George Montgomery and Tab Hunter have a reunion of sorts in this A.C. Lyles western Hostile Guns. The third film of Hunter's career was a western called Gun Belt where Hunter played Montgomery's nephew. It was a routine western, so is this only not quite as good.
As always it's a pleasure to see a lot of the old timers that A.C. Lyles gave work to in the Sixties. But Hostile Guns has a rather unbelievable plot that I just could not swallow.
Montgomery is a federal marshal transporting prisoners to Huntsville State Prison in Texas and in need of a deputy. Young punk Tab Hunter is the best available so he takes him to transport Leo Gordon, Robert Emhardt, Pedro Gonzalez-Gonzalez and Yvonne DeCarlo. DeCarlo and Montgomery have some history though we don't learn about that until well into the film.
Gordon is his usual mean, sadistic self and he's scheduled to hang. Why they don't just hang him where he committed the crime and was tried and convicted God only knows, but he's got relatives like John Russell and James Craig looking to bust him out. That's the story of the film as Montgomery faces some bad odds.
In fact these guys should have freed Gordon, but they went about incredibly stupid. Makes for an inferior film.
I have to say that Robert Emhardt plays an interesting role of what we would call a white collar criminal. He's the former Texas State Railroad Commissioner who is eluded to have some sticky fingers. No country club prison for him in those days, but he's convinced friends will help.
As always it's a pleasure to see a lot of the old timers that A.C. Lyles gave work to in the Sixties. But Hostile Guns has a rather unbelievable plot that I just could not swallow.
Montgomery is a federal marshal transporting prisoners to Huntsville State Prison in Texas and in need of a deputy. Young punk Tab Hunter is the best available so he takes him to transport Leo Gordon, Robert Emhardt, Pedro Gonzalez-Gonzalez and Yvonne DeCarlo. DeCarlo and Montgomery have some history though we don't learn about that until well into the film.
Gordon is his usual mean, sadistic self and he's scheduled to hang. Why they don't just hang him where he committed the crime and was tried and convicted God only knows, but he's got relatives like John Russell and James Craig looking to bust him out. That's the story of the film as Montgomery faces some bad odds.
In fact these guys should have freed Gordon, but they went about incredibly stupid. Makes for an inferior film.
I have to say that Robert Emhardt plays an interesting role of what we would call a white collar criminal. He's the former Texas State Railroad Commissioner who is eluded to have some sticky fingers. No country club prison for him in those days, but he's convinced friends will help.
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