The Hard Man

1957 "He's Got the Southwest...Over a Gun-Barrel!"
The Hard Man
6.1| 1h20m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 01 December 1957 Released
Producted By: Columbia Pictures
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Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

A Texas Ranger turns deputy sheriff; a woman wants him to kill her cattle-baron husband.

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classicsoncall Guy Madison made this picture near the end of his series run in "The Adventures of Wild Bill Hickok". I'm currently watching "The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp" running on Encore Westerns, and trying to decide who the better looking lawman was, Madison as Hickok or Hugh O'Brian as Earp. I guess it could be a toss up, so I bring it up for the reader to decide.Now if Michael Landon appeared here, it might have been a three way contest. Instead, his 'Bonanza' Dad Lorne Green played the quintessential bad guy/town boss who didn't like to get his own hands dirty, so he hired out gunslingers to do his nasty work. None of them proved to be a match for Madison's character, Steve Burden, who outdrew and out fought every henchman Rice Martin (Green) threw up against him. That included his wife Fern Martin (Valerie French), who had no problem using up men like paper towels and throwing them on the scrap heap.The story plays out rather formulaic, but what bothered me were the couple of times Steve Burden allowed himself to get up close and personal with the shrewish Fern Martin (French). I guess if part of his plan was to draw her out to expose her husband's rustling operation and implication in a friend's death at the beginning of the story, then it worked. But even if it hadn't, Fern made the same fatal mistake a lot of outlaws do when she shot her husband with three witnesses present. Losing one's head like that is always a bad career move.Since I brought up the Wyatt Earp TV series earlier, keep a sharp eye out for a couple of that show's regulars in the cast. Myron Healey doesn't last long in this story when he's shot by Burden to open the picture; he portrayed Doc Holliday for a couple of seasons along side O'Brian. Also on hand was that show's Old Man Clanton, Trevor Bardette, here playing an opportunistic weasel by the name of Willis, picking up stray jobs and booze for pay from Rice Martin. He's the guy shot off the roof by El Solito town sheriff Harker (Robert Burton), in a move described by Burden as 'the best shot he's ever seen'.
score-10 Just the thing for a lazy Sunday afternoon - like all those TV westerns from 50s/60s which this reviewer found when perhaps more impressionable - when men were Men, spoke deep, dressed clean and drew sixguns easy fast. The story/plot in detail is (surely ?) corny ridiculous soap - to this nonAmerican anyhow - but, once that is accepted, this film can entertain as a straight "shoot 'em, cowboy" with a hero in the Hollywood tradition of the (semi-official) vigilante from the Lone Ranger to the Dark Knight. Definitely competently acted and made q well enough, this film is a nice reminder of how the fun Western used to be. Canadian Lorne Green went on to greater fame; going by this movie, Madison and French were unlucky not to do same.
swithers54 This is a better western than some made in the 50's. Guy Madison is good as the reluctant fast gun. Lorne Greene (pre-Bonanza) is excellent as a thoroughly ruthless land baron. Valerie French is pretty. Myron Healy who has been in countless pictures is not even credited but is the reason for Guy Madison to go to the town where Lorne Greene is the boss. Madison does a good job of showing how a lawman can sometimes be as ruthless as the outlaws if not careful. He is forced to kill his friend and then finds out the friend may have been framed as a killer. He rides to the town where his friend committed the crime and runs into a lot of road blocks (most notably Lorne Greene's character) as well as a beautiful woman that he is not sure of.
Terence Allen The Hard Man does not stand out as anything unique, but it is an entertaining western that can hold your interest during viewing. Guy Madison does fine as the stalwart lawman/gunfighter brought in to clean up the town. Valerie French has the requisite beauty as the femme fatale, although it sounds as if her voice was dubbed by another actress. The greatest revelation about the Hard Man is seeing a pre-Ben Cartwright Lorne Greene play a ruthless, utterly despicable villain. This was made several years before Bonanza began, and Greene makes the most of playing the bad guy. This alone makes the movie worth watching. The Hard Man is a fine Western to watch to pass the time. The only thing noteworthy is to watch this while comparing Greene's character to his future Ben Cartwright role.