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Sierra
Sierra

Sierra (1950)

53% User Rating
1h 23min
Western

"Adventure ... raging to the very peaks of Excitement !"

Ring Hassard and his father Jeff, wild horse breakers, live in a hidden mountain eyrie as Jeff is wanted for a murder he didn't commit. Things change when they take in a lost young lady, Riley Martin, who finds that Ring has "never seen a woman close up." Jeff is injured, Ring runs afoul of horse thieves and the law, and Riley (who is a lawyer) labors to clear the Hassards (who others would prefer dead).

Alfred E. GreenDirector

Cast

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Wanda Hendrix

Wanda Hendrix

Riley Martin

Audie Murphy

Audie Murphy

Ring Hassard

Burl Ives

Burl Ives

Lonesome

Dean Jagger

Dean Jagger

Jeff Hassard

Richard Rober

Richard Rober

Big Matt

Tony Curtis

Tony Curtis

Brent Coulter (as Anthony Cutis)

Houseley Stevenson

Houseley Stevenson

Sam Coulter

Elliott Reid

Elliott Reid

Duke Lafferty

Griff Barnett

Griff Barnett

Dr. Robbins

Elisabeth Risdon

Elisabeth Risdon

Aunt Susan

Roy Roberts

Roy Roberts

Sheriff Knudsen

Gregg Martell

Gregg Martell

Hogan

Sara Allgood

Sara Allgood

Mrs. Jonas

Erskine Sanford

Erskine Sanford

Judge Prentiss

John Doucette

John Doucette

Jed Coulter

James Arness

James Arness

Little Sam (as Jim Arness)

Ted Jordan

Ted Jordan

Jim Coulter

I. Stanford Jolley

I. Stanford Jolley

Snake Willens

Jack Ingram

Jack Ingram

Al

Reviews (1)

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John Chard
John Chard
Rating 60%

September 10, 2019

It will be like bedding down in a nest of rattlers! Sierra is directed by Alfred E. Green and adapted to screenplay by Edna Anhalt from the novel "Mountains Are My Kingdom" written by Stuart Hardy. It stars Audie Murphy, Wanda Hendrix, Burl Ives, Dean Jagger and Richard Rober. Music is by Walter Scharf and the Technicolor cinematography is by Russell Metty. 1950 is right at the beginning of Audie Murphy's film career and it's a big indicator of where his genre staples were laid. Of the three Westerns he made in 1950, Sierra is the weakest, but even then it's above average and shows enough of why Murphy was such an engaging star to his fans. Plot has Murphy and Jagger as a Son and Father living in the mountains due to Pops being on the run from the law. They survive by trapping and breaking wild horses and then use Burl Ives' prospecting troubadour type as an intermediate salesman. One day a lost lawyer from town in the form of Hendrix gets involved in the lives of the mountain duo, where a series of events then lead to Murphy having to go into town and from there things become dangerously interesting for all involved. The location photography is outstanding, with Metty bringing visual joys from Cedar City and Cedar Breaks in Utah. The costuming (Yvonne Wood) is top draw, and how nice to see Ives in a jolly role where he warbles and strums at various junctures in the play. Murphy and Hendrix have the chemistry, even though their ill fated marriage would end this same year, and the legal axis of the narrative (intriguing court sequences with Hendrix as the defence) adds some thought into proceedings. Unfortunately for action junkies this is not the one for you, there's some nifty horse play and stampedes, and of course some macho posturing in sync, but it's with the smart story (greenhorn young man meets city life for the first time/lady lawyer trying to make it in the male dominated West) where the pic gets its strength. In the support slots you find Tony Curtis (billed as Anthony) and James Arness, who add a bit of colour to an already lively frontline cast. 6/10

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