A cowboy injured fighting bank robbers awakens to find he's the new marshal. He faces off against the corrupt town banker who's exploiting the locals.A cowboy injured fighting bank robbers awakens to find he's the new marshal. He faces off against the corrupt town banker who's exploiting the locals.A cowboy injured fighting bank robbers awakens to find he's the new marshal. He faces off against the corrupt town banker who's exploiting the locals.
- Nominated for 1 Oscar
- 1 nomination total
Ray Bennett
- Messenger
- (as Raphael Bennett)
Gertrude Astor
- Blonde Townswoman
- (uncredited)
Walter Baldwin
- Judge Lorrimer
- (uncredited)
Ted Billings
- Barfly
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
After a twenty year career that dated back to the silent era, Richard Dix has the good fortune to find the landlady at the hotel where he's staying is the charming young Jane Wyatt; who doubles up as the main attraction at the local saloon.
Veteran western cameraman Russell Harlan gets maximum value out pretty basic sets which don't last long during a furious punch-up.
Albert Dekker and Victor Jory make an unlikely pair of siblings. Eugene Pallette does his usual imitation of a bullfrog. The single most sour note, however, has to be Willie Best rolling his eyes in the sort of stereotypical role that reminds you that the film is over eighty years old.
Veteran western cameraman Russell Harlan gets maximum value out pretty basic sets which don't last long during a furious punch-up.
Albert Dekker and Victor Jory make an unlikely pair of siblings. Eugene Pallette does his usual imitation of a bullfrog. The single most sour note, however, has to be Willie Best rolling his eyes in the sort of stereotypical role that reminds you that the film is over eighty years old.
Richard Dix finds himself elected sheriff of a small town run by land baron Albert Dekker after helping foil a robbery in this B-Western from the '40s. Dekker's the one who had him elected in the expectation that he would become just another of his puppets - but this is Dickie Dix we're talking about, and he's not about to be any man's doormat, even if he does look a little careworn at this stage of his career (death from heart attack was only 6 years away). The widely under-praised Victor Jory plays Dekker's brother, a gambler whose uncertain allegiance to either side makes him by far the film's most interesting character.
This is a decent and generally unremarkable western. But, because it stars Richard Dix, it comes off a bit better. While not a household name, Dix was a very fine actor--mostly because he played a great 'everyman'--a believable and rugged guy who was no pretty-boy. Solid, dependable and making the most of his material, he pretty much makes this film worth watching.
The film begins well, as it's pretty creative. Dix is a stranger in a new town and soon after arriving, there's a bank robbery. He happens to be in the right place at the time and is able to thwart the robbers. He gets them but is injured in the process. Here's the twist--when he awakens, he hears the crowd outside his window celebrating the election of a new sheriff...and that sheriff turns out to be HIM! Too good to be true? Yep. That's because a powerful rich guy has his own reasons for having the stranger become sheriff. Fortunately, Dix's character is on dummy. What's next? See this one yourself.
Overall, not a bad little film. Despite a VERY familiar plot, Dix and some decent baddies (Victor Jory and Albert Dekker) are able to elevate this one to more than just another time-passer.
The film begins well, as it's pretty creative. Dix is a stranger in a new town and soon after arriving, there's a bank robbery. He happens to be in the right place at the time and is able to thwart the robbers. He gets them but is injured in the process. Here's the twist--when he awakens, he hears the crowd outside his window celebrating the election of a new sheriff...and that sheriff turns out to be HIM! Too good to be true? Yep. That's because a powerful rich guy has his own reasons for having the stranger become sheriff. Fortunately, Dix's character is on dummy. What's next? See this one yourself.
Overall, not a bad little film. Despite a VERY familiar plot, Dix and some decent baddies (Victor Jory and Albert Dekker) are able to elevate this one to more than just another time-passer.
No need to recap the plot. Though conventional in most respects, this western does have some imaginative wrinkles. The Victor Jory character (Jeff) is a real novelty for the western format. Unlike most oaters, we can't tell where his loyalties lie. His intentions remain something of an enigma, which adds greatly to the plot since we can't be sure what he'll do next. With his unusual looks, Jory is perfectly cast. Then there's the super slick Albert Dekker who uses his extraordinary business guile instead of a six-gun to take over the town. All in all, it's a fine cast of colorful movie veterans, especially the froggish Eugene Palette.
I get the feeling someone in production was aiming for an epic scale western. Consider features like the host of extras, the big shootouts, the massive barroom free-for-all, the cattle stampede that's not all stock shots, along with the well-mounted musical numbers. The trouble is they spent all their money on big events but filmed in the very un-epic LA area scrublands, which gives the visuals a flat, pedestrian appearance. The story may be grandly conceived but the canvas is ordinary, at best. All in all, it's an interesting, slightly offbeat western.
I get the feeling someone in production was aiming for an epic scale western. Consider features like the host of extras, the big shootouts, the massive barroom free-for-all, the cattle stampede that's not all stock shots, along with the well-mounted musical numbers. The trouble is they spent all their money on big events but filmed in the very un-epic LA area scrublands, which gives the visuals a flat, pedestrian appearance. The story may be grandly conceived but the canvas is ordinary, at best. All in all, it's an interesting, slightly offbeat western.
The producing/directing team of Harry Sherman and George Archaimbaud who turned out a couple dozen Hopalong Cassidy movies moved away from Hoppy and the Bar 20 to give us The Kansan, an independent film from United Artists. This western stars Richard Dix as the Shane like character who takes a hand in stopping a bank robbery by the notorious James gang. Dix gets good and shot up for his troubles, but while he's on the mend he finds he's been elected town marshal.
Engineering his election is town banker Albert Dekker who has many interests, legal and extralegal and he'd like a gun-hand like Dix as marshal to look after those interests. Dekker has cause for regret as Dix takes the job very seriously. Dix also starts courting Jane Wyatt the local innkeeper.
That doesn't sit well with Victor Jory who is Dekker's brother. But Jory plays a lone hand in life as the film unfolds.
Dix's best years on screen were way behind him when he did The Kansan, but he could and does contribute a solid western characterization and gets solid support from the cast. Eugene Palette as a visiting cattle baron looks a bit lost in the western garb, but he works through it.
Western fans will recognize some distinct plot elements the Cecil B. DeMille classic Union Pacific. If you do you know exactly how The Kansan will end.
Engineering his election is town banker Albert Dekker who has many interests, legal and extralegal and he'd like a gun-hand like Dix as marshal to look after those interests. Dekker has cause for regret as Dix takes the job very seriously. Dix also starts courting Jane Wyatt the local innkeeper.
That doesn't sit well with Victor Jory who is Dekker's brother. But Jory plays a lone hand in life as the film unfolds.
Dix's best years on screen were way behind him when he did The Kansan, but he could and does contribute a solid western characterization and gets solid support from the cast. Eugene Palette as a visiting cattle baron looks a bit lost in the western garb, but he works through it.
Western fans will recognize some distinct plot elements the Cecil B. DeMille classic Union Pacific. If you do you know exactly how The Kansan will end.
Did you know
- TriviaFilm debut of Lorraine Clark.
- Quotes
Josh Hudkins: [to Bonniwell] Marshal, I'm the mayor here. Aren't you overstepping your authority?
- ConnectionsFeatured in Doctor Who: The Tenth Planet: Episode 2 (1966)
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 19m(79 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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