fredcdobbs5
Sterling Hayden is a deputy out for revenge when a bandit gang murders his friend and mentor, an old-time marshal. Yvonne DeCarlo is a dance-hall floozy headed for California who runs into Hayden on the trail and eventually falls for him (after he pushes her around and even slaps her a couple of times). The Arizona scenery--it was shot around Sedona--is attractive and there's a good, for the most part, cast of western veterans: Robert J. Wilke, Lane Chandler, John Pickard and Zachary Scott (who seems wildly out of place as a dandified bounty hunter). But the story is trite, the dialogue is lame and the only time the movie actually comes alive for any amount of time is during the bursts of action, which veteran director Lesley Selander handles with his usual skill at these things. Other than that, there's not much to recommend this film. Hayden pretty much sleepwalks through the part, and although DeCarlo is supposed to be his love interest, they in fact have no chemistry whatsoever and whatever "romance" there is comes across as forced, not helped by DeCarlo's overacting. It's pretty much a run-of-the-mill western--better than some, not as good as most. It's not totally without merit, but doesn't have enough to recommend it.
PamelaShort
Shotgun is another revenge themed western, well scripted and performed. Sterling Hayden plays Clay Hardin, the man out for revenge and his hard-bitten, callous character holds the viewers attention. Along the the way he picks up Abby ( Yvonne DeCarlo ), a tough and sassy saloon girl, who doesn't think much of Clay at first, but soon finds herself warming towards him. Soon they come to the aid of Reb Carlton ( Zachary Scott ) a sleazy bounty hunter, who happens to be hunting after the same men as Hardin. Some tense moments develop between Hardin and Carlton over the triangle relationship now simmering over the desirable Abby. Shotgun is not a sappy cowboy picture, it has an adult themed story-line with some violence and action to keep it interesting. Like so many westerns from the 1950s, Shotgun features beautiful Technicolor vistas, and offers the audience satisfactory entertainment.
bkoganbing
Shotgun is one of the best directorial efforts of Lesley Selander who has his name on about a gazillion B westerns, a large percentage of them the Hopalong Cassidy series. He brings a love of the genre to this ambitious Allied Artists films shot on location in Arizona with a fine trio of stars, Sterling Hayden, Yvonne DeCarlo, and Zachary Scott.Guy Presscott should have left well enough alone because he decided to gun down marshal Lane Chandler on the street of his town. He also had his deputy Sterling Hayden in mind, but Hayden got one of Presscott's henchmen instead. After that Presscott goes about his usual villainy which includes selling guns to the Apaches.Presscott took on the first mission because he blamed Chandler and Hayden for a stretch in prison. He should have nailed Hayden when he had a chance because now Hayden has a mission, to avenge the killing of the man who had rescued him from outlaw life.Along the way Hayden picks up as traveling companions mixed racial Yvonne DeCarlo and cynical bounty hunter Zachary Scott. It's not a harmonious trio by any means. Scott has some really good lines in this film and gives one of his best screen performances.The film has some beautiful Arizona scenery as it was shot in the desert country of Sedona. The final encounter with Hayden and Presscott features something I've never seen before or since in a western, a duel with shotguns. Really unique and original.Try not to miss this one if it's broadcast.
zardoz-13
Veteran western B-movie director Lesley Selander has helmed more than his share of westerns. He got his start with cowboy hero Buck Jones in 1936 with "Ride 'Em Cowboy," and then later made a string of horse operas with William Boyd better known as 'Hopalong Cassidy.' Most of them are forgettable unless you like westerns, but the Sterling Hayden & Yvonne De Carlo oater "Shotgun" is okay. Like the best Selander westerns, this Allied Artists release was lensed against the picturesque backdrop of colorful Sedona, Arizona, and future Oscar nominated lenser Ellsworth Fredericks, who got his nod for "Sayonara," makes it worth looking at for not only the stunning scenery but the pictorial compositions. Interesting, veteran western actor Rory Calhoun helped pen the screenplay with Clark Reynolds, who had inked three episodes of Calhoun's own CBS-TV sagebrusher series "The Texan." Reynolds also wrote the teleplays for seven other western series, including "Cheyenne" and "Tombstone Territory." Later, Reynolds wrote the screen story for the Sean Connery western "Shalako" as well as the Spaghetti western "A Man Called Gringo." Mind you, some of the dialogue is quotable. At one point, our hero warns a bounty hunter that if he moves sideways, he will kill him. Producer John C. Champion reportedly supplemented the Calhoun & Reynolds' screenplay. Later, Champion produced the European-lensed western "The Texican" with Audie Murphy that—not surprisingly—Lesley Selander directed in his customary workman-like style.Basically, "Shotgun" is a revenge-themed western. Clay Hardin (Sterling Hayden of "Top Gun") hits the trail after the dastards who murdered Hardin's mentor, Marshal Mark Fletcher (Lane Chandler of "Flash Gordon's Trip to Mars"), in cold blood. Now, you can understand why Clay not only totes a shotgun in addition to his other firearms, but also why the movie draws its title from a firearm. The villainous Ben Thompson (Guy Prescott of "The Tall Stranger") and Bentley (Robert J. Wilke of "The Magnificent Seven"), ride into town and await Fletcher in the local saloon. Thompson hates both Fletcher and Clay because they sent him to prison for six years. If this weren't bad enough, Thompson plans to run contraband Winchester repeating rifles to the Apaches. As Fletcher approaches the saloon, Thompson gives him both shotgun barrels in the belly. Against opposition from a girl, Aletha (Angela Greene of "Cinderella Jones"), who had arranged for Clay to take a white-collar job, Clay chases Thompson. He catches up with Bentley who had quit riding with Thompson. The scene where Clay finds Bentley staked out in the scorching sun is pretty gritty. You see, the sadistic Indians have tied Bentley down to earth with shrinking leather straps. Eventually, Bentley will be drawn up to within striking distance of the grand-daddy of all rattlesnakes while a helpless woman, Abby (Yvonne De Carlo of "McLintock!"), struggles against her own restraints. The Native Americans have tied her to a scrub tree nearby to watch Bentley's agonizing demise. Later, Abby admits that she hasn't led the most luminous of lives as a dance-hall gal. Predictably, Clay rescues them, cutting Abby loose first and savoring Bentley's predicament long enough to make the villain really squirm in terror.Not long after Clay saves Bentley's bacon, the ungrateful desperado gets the drop on him. Unfortunately, for poor Bentley, he makes a mistake and Clay plugs him. Down the river drifts Bentley's body. Later, an Indian retrieves the sodden corpse and takes it to Thompson. Meantime, as Clay and Abby are getting up from a night on the range, they hear galloping horses and spot a white rider pursued by a swarm of angry redskins. Clay knocks a couple out of the saddle and winds up saving the rider from losing his scalp. The grateful rider, Reb Carlton (Zachary Scott of "Mildred Pierce") is a loquacious bounty hunter. In the 1950s' westerns, bounty hunters constituted the scourge of the earth and in a later gunfight Clay complains to Reb about his predilection for shooting men in the back. At one point along the trail, Reb makes some disparaging remarks about Abby as she hides in the brush to freshen up, and Clay beats him to a pulp and nearly drowns in the river for his salacious comments. Abby has to wade into the water to restrain Clay. Thompson and his two gunmen hit a stagecoach relay station and Thompson leaves them behind to prepare a lead reception for Clay.Clay and Reb gun down Thompson's two men, while the outlaw heads off to the Indian camp to palaver with Delgadito (Paul Marion of "Fort Vengeance") who is impatient about the Winchesters that Thompson has promised him. Meanwhile, Clay leaves Reb and Abby at station. Abby has grown attached to Clay. She persuades Reb to take her to him before Clay gets to Thompson. Reb savors the prospect of catching up with Thompson for the bounty. Clay threatens to kill Reb if he doesn't take Abby back. Reb malingers on the trail with Abby and Apaches jump them. After roping Reb to a tree, they skewer him with an arrow and leave him to die. The redskins abduct Abby. Clay rides into Delgadito's camp. The Indians arrange things so that Thompson and Clay have to blast it out in a duel with shotguns on horseback. Predictably, Thompson cuts loose first and shoots Clay's horse. When Thompson tries to flee, Delgadito kills him with a lance."Shotgun" gets marginally violent at intervals for a 1950s' western. Selander keeps the action moving along in this sturdy oater without any interference. The Clay and Abby romance is held to a minimum. The lean Hayden makes a rugged protagonist with De Carlo around for eye candy. Slippery-tongued Zachery Scott excels as a no-good bounty hunter who has to commit suicide rather than suffer a slow, torturous death. Selander doesn't waste time with philosophical messages and the characterization is rudimentary. Nevertheless, western fans should find this 80-minute, Technicolor oater worth its time.