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Roughshod

Roughshod (1949)

May. 11,1949
|
6.6
|
NR
| Drama Action Western Romance

Rancher Clay and his brother, Steve, head out across the Sonora mountain pass, followed by Lednov, an ex-con seeking revenge on Clay for putting him behind bars. Clay and Steve unexpectedly cross paths with a group of dance hall girls -- including Mary, Marcia and Helen -- whose stagecoach has broken down, and help them get to the nearest ranch, where Lednov unfortunately catches up to Clay.

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Chatverock
1949/05/11

Takes itself way too seriously

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ThedevilChoose
1949/05/12

When a movie has you begging for it to end not even half way through it's pure crap. We've all seen this movie and this characters millions of times, nothing new in it. Don't waste your time.

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Megamind
1949/05/13

To all those who have watched it: I hope you enjoyed it as much as I do.

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Erica Derrick
1949/05/14

By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.

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zardoz-13
1949/05/15

Robert Sterling is a Winchester-toting rancher in "Peyton Place" director Mark Robson's "Roughshod," a romantic western epic, where our stalwart hero finds his fortunes changed by a quartet of women that have been run out of Aspen by social reformers. Clay Phillips (Robert Sterling of "Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea") has nine horses and his little brother Steve (Claude Jarman, Jr., of "The Yearling") and he herding them to their new ranch in Sonora. They encounter a buggy load of prostitutes broken down on the trail to Sonora. Reluctantly, rather than leave them to die by the elements, Clay decides to load their things and them in the back of his wagon and deposit them at the first ranch that they see. Meantime, Sheriff Gardner (Ed Cassidy) warns Clay about the trio of desperadoes that have broken out of prison, shot down three innocent gents, and stolen not only their horses but also their hardware. Actually, this is the first thing that happens in "Roughshod." The man who leads this threesome, Lednov (John Ireland of "Red River" in an outfit that resembles his Red River garb) wants to even up a score with Clay. As it turns out, our hero took part in arresting Lednov because he killed of his best friend. Mary Wells (film noir femme fatale Gloria Grahame of "The Big Heat") and the three of her dancehall girl friends with her, Elaine (Jeff Donnell), Helen (Myrna Dell) and Marcia (Martha Hyer of "The Sons of Katie Elder"), are literally fish out of water on the frontier. One frontiersman (Jeff Cory of "True Grit") helps the women navigate their way down a sloping road. Eventually, the wagon that they were run out of town in breaks down on them, and this is when they meet Clay. Nothing of significance, "Roughshod" is still an above-average oater with strong performances and great photography.

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dbdumonteil
1949/05/16

The first western by Robson who had already made some extraordinary movies (who says they were Val Lewton's work?) such as "the seventh victim" 'the ghost ship" or "bedlam".And his western is quite good ,if not as mind -boggling as his precedent efforts.First of all,Gloria Grahame,who was often cast in films noirs ,shines in her part of a dance hall gal who dreams to be a housewife and to educate her young protégé,Robert Sterling's kid brother:my favorite scenes show her teaching him the alphabet and the "true" culture;it's a destruction of the bad gal cliché;and I love when Sterling tells her that he knows a lot of things she can't teach him: the nature ,the animals,the weather,an empirical knowledge for sure ,but one that is more useful than the culture you get from the books,when you are in the wilderness tracked down by outlaws (John Ireland is the ideal bandit,but his part is underwritten and his relationship with the hero is skimmed over);it seems the director was more interested in the Sterling/Grahame relationship:a hero who is (perhaps?We are not told about it) illiterate but who demands a "respectable" woman for his wife :the other one is just good for a kiss,but you cannot marry a chick with a racy past;his kid brother knows better than he does:the young actor is excellent and endearing.A rare thing in the forties (and in the westerns of the era),the action begins a few seconds before the cast and credits.

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whitec-3
1949/05/17

Gloria Grahame is Roughshod's major attraction, but bonuses are Jeff Corey in a small role, John Ireland as a lean young killer, and Claude Jarman Jr. carrying as serious a teenage role as a western may offer. Robert Sterling honestly manages the male lead. All the supporting roles are a testament to the kind of dependable quality the studios were delivering in the mid-20th century.The most pleasant surprise may be the number of women's roles--the four bar girls, each of whom has her own denouement, including the accidental reunion of one with her decently grieving parents. As other posters have noted, the movie handles such scenes with minimal sentimentality or chatter, so that the strong feminine presence operates within the proper western decorum.As a student of plot, I felt continually (if mildly) impressed by the story's layers and crossings. The bad guys' journey interweaves with the good guys' journey, which involves driving 10 free horses and assuming responsibility for the bar girls who break down on their path. One genre hallmark of a western is the story's geography or landscape. The good guys take another trail to avoid the bad guys, which leads the brassiest of the saloon-girls to hitch up with a gold prospector. The only wince-factor is the dependence on Gloria Grahame's character's reckless driving, but when that results in some of her clothes spilling in the river, those clothes float downstream and signal to the bad guys where the good guys are.A lot happens in about 90 minutes, but it's all a bit subdued like its male lead. Director Mark Robson worked with Orson Welles and Val Lewton, so the quality-floor is high throughout. The best visuals are the long shots through the landscape where the different parties see each other; otherwise the film's composition, in keeping with its feminine content, is tight, personal, and intimate. The final gunfight is modest but, again, honest in its way, like the whole movie.

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bkoganbing
1949/05/18

Roughshod is a B western from RKO Studios where Robert Sterling and his younger brother Claude Jarman are driving a herd of horses to their new ranch. The brothers have been separated for years, but with their parents dying, they're reconnecting in this new venture. On the way they stop to help a group of four saloon girls also moving west for bigger and better opportunities. The girls are Gloria Grahame, Jeff Donnell, Martha Hyer and Myrna Dell. They all went on to have film careers of varying degrees of success and RKO was using this western as an opportunity to exhibit some of the flesh.Sterling also has John Ireland on his trail, an outlaw he wounded and put in jail for several years. He'd probably wait and shoot it out with him like Gary Cooper in High Noon, but with all these responsibilities, the best course is to keep moving. Although it's never said, it is sure implied here more than in most westerns done under the Code that the four girls are working girls. And the opportunities they seek are places where men are scarce and they can make money or even marry one.Naturally this makes the film perfect for Gloria Grahame who when you needed a woman of loose morals in the coming decade, she always got first call. She's who makes Roughshod any kind of memorable and without the women, Roughshod could have passed for a Gene Autry or a Roy Rogers product. Gloria however has a great deal more character to her than originally supposed. You'll see that if you watch Roughshod and believe me, she's the reason to check this film out.

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