The Sheepman (1958)
8/10
An exciting picture, solidly based on one of the fiercest Western issues...
3 June 2005
Warning: Spoilers
Marshall's "The Sheepman" (Shot in Montrose, California, and in the San Juan range of the Colorado Rockies), now ranks with many as the best Western comedy of all time…

This is using the word 'comedy' in the classical, theatrical sense—not in terms of spoofy fun and games, but humor arising from character and situation…

"The Sheepman," in fact, is a most exciting picture, solidly based on one of the fiercest Western issues, although it has received comparatively barely enough attention; the bitter animosity prevailing between cattlemen and sheepmen...

So furious was the long-standing quarrel that it often exploded into a malevolence that was an exposed piece on the name of 'cowboy'—involving the murder of sheep and shepherds alike… Wyoming and Arizona both experienced the nastier manifestations…

Sheep and cattle don't mix—this is worked out to be an agricultural statement the truth of which is self-evident—and so when Glenn Ford arrives in cattle territory, cheerfully proclaiming that he's bringing in sheep, all is set for a full-scale feuding...

But there's something incongruous in the sight of sheep in the Western movie setting—especially when there's a hard man in charge of them… By the standards of cattlemen sheep-herding is unmanly, more unworthy even than sod-busting... And so the comedy element is built in—the disgust of the cattlemen at the mere sight of sheep, only equaled by disgust at the sight of Ford, taking care of them, entirely causing a great feeling of embarrassment…

Marshall handles it all beautifully and is well served by first rate comedy talent—Ford (again the steel behind the smile, but an easier smile); Shirley Maclaine, many people's favorite comedienne, in marvelous form; Edgar Buchanan, as a devious freewheeling old-timer; Mickey Shaughnessy, as Jumbo the toughest cowboy in the town; Pedro Gonzales-Gonzales, the much depressed-looking herdsman…

It's a great mixture, nicely stirred—not forgetting the 'straight man' cattle baron, Leslie Nielsen
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