The Cimarron Kid is a 1952 American Technicolor Western film directed by
Budd Boetticher starring Audie Murphy, Beverly Tyler and James Best.
Production
The film was based on a story by Louis Stevens.
It was assigned to producer Ted Richmond at Universal for Audie Murphy in April 1951
It was the first Western from Budd Boetticher, who later became famous for his work in the genre.
“I became a western director because they thought I looked like one and they thought I rode better than anyone else,"
said Boetticher later. "And I didn’t know anything about the west.”
It was also the director's first film in color and his first under a long term contract with Universal Pictures.
In the original script, Murphy's character died at the end of the movie.
However, the studio decided to change it to reflect the actor's rising popularity
User Review
One of Audie Murphy's Better Westerns
10 November 2011 | by oldblackandwhite (North Texas sticks (see all my reviews))
Quote from oldDisplay MoreThe Cimarron Kid is a tightly-made, action-packed, very entertaining Western of the Oklahoma outlaws sub-genre. It is well directed by Bud Boetticher, generally well acted, pleasingly scored, and beautifully filmed in three-strip Technicolor. Costumes, gun leather, railroad equipment and sets are quite authentic looking for the late 19th century era. The the outdoor locations, though actually California, were well chosen to look suitably like Okieland. As an added bonus, there are lots of period railroad equipment, with a shootout in a rural roundhouse one of the rousing action scenes.
There is not really much to find wrong is this little oat burner, except for Audie Murphy's awful acting.
Let's face, a wooden cigar store Indian with a microphone implant could do little worse.
But even that serious handicap is overcome by Boetticher's skillful direction and a creative script that concentrates on the interesting supporting cast of characters, especially Noah Berry, Jr.'s Bob Dalton, and the love relationship between Bitter Creek Dalton (James Best) and Cimarron Rose (Yvette Duguay). This device happily keeps the camera away from Murphy's frozen features for most of the screen time. Yvette Duguay, though only fourth-billed, actually steals the show as the outlaw gang's resourceful gun moll. Pretty, exotic, lively, and sexy, she is more interesting and appealing in every way than Audie's ho-hum love interest, second-billed Beverly Tyler. Good support is also contributed by veteran character actors Roy Roberts and Leif Erickson.
Altogether a very satisfying little Western. Better than some of the bigger productions from the same early 1950's era and certainly superior to any of the pretentious plates of tripe passed off as Westerns today.