Lucas (Stevens) and his partner Simon (John Lupton) set about to capture the renegade white man who caused the deaths of Lucas' parents in an Indian raid.Lucas (Stevens) and his partner Simon (John Lupton) set about to capture the renegade white man who caused the deaths of Lucas' parents in an Indian raid.Lucas (Stevens) and his partner Simon (John Lupton) set about to capture the renegade white man who caused the deaths of Lucas' parents in an Indian raid.
Maureen Hingert
- Tanana
- (as Jana Davi)
Jered Barclay
- Singer
- (as Jerry Barclay)
Dean Fredericks
- Charlie Whitman
- (as Norman Fredric)
Jean Inness
- Martha Rand
- (as Jean Innes)
Robert J. Stevenson
- Norris
- (as Robert Stevenson)
Bill Erwin
- Bartender
- (as William Erwin)
Eddie Little Sky
- 2nd Indian chief
- (as Eddie Little)
Featured reviews
This is the worst Western, and maybe even the worst movie ever made. I kept watching it hoping that it had to get better , but alas it continued in a downward spiral. It is so bad that it is unintentionally funny .
It looked like it was photographed in someones back yard in an LA suburb.
Even the old quickie Westerns in the !930's were better than this .
Larry Storch's Mexican character set back Mexican - American relations 20 years
The Federales probably tried to have him arrested for insulting the Mexican culture .
Most of the dialog was amateurish drivel , and the acting was even worst .
View this film only if you are desperately lonely , and have absolutely nothing else to do .
It looked like it was photographed in someones back yard in an LA suburb.
Even the old quickie Westerns in the !930's were better than this .
Larry Storch's Mexican character set back Mexican - American relations 20 years
The Federales probably tried to have him arrested for insulting the Mexican culture .
Most of the dialog was amateurish drivel , and the acting was even worst .
View this film only if you are desperately lonely , and have absolutely nothing else to do .
Very raw script in terms of language showing depths of violence and bigotry among all players even rogue native American Indian peoples... Granted European & South American invaders give Our Native American Indian Tribal peoples an argument for simply defending their territories. Shame they had no functional central government before Europeans especially from England's Royal Monarchy Imperialism influences missed the opportunity for a more harmonious merger in our history. All Nation's beginnings have raw greed and fear feeding disastrous moments.
This film captures that the mental health problems of just a few always resulting in big wars.
The script and actors pulling off such a high quality effort ON FILM is something that could NOT be done today.
It's a bit plodding and complex, but truly ruthless human behavior that definitely would be how things were for many in rural settings.
Criminals if all skin tones were the biggest problem...no laws to adhere to, mass slaughter of herds for furs because textile fabrics from cotton picking hadn't been established yet nationally. Yes, Union Soldiers probably helped emancipate slaves wearing slave labor uniforms. Appropriately so, given the result, more reasons emancipation was mandatory. Only possible by a noble Central Government.
This film puts some things in historically accurate context in cultural meanness; how true lowlifes mixed with settlers - both Euro & Indian - played out in cruel ways when good tribes/settlers met up with criminal rogues away from the help of any type of government defense.
It definitely wasn't exactly as free as anyone wants to pretend.
This film captures that the mental health problems of just a few always resulting in big wars.
The script and actors pulling off such a high quality effort ON FILM is something that could NOT be done today.
It's a bit plodding and complex, but truly ruthless human behavior that definitely would be how things were for many in rural settings.
Criminals if all skin tones were the biggest problem...no laws to adhere to, mass slaughter of herds for furs because textile fabrics from cotton picking hadn't been established yet nationally. Yes, Union Soldiers probably helped emancipate slaves wearing slave labor uniforms. Appropriately so, given the result, more reasons emancipation was mandatory. Only possible by a noble Central Government.
This film puts some things in historically accurate context in cultural meanness; how true lowlifes mixed with settlers - both Euro & Indian - played out in cruel ways when good tribes/settlers met up with criminal rogues away from the help of any type of government defense.
It definitely wasn't exactly as free as anyone wants to pretend.
Mark Stevens and John Lupton play a pair looking for a white renegade who is
stirring up the Sioux. Stevens and Lupton each have their own reasons and own agenda for being on this ques.
This is a truly dull western and frankly the only time it comes to life is when Larry Storch gives a performance drawn from those old Frito Bandito commercials. I haven't heard that lousy an accent since Humphrey Bogart in Virginia City.
Few saw this because much better westerns were done on television at this time.
This is a truly dull western and frankly the only time it comes to life is when Larry Storch gives a performance drawn from those old Frito Bandito commercials. I haven't heard that lousy an accent since Humphrey Bogart in Virginia City.
Few saw this because much better westerns were done on television at this time.
Two reasons to comment on this ultra-cheapo made at the height of TV's Western craze. The film's biggest star is the wind machine that blows for almost the entire 70 minutes, even gusting away the ghostly-looking credits as they crawl by! I guess the latter was an insider joke. But actually the constant wind serves a couple of "higher" purposes-- to lend supposed atmosphere, and to mask the SoCal scrublands so close to LA, you can almost hear the traffic noise. The other reason, is to scope out the absolutely worst imitation of a Mexican outlaw in Hollywood's long and dishonorable history of "ethnic types". The dishonor here goes to Larry Storch-- yeah, that Larry Storch of the buffoonish F Troop TV series. After seeing him here grinding teeth and mangling accents, you can understand why he went into burlesque comedy. There's also an "Indian chief" so obviously Anglo, it's like putting a feathered headdress on Ozzie Nelson, while the main bad guy is played by a professional wrestler, whose cartoonish sneer suggests he's still doing his ring act. In fact, the most convincing thing about this movie is John Lupton's cough. I expected a lung to come up any moment on a cascade of blood.
Of course, it's easy to mock a cheap misfire like Gun Fever that likely played in 1 or 2 remote drive-in's where necking teenagers hardly cared what was on screen. In fairness to the record, actor-director Mark Stevens had a strong hand in two above-average cheapos-- Timetable and Cry Vengeance-- showing that with the right material (especially cast), he could turn out a decent product. Nonetheless, this campy flop is only for those of us addicted to The Western Channel.
Of course, it's easy to mock a cheap misfire like Gun Fever that likely played in 1 or 2 remote drive-in's where necking teenagers hardly cared what was on screen. In fairness to the record, actor-director Mark Stevens had a strong hand in two above-average cheapos-- Timetable and Cry Vengeance-- showing that with the right material (especially cast), he could turn out a decent product. Nonetheless, this campy flop is only for those of us addicted to The Western Channel.
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Bitter is the Ride
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 23m(83 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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