Panhandle

Panhandle

SEE The fiercest man-to-man fight ever caught on film! The last, wild stand of the Panhandle outlaws! The women who were more than a match for Texas badmen!

  • 85 Mins
  • 1948
  • en
  • star5.8/ 10

An ex-gunfighter woos two women while avenging his brother, victim of a crooked gambler.

Cast & Crew

Review

John Chard

John Sands: Even Billy the Kid backed down from him! Panhandle is directed by Leslie Selander and written by John C. Champion and Blake Edwards. It stars Rod Cameron, Cathy Downs, Reed Hadley, Anne Gwynne, Blake Edwards, Dick Crockett and Rory Mallinson. Music is by Rex Dunn and cinematography by Harry Neumann. John Sands (Cameron) has to return to his gunfighter ways when news reaches him that his brother has been murdered... Filmed in Sepiatone and a little more serious than many other 1940's Westerns, Panhandle is a satisfying experience for genre enthusiasts. Formula is rife as we would come to know it in Oaters, though, as picture ticks off the check list: badman turned good who is forced to turn bad again for revenge, romance tingling in the air, quick draw shoot-outs, punch-up, weasel villain and his hired cronies, poker games with the inevitable cheat called out and the "hooray" finale. All of which is nicely directed and performed by the cast. The location scenery doesn't get much chance to shine through, and in truth the Sepiatone does little to improve the picture, but this is easily recommended to the Western faithful. 7/10

CinemaSerf

Randolph Scott lookalike Rod Cameron is "Sands", a former lawman who travels to a Texas town to investigate the shooting of his newspaper-man brother. Upon arrival, he quickly discovers the town, indeed the territory, under the heel of "Matt Garson" (Reed Hadley). With the help of his secretary "Dusty" (Cathy Downs) he vows to avenge his brother's death. It's quite eerily shot - much of the action takes place at night, in torrential rain, but the story is all just a bit too well travelled, and neither the actors nor the script offer much by way of innovation. This is still a perfectly watchable B-feature that dawdles for the first half hour before finally picking up just enough speed to hold the attention. It's too long - but then films were frequently elongated to accommodate the paying public's appetite for cinema, rather than because the story justified it.

Image 0

Movies You May Like

Tombstone Rashomon
Barricade
Shane
Wild Wild West
Rio Bravo
Joe Kidd
Gunman's Walk
The Legend of the Golden Gun
The Silver Star
Chuka
Shalako
The Return of Jesse James
Hannie Caulder
The Gunfighter
A Man Alone
Take a Hard Ride
Tombstone
The Shootist
El Topo
High Plains Drifter

Recommended Movies

Dune: Part Two
Братство
A Christmas Prince: The Royal Wedding
The Kid Detective
The Killing of a Sacred Deer
Deadpool & Wolverine
Wonder Woman
The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes
Desperation Road
Wrong Turn 4: Bloody Beginnings
Thor: Ragnarok
I Still See You
100 Dinge
Avengers: Endgame
BlacKkKlansman
The Holdovers
劇場版 七つの大罪 光に呪われし者たち
정이
鬼滅の刃 那田蜘蛛山編
Nerve