UNLIMITED STREAMING
WITH PRIME VIDEO
TRY 30-DAY TRIAL
Home > Western >

Fort Worth

Fort Worth (1951)

July. 14,1951
|
6.2
|
NR
| Western

Ex-gunfighter Ned Britt returns to Fort Worth after the civil war to help run a newspaper which is against ambitious men and their schemes for control.

...

Watch Trailer

Cast

Similar titles

Reviews

Alicia
1951/07/14

I love this movie so much

More
Solemplex
1951/07/15

To me, this movie is perfection.

More
HeadlinesExotic
1951/07/16

Boring

More
Kaelan Mccaffrey
1951/07/17

Like the great film, it's made with a great deal of visible affection both in front of and behind the camera.

More
JohnHowardReid
1951/07/18

Randolph Scott (Ned Britt), David Brian (Blair Lunsford), Phyllis Thaxter (Flora Talbot), Helena Carter (Amy Brooks), Dick Jones (Luther Wick), Ray Teal (Gabe Clevenger), Lawrence Tolan (Mort), Paul Picerni (Castro), Emerson Treacy (Ben Garvin), Bob Steele ("Shorty"), Walter Sande (Deputy Waller), Chubby Johnson (the sheriff), Don C. Harvey.Direction by EDWIN L. MARTIN. Written by John Twist. Photography by Sid Hickox. Art director: Stanley Fleischer. Film editor: Clarence Kolster. Sound by Oliver S. Garretson. Set decorator: G. W. Berntsen. Music by David Buttolph. Special effects by William McGann (director) and H.F. Koenekamp (photographer). Technicolor color consultant: Mitchell Kovaleski. Wardrobe by Marjorie Best. Make-up artist: Gordon Bau. Assistant director: Charles Hansen. R.C.A. Sound System. Produced by Anthony Veiller.Copyright 2 July 1951 by Warner Brothers Pictures Corp. New York opening at the Palace: 12 July 1951. U.S. release: 14 July 1951. U.K. release on the lower half of a double bill: 7 April 1952. Australian release: 26 December 1952. 7,232 feet. 80 minutes. Re-issue title: Texas EXPRESS.SYNOPSIS: Randolph Scott, once a famed gunfighter, decides to battle lawlessness as a frontier town newspaperman. Nearing Fort Worth, he meets Phyllis Thaxter, who is on her way to marry David Brian, a friend of Scott. In brawling Fort Worth, Scott learns that the town is menaced by the tactics of ruthless cattleman Ray Teal. Brian urges Scott to establish his newspaper there and fight Teal.COMMENT: Fleshed out with stock footage from "Dodge City" — all the railroad material, including the fire, and the cattle stampede — "Fort Worth" features Phyllis Kirk smiling inanely throughout. Unfortunately, the slow, talkative script actually provides little to smile about, even though it pegs in a fair amount of action, glumly perpetrated by Scott. David Brian grimaces suitably insanely, Helena Carter has a couple of brief scenes, Ray Teal appears properly villainous (with a very mild assist from Bob Steele).Marin is at his best in the action spots. The dialogue scenes are sometimes almost laughably composed of actors hitting the mark, rooted to the floor waiting for their cues. A fair amount of money was spent on the film all the same.The plot is easy to follow but makes little sense, thanks to one- dimensional characterizations and commonplace dialogue (with one or two bright lines: "Never pitch-fork the dead"; "Knew a woman worked on a newspaper once. Wrote the cookery column").Overall impression — routine.

More
classicsoncall
1951/07/19

Is it just me, or did anyone else have trouble following the convoluted relationship between Ned Britt (Randolph Scott) and Blair Lunsford (David Brian)? It didn't help when former Britt gal pal Amy Brooks (Helena Carter) showed up to throw a little gasoline on the fire at the Lunsford Ranch when she arrived for dinner with Britt. After that she wasn't even a factor in the story, so what gives with her showing up at all, other than to throw another monkey wrench into the works.As the story progresses, former gunslinger Britt intends to persuade his fellow citizens that the printing press is a thousand times more potent than gunpowder for settling disagreements and ridding the territory of thugs like the Clevenger (Ray Real) gang. I've seen Teal on both sides of the law in these old time Westerns, but it's still unusual to catch him in the role of a heel after all those Bonanza episodes in which he appeared as Sheriff Roy Coffee. It's akin to Paul Fix playing an outlaw before and after portraying Marshal Micah Torrance in the 'Rifleman' series.Even though Lunsford seems to be an on and off good guy/bad guy, it was still interesting to see him and Britt perform that gun flip distraction to the disadvantage of the Clevenger bunch. I don't think I'm buying that something like that could be pulled off for real, but it looked pretty cool in the execution. Seems like Lunsford pulled Britt's fat out of the fire more than enough times for Britt to come around.The topper for me was how quickly Miss Flora Talbot got over her romance with Lunsford when all was said and done. You would think there would have been a bit more angst over his demise, especially after she admitted shooting him, although that scene was cast in doubt with the appearance of Clevenger. Still and all, the new sheriff didn't waste any time making his mark in Fort Worth, finding just enough spare moments to welcome a new Toby on the way for Mrs. Britt to close out the story.

More
bkoganbing
1951/07/20

With Warner Brothers having done a western entitled Dallas a year earlier with Gary Cooper it only seemed right that it produce another western with the title of that other Texas twin city, Fort Worth. Starring in this one is Randolph Scott and directing it is Edwin L. Marin who collaborated with Scott on a few other previous films. This was Marin's last film as a director. Not a noteworthy stylist, Marin nevertheless was able to do a competent and entertaining product.Scott's in a strange occupation for him in a western, he's a newspaper editor, a partner with Emerson Treacy with Dick Jones working for them. They're picking up stakes and going to Texas and decide to settle in the city of Fort Worth which is having problems with a lawless element led by cattle trail boss Ray Teal. An old friend of Scott's, David Brian is the big mover and shaker in Fort Worth and he'd like to see a railroad come through and a meat packing plant right in the town like Chicago. That would eliminate folks like Teal and he's not about to see that happen.Scott has an interesting character, he's become pacifistic after war service and thinks that the power of the pen will do more than the six gun. But when law and order breaks down Randy straps on the six guns like Jimmy Stewart in Destry Rides Again to restore it as surely as Stewart did in Bottleneck.Brian though has a strange character, even after the end of the film you don't know quite what to make of him. He says he wants law and order, but tolerates an ineffectual sheriff in Chubby Johnson and allows Teal to run roughshod. Many in the cast want to know just what is his game and in the end we never really find out. Makes for an interesting piece of cinema.Fort Worth is an interesting western with far more plot than most of these six gun shoot 'em ups have. It is one of Randolph Scott's best westerns from the Fifties, you'll become a fan of Randolph Scott after seeing Fort Worth.

More
MartinHafer
1951/07/21

Randolph Scott was such a wonderful actor that his films were always at least a notch above the rest. While this is about average for a Scott film, it's clearly head and shoulders better than a typical western. Even with the overuse of old footage from another Warner Brothers western (DODGE CITY, 1939), the film still manages to shine. Most of the old footage works just fine, though some is indeed grainier and a few times actors from the second film change hat and clothes when they switch to actors from the old film!! Pretty sloppy...but it can be overlooked.Scott plays a tough newspaper man who moves back to his old home town of Fort Worth. The city is dying due to two men. One is an obvious bully and leader of a gang of thugs who break laws with impunity. The other, played by Film Noir favorite David Brian, is an opportunist who is buying up land right and left--at pennies on the dollar from people who are leaving the violent town in droves. While the first guy is an obvious baddie, Brian is a cypher. Scott thinks Brian is evil and a megalomaniac but again and again throughout the film Brian proves he really is interested in the town. Could Scott be wrong? And, can Scott print the truth without getting his head blown off instead?! The film does well because the plot is more original than most westerns. Also, Brian is a very good heavy--not as predictable and nasty as most. Overall, this is a must-see for Scott fans and would be enjoyable to most.

More