The Stranger Wore a Gun is a 1953 Technicolor Western film directed by
Andre DeToth, and starring Randolph Scott and Claire Trevor.
Based on the short story "Yankee Gold" by John W. Cunningham,
the film is about a former spy who moves to Arizona to join a gold robbery,
but reconsiders and decides to change his life.
The film is one of the first 3-D western movies; it earned an estimated $1.6 million
at the North American box office in 1953.
The supporting cast features Joan Weldon,
George Macready, Alfonso Bedoya, Lee Marvin and Ernest Borgnine.
User Review
Average Western
23 January 2010 | by Claudio Carvalho (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil)
Quote from cluadioDisplay MoreDuring the American Civil War, the Quantrill's raiders use the spy Jeff Travis (Randolph Scott) to plunder the city of Lawrence, in Kansas, and Travis leaves Quantrill when he sees the massacre of the town. After the war, Travis believes that he is a wanted man and he heads to Prescott, in Arizona, to start a new life. However, the powerful Jules Mourret (George Macready), who apparently is a businessman but actually is the leader of a gang of thieves, knows his past and forges documents with a fake identity to give a job in the local Conroy Stage and Freighter Line. Mourret is unsuccessful trying to steal the money and gold transported by the company but is frequently lured by Jason Conroy (Pierre Watkin); he intends to use Travis to get inside information about the transportation of gold. When one of Mourret's men kills the driver of the wagon, Travis schemes a plan to get rid of the gang.
"The Stranger Wore a Gun" is only an average Western and is disappointing considering the names of Randolph Scott, Lee Marvin and Ernest Borgnine in the cast. The story is weird and the motives of the ambiguous character performed by Randolph Scott are absolutely confused, but in the end this movie entertains. My vote is six.
Title (Brazil): "O Pistoleiro" ("The Gunman")