6/10
Long before "The Dirty Dozen" pardoned prisoners for duty, this little western championed that plot idea
11 September 2005
Warning: Spoilers
Despite its low-budget B-movie origins and its brisk 59-minute running time, this Wild Bill Elliot horse opera qualifies as one of the earliest examples of a movie where society enlists convicts to establish law and order to the frontier west. Typically, most moviegoers think that "The Dirty Dozen" introduced the parole-the-prisoners plot, but this 1940 sagebrusher used that idea long before director Robert Aldrich appropriated it for his anti-heroic, behind-enemy-lines, World War II-themed blockbuster. In fact, the parole-the-prisoners plot turned up earlier in Burt Kennedy's western sequel "Return of the Seven" (1966), Roger Corman's behind enemy lines W.W. 2 opus "The Secret Invasion" (1964), and Richard Bartlett's "Two-Gun Lady" (1956).

When trigger-happy outlaws lay down the rule of lawlessness in the town of Gun Sight by the, two-gun toting Bill Saunders (Bill Elliot) rides to the rescue. "My name's Wild Bill, but I'm a peaceable man," says Bill to just about everybody. Unlike most western champions, Bill packs his brace of pistols in his holsters with the handles reversed so the hammers face away from him when he draws. Kilgore (Ray Bennett) and his gang of henchmen have been hijacking wagon trains as free and easy as hawks until 'Spunky' Cameron (western heroine regular Iris Meredith), daughter of wagon train boss Jeff Cameron, sends Cannonball (veteran western sidekick Dub Taylor of "Bandolero") to find Wild Bill to restore order. As a tough-as-nails villain, Kilgore proves his credentials from the get-go by gunning down old Jeff on Main Street in broad daylight. Unfortunately, since Jeff (Edward LeSaint of "The Green Hornet") shucked his six-shooter first, Kilgore cannot be arrested for what constitutes 'self-defense.' Meantime, Cannonball hightails it to another dusty western hamlet just in time to watch Wild Bill foil a bank robbery single-handedly against three armed assailants. Cannonball brings Bill and Spunky together to discuss the lawlessness, and Bill visits Governor Dawson (Don Beddoe of "Night of the Hunter") to round up some gunmen to create a state police to hunt down these hooligans. Dawson explains to Will Bill that the legislature has wrapped his plans up in red tape so he hasn't had any luck. Wild Bill proposes another plan: release some of the deadliest six-gunners in prison into his custody to flush out the bad guys and award the convicts with paroles if they help him corral these heavies. Of course, everything works out in the long run, but there are a couple of surprises along the way. Director Joseph H. Lewis, who later went on to fame directing TV westerns like "Bonanza," "Branded," "The Rifleman," and "The Big Valley," keeps things moving at a swift clip. The only drawback is during a stagecoach shoot-out several gunhands believe that they are bulletproof enough to stand out in the open and swap lead without consequences. Later, the much talking about but hard to locate secret hideout that Kilgore and his men operate out of is neither as secret nor as exotic as the secret hideout in most westerns like the 1954 Nicholas Ray oater "Johnny Guitar", but then the low budget accounts for that shortcoming. Scenarist Charles F. Royal's screenplay for "The Man from Tumbleweeds" is again one of the earliest examples of a Hollywood movie where the heroes have to rely on henchmen fresh out of prison to help them. Royal's dialogue is worth quoting, too.
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