The Bounty Hunter is a 1954 western film, the last of six
Randolph Scott Westerns directed by Andre DeToth
and the first film to feature a bounty hunter as its hero.
It was released by Warner Bros. Pictures.
It was filmed in 3-D but released in standard format, though a 3-D print exists in the Warner archives.
Stock footage from Carson City is used at the beginning of the film.
User Review
Scott Showcase, But Not Much Else
28 August 2014 | by dougdoepke (Claremont,USA)
Display MorePlot heavy western that should please Scott fans, even if the film doesn't. In fact, the lantern jaw actor carries the 80-minutes, at the same time supporting players drift in and out rather aimlessly. Bounty hunter Kipp (Scott) is on the trail of three baddies who've blended into Twin Forks, so that their identities are now hidden. As a result, Kipp has to figure out who the guilty ones are. Trouble is the townspeople don't take kindly to being under suspicion, so he's got his work cut out for him.
A plot like this relies greatly on script, which I found pretty loosely structured. Except for Kipp, none of the other many characters are sharply etched. Thus the mystery element never really gels, and with that goes much of the suspense until the last ten minutes. As you might expect this is not a scenic western, with most of the action taking place in a studio town. What the film does have going for it--in addition to Scott-- is the great Marie Windsor as, surprise, surprise, a dancehall girl. I just wish they had given her more to do. Some verbal face-offs between her and Scott would be explosive. Looks to me also like director deToth couldn't really engage with the script, despite his proved record with outstanding westerns—Ramrod (1947), Day of the Outlaw (1959).
Overall, the oater shows off Scott's powerful presence, but, I'm sorry to say, not much else.