When his town-drunk father is killed by the Sully brothers, gunfighter Blaine Madden exacts his revenge but has to flee, aided by a young aspiring gunslinger, when the sheriff tries to arres... Read allWhen his town-drunk father is killed by the Sully brothers, gunfighter Blaine Madden exacts his revenge but has to flee, aided by a young aspiring gunslinger, when the sheriff tries to arrest him.When his town-drunk father is killed by the Sully brothers, gunfighter Blaine Madden exacts his revenge but has to flee, aided by a young aspiring gunslinger, when the sheriff tries to arrest him.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Rodolfo Hoyos Jr.
- Miguel
- (as Rodolpho Hoyos)
Natividad Vacío
- Quid
- (as Natividad Vacio)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Two veterans of the B western movie genre Rory Calhoun and Rod Cameron team up for The Gun Hawk. Cameron plays an upright sheriff who saw some promise in Rory Calhoun and wanted to make him his deputy. But Calhoun preferred the dark side and became a notorious gunfighter.
Calhoun is back in Cameron's town for some personal business. But a gunfight that resulted in the accidental killing of his father sends Calhoun on a vengeance quest rather than let the sheriff handle it. He kills the two shooters and now has Cameron and his deputy Morgan Woodward after him. Cameron wounds him in the right arm, Calhoun's shooting arm.
But Calhoun has another scheme in mind. He's the kingpin in a town called Sanctuary, an outlaw town. Calhoun's also got his girl friend Ruta Lee there as well. He'll need her presence as his gun hand is out of commission.
Both Cameron and Calhoun are shown to good advantage, Calhoun having the more complex part in The Gun Hawk. Also look for a nice performance by Rod Lauren as a young kid who both Calhoun and Cameron are courting. Yet another young man of promise.
Definitely a must for fans of the B western.
Calhoun is back in Cameron's town for some personal business. But a gunfight that resulted in the accidental killing of his father sends Calhoun on a vengeance quest rather than let the sheriff handle it. He kills the two shooters and now has Cameron and his deputy Morgan Woodward after him. Cameron wounds him in the right arm, Calhoun's shooting arm.
But Calhoun has another scheme in mind. He's the kingpin in a town called Sanctuary, an outlaw town. Calhoun's also got his girl friend Ruta Lee there as well. He'll need her presence as his gun hand is out of commission.
Both Cameron and Calhoun are shown to good advantage, Calhoun having the more complex part in The Gun Hawk. Also look for a nice performance by Rod Lauren as a young kid who both Calhoun and Cameron are courting. Yet another young man of promise.
Definitely a must for fans of the B western.
The Gun Hawk is directed by Edward Ludwig and collectively written by Jo Heims, Richard Bernstein and Max Steeber. It stars Rory Calhoun, Rod Cameron, Ruta Lee, Rod Lauren, Morgan Woodward and Robert J. Wilke. Music is by Jimmy Haskell and cinematography by Paul Vogel.
Gunslinger Blaine Madden (Calhoun) is pursued by the law after a shoot out he was forced into results in him killing two men. With young protégée Reb Roan (Lauren) in tow, Madden makes his way to the town of Sanctuary, a place that ultimately holds the fate cards of the man known as El gavilán.
Still trying to reform the world Ben?
It's pretty stock formula on a thematic front, and for sure there's some creakiness in the script and from some of the actors around Calhoun, but there's a big pay off here. It's something of a rare little Western this one, out of Allied Artists it proves to be one of the better B Westerns from the company. The main interest value comes with the burgeoning relationship between the aged gunslinger and his hot headed punk companion. It's through this relationship that the finale gets its emotional wallop, something which lifts the picture out of the ordinary.
Sanctuary. If you kill there you have no place else to go.
On the outskirts of the relationship between Blaine and Reb there is the lawmen in pursuit, one is wise and has a soft spot for Madden, the other is angry and only sees death for Madden as a positive result. Into the mix comes Ruta Lee (ravishing in looks, staid in acting) as the love interest, though it's nice to report that this strand of the story never cloys and in fact enhances the Madden character arc. Robert J. Wilke and Lane Bradford file in for villain duties, with the former energetic and doing a nice line in brash outlaw who is destined for a fall.
Back off. BACK OFF!
In spite of being able to spot the obvious cheap aspects of the production, the tech credits are rather decent. There's some nice outdoor photography from the Bronson Canyon locale, set design is colourful and costuming is very pleasing. On the flip-side, though, Haskell's music becomes repetitious and therefore irritating, while the make-up department go over board for the key scene at the end. But with Calhoun turning in a very effective ghoulish performance and that finale of some great reward, The Gun Hawk is worthy of being better known and supported. 7/10
Gunslinger Blaine Madden (Calhoun) is pursued by the law after a shoot out he was forced into results in him killing two men. With young protégée Reb Roan (Lauren) in tow, Madden makes his way to the town of Sanctuary, a place that ultimately holds the fate cards of the man known as El gavilán.
Still trying to reform the world Ben?
It's pretty stock formula on a thematic front, and for sure there's some creakiness in the script and from some of the actors around Calhoun, but there's a big pay off here. It's something of a rare little Western this one, out of Allied Artists it proves to be one of the better B Westerns from the company. The main interest value comes with the burgeoning relationship between the aged gunslinger and his hot headed punk companion. It's through this relationship that the finale gets its emotional wallop, something which lifts the picture out of the ordinary.
Sanctuary. If you kill there you have no place else to go.
On the outskirts of the relationship between Blaine and Reb there is the lawmen in pursuit, one is wise and has a soft spot for Madden, the other is angry and only sees death for Madden as a positive result. Into the mix comes Ruta Lee (ravishing in looks, staid in acting) as the love interest, though it's nice to report that this strand of the story never cloys and in fact enhances the Madden character arc. Robert J. Wilke and Lane Bradford file in for villain duties, with the former energetic and doing a nice line in brash outlaw who is destined for a fall.
Back off. BACK OFF!
In spite of being able to spot the obvious cheap aspects of the production, the tech credits are rather decent. There's some nice outdoor photography from the Bronson Canyon locale, set design is colourful and costuming is very pleasing. On the flip-side, though, Haskell's music becomes repetitious and therefore irritating, while the make-up department go over board for the key scene at the end. But with Calhoun turning in a very effective ghoulish performance and that finale of some great reward, The Gun Hawk is worthy of being better known and supported. 7/10
Edward Ludwig was mainly known for his adventures yarns: CARIBBEAN, WAKE OF THE RED WITCH, JIVARO, SMUGGLER'S ISLAND, FLAME OF THE ISLANDS, though he also gave some other genres stuff, horror: BLACK SCORPION; crime. LAST GANGSTER; and war/ FIGHTING SEABEES; Also I admit a couple of westerns such as VANQUISHED and the one I am talking about now. This is a typical mid sixties western, not speaking of those starring the Duke, directed by the likes of Burt Kennedy or Andy McLaglen in the pure forties, fifties and Jack Ford tradition. No I speak of those westerns which were somewhere the transition between Ford and Peckinpah. Westerns with a bit of bittersweet taste and melancholy; for instance Dick Thorpe - also last stand, what a coincidence - THE LAST CHALLENGE - with of course nearly the same scheme as GUNHAWK, or those B westerns produced by Paramount pictures and AC Lyles, during also the early sixties, and starring old timers such as George Montgomery, Yvonne de Carlo, Richard Arlen. And don't forget last Spencer Gordon Bennet's film, - one of the most famous and prolific serial maker with Bill Witney, who, for his last feature, as like Thorpe and Ludwig, gave us two tremendous little films, BOUNTY KILLER, and REQUIEM FOR A GUNFIGHTER. In one of them, Dan Duryea gave one of his best performances ever as a pure anti hero, who announced the downbeat late sixties and early seventies. So GUNHAWK is for me a terrific piece of work, especially for the B genre. Which i have always loved.
A heavy, self important western (i.e. Trying too hard to "say something" significant about the human yadda yadda). Most of the oppressiveness comes from Jo Heims' too talky, too expositional and definitely too philosophical screenplay but Jimmie Haskell's score is not far behind and director Edward Ludwig, in his last film, is only too happy to attach himself to Heims/Haskell. As is Rory Calhoun, a poor man's Robert Taylor, Ruta Lee, a poor woman's Stella Stevens, and Rod Laurin, a very poor boy's James Dean. About the only person who manages to rise above the dreck is Rod Cameron, doing a more than passable aging lawman. Not Joel McRae in "Ride The High Country", which this film wishes it was, but close. Give it a C.
Reb Roan is released by Sheriff Ben Corey after a night in the drunk tank. Corey would like to reform him, but he's not willing. Gunslinger Blaine Madden (Rory Calhoun) returns to town after three years. The Sully brothers grab his drunken father and force him into an unfair gunfight. The brothers kill his father and he's looking for revenge. Ben insists that he should move on. Sanctuary is a hideaway settlement where all gunmen are honor-bound to not kill each other.
This starts with an interesting premise. In modern terms, this is Hotel Artemis. The movie seems to set up for some great action, but the story goes a different way. It wants to do something philosophical and the movie stalls out in the middle. I do appreciate where it goes. It's just not what I wanted.
This starts with an interesting premise. In modern terms, this is Hotel Artemis. The movie seems to set up for some great action, but the story goes a different way. It wants to do something philosophical and the movie stalls out in the middle. I do appreciate where it goes. It's just not what I wanted.
Did you know
- TriviaFinal film of director Edward Ludwig.
- GoofsIn the taverna (bar) in Sanctuary, Curly confronts Johnny Flanders. In the course of their conversation, Johnny mistakenly refers to Curly as "Johnny": "Now look, Johnny, nobody's gonna kill nobody in this town."
- ConnectionsReferenced in The Big Snatch (1971)
- SoundtracksA Searcher For Love
Music and lyrics by Robert P. Marcucci and Russell Faith (as Russ Faith)
Sung by Rod Lauren
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Stadt ohne Sheriff
- Filming locations
- Bronson Caves, Bronson Canyon, Griffith Park - 4730 Crystal Springs Drive, Los Angeles, California, USA(Sheriff Corey enters outlaw hideout)
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 32m(92 min)
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
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