Audie Murphy & Terry Moore in "Cast a Long Shadow" (1959)

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After Chip Donahue (John Dehner) tracks down Matt Brown (Audie Murphy) and rescues him from a brawl in a Mexican cantina, he tells him that Jake Keenan has died and left him his eighty-seven-thousand acre ranch. Matt is assumed by all to be Keenan's unrecognized, illegitimate child, and Matt is glad that he is dead because of his treatment of Matt's mother.

On behalf of the families who live and work on the ranch, Chip, the ranch's foreman, offers to buy the ranch for twenty thousand dollars. Matt agrees and they ride back to the ranch in Lobos, New Mexico, to sign the papers and pick up the cash where Janet Calvert (Terry Moore), Matt's former girl friend, tells him that although she is being pressured by her brothers to marry Sam Muller and had refused to marry Matt four years earlier when she was seventeen, she now realizes that she loves him and challenges him to stay.

Chip discovers correspondence from a Santa Fe bank indicating that Keenan had defaulted on loans and notes and that the bank intends to foreclose on the property within a few days. Chip stops the celebration and tells the crowd that unless they can pay off the loans within a few days, they will lose the property. He suggests that if they can round up three thousand herd of cattle, drive them to Santa Fe and sell them by the end of the week, they will be able to pay the bank.

When Matt asks Janet's elder brother for permission to marry her, the situation becomes tense but is defused by Janet's mother, who claims she is happy at the news. However, Muller is riled and starts a fight with Matt, which ends when Matt knocks him out.

The round-up begins and Matt tells Janet that they will marry in Santa Fe at the end of the drive. The newly confident Matt fires Hugh Rigdon (Robert Foulk) for drinking, and when Janet asks him to give Rigdon another chance, he refuses. Accusing him of becoming a "big man" and losing the qualities she liked, Janet declares that she no longer wants to marry him. Matt then closes down a cantina, claiming that the men should be sleeping in preparation for the drive. When Matt becomes involved in a fight with Muller and one of Janet's brothers, Chip intervenes but is later fired by Matt for drinking at the bar.

Early one morning, the drive starts but Janet stays behind with her mother, while worrying that Matt will not succeed without Chip's help. Chip decides to leave for other parts, but after Hortensia, the cantina's owner, tells him that he cannot run from the truth, he heads out to follow the drive. Meeting up with Matt while the cattle are grazing, Chip apologizes and is rehired. As the drive resumes across dusty flats and a river, Muller, Rigdon and two other disgruntled cowboys plot Matt's failure. After Matt insists that the drive continue by night, Chip protests that it is dangerous and could result in a stampede and loss of life. When Matt calls Chip a broken-down saddle tramp and fires him, Chip tells Matt that he is his son, not Keenan's. They start to fight but are interrupted when Muller and his companions start firing guns and cause the cattle to stampede. The men ride after the cattle, and when Chip falls off his horse and is almost trampled, he is rescued by Matt. Muller then aims his rifle at them, but Rigdon, unwilling to be involved in murder, stops him. Rigdon and Muller shoot at each other and both die. The stampede is stopped and Matt, now his own man and humbled, heads onto Santa Fe with his father.

A 1959 Black & White American Western film directed by Thomas Carr, produced by Walter Mirisch, Screenplay by Martin Goldsmith and John McGreevey, based on Wayne D. Overholser's 1957 novel, starring Audie Murphy, Terry Moore, John Dehner, James Best, Denver Pyle, Rita Lynn, Ann Doran, Stacy S Harris, Robert Foulk, Wright King and Mason Alan Dinehart.

This was one of the first films the Mirish Brothers made after they left Allied Artists, and the final film of director Thomas Carr. Denver Pyle and James Best would go on to star together in "The Dukes of Hazzard" (1979) as Uncle Jesse and Sheriff Roscoe P. Coltrane, respectively.

Wayne D. Overholser was an American Western writer. Overholser won the 1953 First Spur Award for Best Western Novel for "Law Man" using the pseudonym Lee Leighton.

Audie Leon Murphy (1925 –1971) was an American soldier, actor, and songwriter. He was one of the most decorated American combat soldiers of World War II, received every military combat award for valor available from the U.S. Army, and French and Belgian awards for heroism. Murphy received the Medal of Honor for valor he demonstrated at the age of 19 for single-handedly holding off a company of German soldiers for an hour at the Colmar Pocket in France in January 1945, before leading a successful counterattack while wounded and out of ammunition. Murphy died in a plane crash in Virginia in 1971, aged 45

A sturdy psychological Western, with enough story, gunplay and intelligence to satisfy Murphy’s fans.







Tags:
1950s American films
1950s Western films
American Western films
films based on Western novels
Thomas Carr
Martin Goldsmith
John McGreevey
Wayne D. Overholser
Walter Mirisch
Gerald Fried
Wilfrid M. Cline
Audie Murphy
Terry Moore
John Dehner
James Best
Denver Pyle
Rita Lynn
Ann Doran
Stacy S Harris
Robert Foulk
Wright King
Mason Alan Dinehart
Dave Milton
William A. Calihan Jr.
Milt Rice
Dale Van Sickel
Sid Mintz
Richard V. Heermance
Westerns