Gunpoint (film)
Gunpoint | |
---|---|
Directed by | Earl Bellamy |
Produced by | Gordon Kay |
Written by |
Mary Willingham Willard W. Willingham |
Starring |
Audie Murphy Joan Staley Warren Stevens |
Music by | Hans J. Salter |
Cinematography | William Marguiles |
Edited by | Russell F. Schoengarth |
Production company | |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 86 mins |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $500,000[1] |
Gunpoint is a 1966 American Western film starring Audie Murphy.[2]
Plot
In a small town in 1880s Colorado, a gang of outlaws led by Drago (Morgan Woodward) rob a bank and kidnap a saloon singer, Uvalde (Joan Staley). The sheriff, Chad Lucas (Audie Murphy), forms a posse to take off after them, which includes Uvalde's fiancé, Nate Harlan (Warren Stevens), a young kid, and Lucas's deputy (Denver Pyle), who is secretly in league with the outlaws. During the chase, Nate realises that Chad and Uvalde used to be lovers. The posses battles Indians, horse thieves and conflicts among themselves before discovering Uvalde and defeating the gang.
Cast
- Audie Murphy as Chad Lucas
- Joan Staley as Uvalde
- Warren Stevens as Nate Harlan
- Edgar Buchanan as Bull
- Denver Pyle as Cap Hold
- David Macklin as Mark Emerson
- Nick Dennis as Nicos
- Royal Dano as Ode
- Kelly Thordsen as Ab
- Morgan Woodward as Drago
- William Bramley as Hoag
- Robert Pine as Mitchell
- John Hoyt as Mayor Osborne
Production
The film was the last of seven Westerns Audie Murphy made with producer Gordon Kay starting with Hell Bent for Leather (1960).[1]
When Hedda Hopper asked him what the story was about, he told her "Same story only we're getting older horses".[3] After making the movie, Murphy went to work in Europe for a number of years.