Three Violent People

Three Violent People
3violentpeople.jpg
DVD Cover
Directed byRudolph Maté
Produced byHugh Brown
Written byJames Edward Grant
Story by
  • Leonard Praskins
  • Barney Slater
Starring
Music byWalter Scharf
CinematographyLoyal Griggs
Edited byAlma Macrorie
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
  • February 9, 1957 (1957-02-09)
Running time
99 min
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Box office$1.2 million (US rentals)[1][2]

Three Violent People is a 1957 American Western film directed by Rudolph Maté and starring Charlton Heston, Anne Baxter, Gilbert Roland, Tom Tryon, Forrest Tucker, Bruce Bennett, and Elaine Stritch.[3]

Plot

Former Confederate cavalryman Capt. Colt Saunders comes home to Texas from the war. Carpetbaggers have taken control of his town, including a corrupt Yankee tax commissioner named Harrison and his deputy Cable. When he sees a Yankee insult a Southern belle named Lorna Hunter, the gallant Colt comes to her aid. He isn't aware of her past as a St. Louis dance-hall girl (prostitute) or her devious golddigging nature. Colt is knocked cold and Lorna takes him back to his room, where she steals $900 from him. Her former employer, saloon owner Ruby LaSalle, lets her know that Colt is a wealthy rancher, so Lorna hatches a scheme. She returns his missing $900 and impresses him with her "honesty." Colt falls in love and marries her.

His ranch, the Bar S, has fallen on hard times. Loyal grand vaquero Innocencio Ortega, who looked out for the spread with his five sons while Colt was off to war, says that Yankees have been rustling their horses with no intervention by the law. Harrison is using a usurious tax law passed by the provisional government to seize all the large ranches in the district. Colt's black sheep brother, nicknamed Cinch, shows up to claim a share of the ranch. Cinch is not trustworthy, but Colt has felt obligated to him since a childhood accident when he lost an arm. Cinch is allowed to help run the ranch.

Lorna comes to love Colt but one of Harrison's minions, Massey, recognizes her from her days in St. Louis. Harrison and Cable serve Colt a writ for $16,000 in newly assessed taxes. They plot to have Massey insult Lorna so that they can shoot Colt when he goes to defend her. Innocencio and his sons foil the plot but a disillusioned Colt orders Lorna to leave, throwing her gold coins in "payment for services rendered." Cinch grabs the opportunity to make off with a hidden herd of valuable horses Colt needs to pay the taxes, enlisting the embittered Lorna to help him.

Colt tracks them down, sending Lorna back to the Bar S and warning Cinch to never set foot on the ranch again. Innocencio tells him that Lorna is pregnant and Colt offers her the value of his horses if she agrees to stay and give birth, leaving the child with him. Meanwhile, Cinch goes to Harrison proposing to kill Colt for him and grab control of the Bar S as partners. On the sly, Harrison and Cable plot to also murder Cinch, Lorna and everyone else at the ranch who could be a witness.

Colt and Innocencio have a falling out over his treatment of Lorna and the foreman prepares to leave with his sons. Lorna gives Colt the child as agreed but refuses to accept the offered bribe. Cinch returns, planning to provoke Colt into a gunfight. Things don't go according to plan, and when Harrison and his gang arrive, Cinch and Cable shoot each other in the fight that ensues. Harrison and Massey are also killed. Afterwards, Colt has a change of heart and reconciles with Lorna.

Cast

Reception

Critical response

The New York Times review of the film was: "THREE VIOLENT PEOPLE, the Paramount Western in VistaVision and color that opened Saturday at the Globe, hoards most of its violence for a rootin'-shootin' finale. But not the talk, assuredly. Even more tiring is the leaden baton-wielding of director Rudolph Maté. [...] Charlton Heston, Anne Baxter and Gilbert Roland are co-starred, and literally hog-tied, in this Hugh Brown production penned by James Edward Grant. Could things have been different? Very easily. For one thing, the cast is small but trim, including such hearties as Bruce Bennett, Forrest Tucker and that hardiest of hearties, Barton MacLane. Add two personable young newcomers from Broadway, Tom Tryon and Elaine Stritch, whose brief portrait of a saloon hostess all but salvages the film. There have been worse plots. A nice enough saloon transient; Miss Baxter, tricks a stalwart ranch heir, Mr. Heston, into marriage and settles down with him for true love and happiness, she thinks. Comes trouble—to wit, his one-armed psychotic young brother, Mr. Tryon, and a gang of greedy Reconstruction officials, Yankees. And with the bride's seemingly mild past disclosed, Mr. Heston all but heaves her off the old rancho."[4]

Release

Three Violent People was released in theatres on February 9, 1957.[4] The film was released on DVD April 19, 2005, by Paramount Home Media Distribution.[5]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Top Grosses of 1957", Variety, 8 January 1958: 30
  2. ^ McDonald 2013, p. 2000.
  3. ^ "Three Violent People". Turner Classic Movies. Atlanta: Turner Broadcasting System (Time Warner). Retrieved May 14, 2017.
  4. ^ a b "Screen: Texas Lethargy; 'Three Violent People' Has Debut at Globe". The New York Times. New York City: The New York Times Company. February 11, 1957. Retrieved May 14, 2017.
  5. ^ Three Violent People (DVD). Hollywood: Paramount Home Media Distribution. April 19, 2005. ASIN B0007TKGYY. Retrieved May 14, 2017.

Sources

External links


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