I have absolutely never seen anything like this movie before. You have to see this movie.
View MoreThe first must-see film of the year.
After playing with our expectations, this turns out to be a very different sort of film.
View MoreGreat example of an old-fashioned, pure-at-heart escapist event movie that doesn't pretend to be anything that it's not and has boat loads of fun being its own ludicrous self.
View MoreAn above average western made so by the inclusion of former stars and a half way satisfactory plot. It was good to see Bruce Cabot, although in the unlikely role as a dance hall bouncer as well as Lon Chaney, Richard Arlen, and Scott Brady. I must admit I had trouble recognizing DeForrest Kelley. Linda Darnell, though having a top billing, had only a minor role.Terry Moore looked positively luscious and half her age. Rory Calhoun turned from negative to positive all too quickly after finding out he had Terry Moore's son. He also made a remarkable recovery after a tremendous brawl with Brady. Emerging without a mark, he claimed he was "beaten half to death". Seeing someone who had been tarred and feathered also was novel. Calhoun rides off into the Great West after announcing that he might become a sheriff somewhere. Black Spurs was entertaining but only because of its well known cast.
View MoreIt's always cool for me to catch one of my favorite TV Western cowboys show up in a movie like Rory Calhoun did here. His run as 'The Texan' during the 1958/1960 season would have overlapped Scott Brady's tenure as 'Shotgun Slade' airing from 1959 to 1961. 'The Texan' was the better of the two shows and had that rousing theme music at the end of each episode. Stephen King must have thought so too because he wrote Rory Calhoun into his novel 'The Regulators'.Right out of the box though, I had to wonder about the name of Santee's (Calhoun) first bounty target. The Mexican outlaw was called 'El Pescador', which translates as The Fisherman, so I was a little puzzled by that. That doesn't sound very villainous to send shivers up your spine. But his character had those black spurs that gave meaning to the title, which Santee confiscated to bolster his image and reputation.The picture reminded of the 1959 Audie Murphy Western "No Name on the Bullet" in as much as when Murphy's character Gant arrived in town, it aroused a lot of town folk suspicion that they were the one he was after. There sure were a lot of guilty citizens in Kile, Kansas when Santee came on the scene. With 'No Name', Gant was content to let the town people take each other out over their suspicions, so his work there was made that much easier.I guess the turning point for Santee here had to be the revelation that old flame Anna's (Terry Moore) son was his as well. You can see the gears slowly turning in Santee's mind about what's important in life and what's not, like turning the civil society in Lark into a hotbed of sin and debauchery. The tar and feathering of Anna's sheriff husband Ralph Elkins (James Best) also played it's part, but you know, I had to laugh when Ralph wanted to lend a hand during the gunfight against the baddies. He looked like The Mummy in one of Lon Chaney's earlier films in which he portrayed the bandaged one ("The Mummy's Tomb" and "The Mummy's Ghost"). It was really kind of comical.Well besides the principals already mentioned, there was cool support here from the likes of DeForest Kelley, Bruce Cabot and Linda Darnell in a final film appearance, although her second billed status is questionable since she only appeared in a handful of scenes and wasn't really prominent in the story. Oh, and can't forget little Manuel Padilla Jr. who gave Santee something to think about when he told him - "It's sad to be a bad man".
View MoreBlack Spurs (1965) * 1/2 (out of 4) A ranch hand named Santee (Rory Calhoun) grows tired of being poor so he decides to turn into a bounty hunter so that he can collect some big rewards. After being successful at this he decides to move in on a local town to take it over because he knows a railroad is about to come through. BLACK SPURS has a very interesting cast but sadly that's about the only thing the movie has going for it. This is a pretty strange Western to watch and especially when you consider it was 1965. By this time most Westerns like this weren't being made anymore as the story, structure and overall feel of this makes you seem like it would have been better fit in the 1940s. I think the main reason people are going to come to this film are for the stars. Calhoun isn't very well known today but he has a strong devoted group of fans who will probably be the only ones wanting to watch this. He's pretty good in the film as he has no problem playing rough and later on more soft-hearted. The supporting cast includes some very familiar faces including Linda Darnell and Scott Brady as well as the likes of Lon Chaney, Jr. and Bruce Cabot. Those coming to this film to see Chaney and Cabot might be disappointed to see their roles so small but both actors are still good. BLACK SPURS features some rather routine gunfights that never get too exciting and we're also treated to a sidestory between Calhoun and Darnell that really doesn't add up to much and the big twist is something you'll see coming from a mile away.
View More"Black Spurs" was one of producer A.C. Lyles now famous series of low-budget westerns featuring onetime big names. This one starred Rory Calhoun, Linda Darnell, Terry Moore, Lon Chaney, Bruce Cabot, Scott Brady and Richard Arlen. The supporting cast included future director Jerome Courtland, in his last acting role as a small town newspaper publisher living in sin! The story followed the adventures of an ambitious ranch hand (Calhoun) who deserts his pregnant girlfriend (Moore) for the life of a bounty hunter. Eventually this career demoralizes him to such a degree, that he instigates a plot to corrupt the morals of a small town for a fat fee. Thus, a planned railroad franchise will be diverted to a neighboring town owned by crooked businessman Chaney, who is in on the scheme. Calhoun sends for bouncer Cabot, new Orleans Madam Darnell and her "girls" as well as card sharp Joe Hoover, all of whom trash the town. Not so coincidentally, the sheriff happens to be the husband of Calhoun's former love, Moore. What happens is not what one might expect. Sadly, the film was Linda Darnell's last screen appearance. She died in an accidental house fire before it was released. And for many, the sight of the once gorgeous actress looking bloated and middle aged was not a pretty one. She did, however, turn in a reliably good performance, as did her co-stars, and Black Spurs remains an enjoyable nostalgia fest, one of Lyles' best.
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