes as opposed to cowboy heroes. There's no resemblance to John Wayne in MacMurray's role.

    Even his wife Dorothy Malone wants him to leave, but MacMurray wants to stay. His only friend is the town doctor Walter Brennan.

    This is a very good if somewhat unconventional western. Keep an eye on Skip Homeier as well. He's playing once again an evil punk.
    6Uriah43

    A Good Man Abandoned by His Friends and Neighbors

    This film essentially begins with a small group of outlaws known as "the Dennis Gang" riding into the peaceful town of Plainview, Texas and robbing the local bank. Unfortunately, while trying to escape, one of the bandits named "Alvin Dennis" (John Pickard) is shot and killed by the owner of a general store by the name of "Jack Wright" (Fred MacMurray) and another local citizen named "Al Ferguson" (Irving Bacon). And since all of the money is recovered because of that, the local banker named "Mr. Livingstone" (John Qualen), along with the other members of the town, are quick to hail the two men as heroes. That is, until the gang returns the next night and kills Al Ferguson in cold blood. And it's this action that turns the entire town into a state of pure panic--which results with all of them wanting nothing to do with Jack Wright out of fear that they might draw the ire of the Dennis Gang if they return again. Now, rather than reveal any more, I will just say that this was a pretty good Western which had clear parallels to the outstanding film "High Noon" produced 3 years earlier with both Gary Cooper and Grace Kelly. But make no mistake, although I consider "At Gunpoint" to be an entertaining film, it is by no means as good as the aforementioned 1952 classic. Even so, I still enjoyed this movie for the most part, and I have rated it accordingly. Slightly above average.

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    Related interests

    John Wayne and Harry Carey Jr. in The Searchers (1956)
    Western

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Joel McCrea was originally cast as Jack Wright.
    • Goofs
      Bob (Skip Homeier) is blasted with a shotgun, the force of which sends him flying off his horse aided by a wire which is plainly seen.
    • Quotes

      Bob Dennis: I'm sick of these two-bit towns. What's wrong with a place like Abilene, for instance?

      Alvin Dennis: Everything, as far as we're concerned.

      Bob Dennis: They're bound to have a lot of cash on hand. They've got to pay off the trail drives.

      Alvin Dennis: That's just it. Where's there's a lot of cash, there's a lot of guns.

      Bob Dennis: We're not exactly amateurs.

      Alvin Dennis: That's why we're alive. And we'll stay that way as long as we stick to the small towns.

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • December 25, 1955 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Gun Point
    • Filming locations
      • Santa Clarita, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Allied Artists Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 21m(81 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.55 : 1

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