IMDb RATING
6.6/10
2.1K
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Jim Slater seeks a survivor of the Apache ambush his father died in.Jim Slater seeks a survivor of the Apache ambush his father died in.Jim Slater seeks a survivor of the Apache ambush his father died in.
Edward Platt
- Sheriff J.C. Marson
- (as Edward C. Platt)
Chris Alcaide
- Dick Lawrence
- (uncredited)
Carl Andre
- Barfly
- (uncredited)
Walter Beaver
- Little Willie
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
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Featured reviews
Excellent story, cast, and performances
This is an outstanding movie, particularly for Westerns filmed in this period, which included the mid-50's.
Widmark and Reed give excellent performances, as usual for both, and the remaining cast, particularly William Campbell and John McIntyre, do as well.
Campbell's brash "young gun" is a bit overdone, but that was a trait which was a virtual necessity from this type character in films 50 years ago. The only other aspect which detracted a bit from the story was Donna Reed's appearance. Traveling by horseback in remote, dusty areas, she looked like she might be dressed for a "Western night" sorority party, with makeup perfect and hair well-coiffed, perhaps by her sorority sisters, if not at the campus beauty parlor.
But again, this was an element of 1950's pictures, and didn't detract from the story. Here, there was more plot, drama, good acting, and realistic dealing with the plot's events than your likely to find in the usual 10-15 Westerns, combined.
Widmark and Reed give excellent performances, as usual for both, and the remaining cast, particularly William Campbell and John McIntyre, do as well.
Campbell's brash "young gun" is a bit overdone, but that was a trait which was a virtual necessity from this type character in films 50 years ago. The only other aspect which detracted a bit from the story was Donna Reed's appearance. Traveling by horseback in remote, dusty areas, she looked like she might be dressed for a "Western night" sorority party, with makeup perfect and hair well-coiffed, perhaps by her sorority sisters, if not at the campus beauty parlor.
But again, this was an element of 1950's pictures, and didn't detract from the story. Here, there was more plot, drama, good acting, and realistic dealing with the plot's events than your likely to find in the usual 10-15 Westerns, combined.
There's things a man has to know and has to do, and it's best that he does them alone.
Backlash (1956) is directed by John Sturges and adapted by Borden Chase from the novel written by Frank Gruber. It stars Richard Widmark, Donna Reed, John McIntire & William Campbell. It's shot in Technicolor by Irving Glassberg on location in Tuscon, Arizona.
1870 Arizona, and Jim Slater (Widmark) is searching for the truth about what happened to his father during the Apache ambush at Gila Valley. This brings him into contact with strong willed Karyl Orton (Reed), who courtesy of her missing husband also has an interest in the events of that raid. Missing family members and missing gold, the can is now open and worms are pouring out every where.
It's about the writing and the characters here. From the off it should be known that this is no high octane actioner. We are dealing in a mystery, with what amounts to a detective story played out in a Western theme. It's a touch unusual but never less than interesting as Chases' unconventional script gives birth to a myriad of characters, some complex, others just stock genre story fleshers. There's some clichés spliced within the piece, but they are off set by some nice twists in the story. And while this is no Anthony Mann/Borden Chase psychologically tinted production, it doesn't cop out with its big decisions. Glassberg's cinematography is first class, really vibrant and bursting out from the screen as they nicely film it on location of where the story is set. The cast is real strong. Widmark is excellent as the tough as nails hero and Reed looks stunning whilst neatly essaying a prickly femme fatale type. McIntire gives another classy supporting turn and Campbell is enjoyably OTT as hothead gunslinger Johnny Cool.
The principals have all done far better work in the genre, but this is a nice change of pace for all of them. It's unlikely to raise the pulses of the action seeking fan, but for those of a more literary persuasion this should hit the spot. 7/10
1870 Arizona, and Jim Slater (Widmark) is searching for the truth about what happened to his father during the Apache ambush at Gila Valley. This brings him into contact with strong willed Karyl Orton (Reed), who courtesy of her missing husband also has an interest in the events of that raid. Missing family members and missing gold, the can is now open and worms are pouring out every where.
It's about the writing and the characters here. From the off it should be known that this is no high octane actioner. We are dealing in a mystery, with what amounts to a detective story played out in a Western theme. It's a touch unusual but never less than interesting as Chases' unconventional script gives birth to a myriad of characters, some complex, others just stock genre story fleshers. There's some clichés spliced within the piece, but they are off set by some nice twists in the story. And while this is no Anthony Mann/Borden Chase psychologically tinted production, it doesn't cop out with its big decisions. Glassberg's cinematography is first class, really vibrant and bursting out from the screen as they nicely film it on location of where the story is set. The cast is real strong. Widmark is excellent as the tough as nails hero and Reed looks stunning whilst neatly essaying a prickly femme fatale type. McIntire gives another classy supporting turn and Campbell is enjoyably OTT as hothead gunslinger Johnny Cool.
The principals have all done far better work in the genre, but this is a nice change of pace for all of them. It's unlikely to raise the pulses of the action seeking fan, but for those of a more literary persuasion this should hit the spot. 7/10
An action western with suspense and a very good cast
From Universal International Pictures shows this thrilling and exciting Western with great cast, lots of action, duels to death and suspense that cuts like a whip. It deals with Jim Slater, Richard Widmark, who seeks a survivor of an Apache massacre and while he meets a beautiful wife : Donna Reed, looking for his husband. Slater is a gunslinger out to find his father's killer. Along the way, he faces off hard-riding outlaws, Apache raiders and he becomes involved into a range warfare between two land barons, John McIntire and Roy Roberts. Was the sixth man the secret to the five empty graves?.. The answer waited in a woman's lips and watched from the shadows of a frightened town!
Nice western with a twisted and complex plot by the prestigious and Western expert Borden Chase. Well financed by the notorius producer Aaron Rosenberg who also produced the succcesful James Stewart Westerns as Winchester 73, The far country, Bend the river, Night passage. This is a tough and certain winner John Sturges Western with touches of mystery and suspense to find out a real culprit. It includes good helpings of ordinary gundown, Indian attacks, ambushes and anything else. The screenplay is unusually well worked-out for an oater, delivering interest and entertainment enough. It packs one or two first-rate twists and surprises in the closing reel. Finely starred by the two-fisted Richard Widmark playing in his usual style and co-starred by the gorgeous Donna Reed. Being very well accompanied by an awesome support cast such as : William Campbell, John McIntire, Henry Morgan, Barton McLane, Robert J Wilke, Roy Roberts, Edward Platt, among others.
Filmed in brilliant technicolor amid the grandeur and espectacle of high sierras. This busiest western was well directed by John Sturges, though it is inferior than his other Western entries. Sturges was a good director who shot some nice and classic Westerns, such as : The Walking Hills, Gunfight at OK Corral, The magnificent seven, Escape from Fort Bravo, The law and Jake Wade, The last train from Gun Hill, Three sergeants, Halelujah trail, Hour of the gun, and a semi-western : Bad day at Black Rock, among others. Rating 6.5. Decent Western that will appeal to Richard Widmark fans. Well worth watching.
Nice western with a twisted and complex plot by the prestigious and Western expert Borden Chase. Well financed by the notorius producer Aaron Rosenberg who also produced the succcesful James Stewart Westerns as Winchester 73, The far country, Bend the river, Night passage. This is a tough and certain winner John Sturges Western with touches of mystery and suspense to find out a real culprit. It includes good helpings of ordinary gundown, Indian attacks, ambushes and anything else. The screenplay is unusually well worked-out for an oater, delivering interest and entertainment enough. It packs one or two first-rate twists and surprises in the closing reel. Finely starred by the two-fisted Richard Widmark playing in his usual style and co-starred by the gorgeous Donna Reed. Being very well accompanied by an awesome support cast such as : William Campbell, John McIntire, Henry Morgan, Barton McLane, Robert J Wilke, Roy Roberts, Edward Platt, among others.
Filmed in brilliant technicolor amid the grandeur and espectacle of high sierras. This busiest western was well directed by John Sturges, though it is inferior than his other Western entries. Sturges was a good director who shot some nice and classic Westerns, such as : The Walking Hills, Gunfight at OK Corral, The magnificent seven, Escape from Fort Bravo, The law and Jake Wade, The last train from Gun Hill, Three sergeants, Halelujah trail, Hour of the gun, and a semi-western : Bad day at Black Rock, among others. Rating 6.5. Decent Western that will appeal to Richard Widmark fans. Well worth watching.
Learning Some Horrible Truths
Donna Reed comes upon Richard Widmark at a place called Gila Valley where five men were massacred by Indians and one man escaped with $60,000.00. Three of the five men were identified, but none of the deceased is either Widmark's father or Reed's husband. Of course both are hunting for their respective relations.
The search yields some truths that neither one is willing to face up to. But both seek and find support and comfort in the other.
Backlash as a previous reviewer remarked is almost like a detective story set in the west. John Sturges gets some find performances out of his cast.
The two who stand out and steal the film from the stars are William Campbell as a punk gunfighter and John McIntire as the amoral outlaw leader in whose hands Widmark and Reed fall into at the end of their odyssey.
No studio backlots for this western, good location photography and a very nice plot distinguish this film. Catch it the next time AMC runs it.
The search yields some truths that neither one is willing to face up to. But both seek and find support and comfort in the other.
Backlash as a previous reviewer remarked is almost like a detective story set in the west. John Sturges gets some find performances out of his cast.
The two who stand out and steal the film from the stars are William Campbell as a punk gunfighter and John McIntire as the amoral outlaw leader in whose hands Widmark and Reed fall into at the end of their odyssey.
No studio backlots for this western, good location photography and a very nice plot distinguish this film. Catch it the next time AMC runs it.
Conventional, but sound and nice classic western
"Backlash" is a conventional 1950s western, but it is sound and nice and has several merits. The director John Sturges (almost) never disappoints you. The entertaining story is a typical one by the great western-writer Borden Chase: plenty of twists of the plot, of surprises, of double-crossing, of complicated kinship relations between the many characters. The finale is rather original. The action scenes are very good: Sturges is a master of that. The cinematography is stunning: it renders with the full force of a glorious technicolor the wonderful beauty of the Arizona landscapes.
The job by the cast is first-rate. Richard Widmark is a great actor in every role: either as the good guy (here), or as the villain (in many other movies). John McIntire is excellent in his trade-mark role of the sneaky outlaw. But I was even more impressed by the depth of Donna Reed's talent. I remembered her as the paradigmatic loving spouse and mother in "It's a wonderful life". Here she's fully convincing in the role of the tough, cynical woman with a turbulent past. Donna seems even more beautiful and appealing in "Backlash" than in the Capra's movie (in fact she's really gorgeous). Is she so good to be able to improve her looks, depending on her role?
Predictably enough, "Backlash" oozes amiable cliches and naive flaws, which, however, almost increase the pleasure of us old western-movies-fans. First: what's the point of the title? No wips are seen along the movie. Widmark wrestles with an Apache sentry for some thirty seconds, without the Apache screaming to give the alarm to his companions. Where does Donna Reed keep the many beautiful dresses she wears? She travels on horse-back... And we have the usual geographical oddities of old classic westerns: the guys just cross a mountain and they pass from Arizona to Texas!
I like "Backlash" and I recommend it: see the movie, relax and have a good time.
The job by the cast is first-rate. Richard Widmark is a great actor in every role: either as the good guy (here), or as the villain (in many other movies). John McIntire is excellent in his trade-mark role of the sneaky outlaw. But I was even more impressed by the depth of Donna Reed's talent. I remembered her as the paradigmatic loving spouse and mother in "It's a wonderful life". Here she's fully convincing in the role of the tough, cynical woman with a turbulent past. Donna seems even more beautiful and appealing in "Backlash" than in the Capra's movie (in fact she's really gorgeous). Is she so good to be able to improve her looks, depending on her role?
Predictably enough, "Backlash" oozes amiable cliches and naive flaws, which, however, almost increase the pleasure of us old western-movies-fans. First: what's the point of the title? No wips are seen along the movie. Widmark wrestles with an Apache sentry for some thirty seconds, without the Apache screaming to give the alarm to his companions. Where does Donna Reed keep the many beautiful dresses she wears? She travels on horse-back... And we have the usual geographical oddities of old classic westerns: the guys just cross a mountain and they pass from Arizona to Texas!
I like "Backlash" and I recommend it: see the movie, relax and have a good time.
Did you know
- TriviaDirector John Sturges hired several hundred Papago Native Americans to play Indians in this film.
- Goofs20 minutes into film, Jim Slater riding from Indians, holsters his pistol and it bounces out. Next scene shows his pistol back in the holster.
- Quotes
Jim Slater: Oh no, not again! You know, a man can get awful tired of bein' shot at.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Svengoolie: Indestructible Man (2021)
- How long is Backlash?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $1,025,000 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 1h 24m(84 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.00 : 1
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