Support Your Local Gunfighter
Support Your Local Gunfighter | |
---|---|
Directed by | Burt Kennedy |
Written by | James Edward Grant and, uncredited, Burt Kennedy[1] |
Produced by | Bill Finnegan Burt Kennedy |
Starring | James Garner Suzanne Pleshette Harry Morgan Jack Elam John Dehner Marie Windsor Joan Blondell Kathleen Freeman Ellen Corby |
Cinematography | Harry Stradling Jr. |
Edited by | William B. Gulick |
Music by | Jack Elliot Allyn Ferguson |
Distributed by | United Artists |
Release date |
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Running time | 91 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Support Your Local Gunfighter is a 1971 American comic Western film directed by Burt Kennedy and starring James Garner. It was written by James Edward Grant. The film shares many cast and crew members and plot elements with the earlier Support Your Local Sheriff!, but is not a sequel. It actually parodies Yojimbo and its remake A Fistful of Dollars, using the basic storyline of a stranger who wanders into a feuding town and pretends to work as an enforcer for both sides.
Garner later wrote that the film was, "not as good as Support Your Local Sheriff".[2]
Plot[]
Latigo Smith, a gambler and confidence man, is traveling by train in frontier-era Colorado with the rich and powerful Goldie. Goldie wants desperately to marry him, a fate he wants to avoid. He sneaks off the train at Purgatory, a small mining town.
He discovers that two mining companies, run by bitter rivals Taylor Barton and Colonel Ames, are vying to find a "mother lode" of gold buried somewhere nearby. Dynamite blasts periodically rock the town to its foundations.
Latigo consults the town doctor about an embarrassing problem that is not immediately revealed, but turns out to be a Goldie-related tattoo. Latigo's great weakness is a periodic uncontrollable urge to bet on roulette; he soon loses all of his money playing his "lucky" number, 23. Penniless, he starts romancing local saloon keeper Miss Jenny. Being mistaken for infamous gunslinger "Swifty" Morgan gives Latigo an idea. He talks amiable ne'er-do-well Jug May into impersonating Swifty. Latigo attracts the attention of Patience Barton, the hot-tempered daughter of Taylor, who desperately wants to escape her frontier existence, attend "Miss Hunter's College on the Hudson River, New York, for Young Ladies of Good Families", and live a life of refinement in New York City. When Latigo and Jug side with the Bartons in a dispute, Ames sends a telegram to the real Swifty Morgan, informing him of their deception.
Swifty arrives in town and immediately challenges the hapless Jug to a gunfight, but at the appointed time and place, Latigo is there in his place, sitting atop a donkey loaded with crates of dynamite. Swifty calls Latigo's bluff, but he is startled by the next mine explosion and accidentally shoots himself. The blast also panics the donkey, which charges into the Bartons' saloon. The dynamite explodes, blowing up the building, uncovering the mother lode, and removing Latigo's troublesome tattoo but leaving him otherwise uninjured.
Latigo finally wins big at roulette after betting $10,000 of the Bartons' money on number 23. From the back of a train taking Latigo and Patience to Denver to get married, Jug narrates the outcomes: Patience never does go to Miss Hunter's College, but her seven daughters do; and Jug goes on to become a big star in Italian Westerns.
Cast[]
- James GarnerA as Latigo Smith
- Suzanne Pleshette as Patience Barton
- Harry MorganA as Taylor Barton
- Jack ElamA as Jug May
- John Dehner as Col. Ames
- Marie Windsor as Goldie
- Dick Curtis as Bud Barton
- Dub Taylor as Doc Shultz
- Joan Blondell as Jenny
- Ellen Corby as Abigail Ames
- Kathleen FreemanA as Mrs. Martha Perkins
- Virginia Capers as Effie
- Henry JonesA as Ez
- Ben Cooper as Colorado
- Grady Sutton as Storekeeper
- Pedro Gonzalez Gonzalez as Ortiz
- Chuck Connors as "Swifty" Morgan (uncredited)
A. ^ Also appeared in Support Your Local Sheriff!
Reception[]
Support Your Local Gunfighter received mixed critical reviews. It holds a 62% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on thirteen reviews.[3]
See also[]
References[]
- ^ http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title/24064/Support-Your-Local-Gunfighter/articles.html
- ^ Garner, James; Winokur, Jon (2011). The Garner Files: A Memoir. Simon & Schuster. p. 258.
- ^ https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/support_your_local_gunfighter
External links[]
- 1971 films
- English-language films
- 1970s Western (genre) comedy films
- American films
- American parody films
- American Western (genre) comedy films
- Films directed by Burt Kennedy
- Films scored by Jack Elliott
- 1970s parody films
- Roulette films
- United Artists films
- 1971 comedy films