The Outriders (1950)
7/10
"There's no time to explain now".....???
31 May 2016
Warning: Spoilers
This film begins in a Union prison camp filled with Confederate prisoners. Three of them (Joel McCrea, Barry Sullivan and James Whitmore) escape and eventually meet up with Confederate raiders. During the war, raiders were Southern soldiers who are a bit more like bandits and specialized in making fast strikes on mostly civilian targets in the North. In this case, the leader picks these three men to head west on an undercover mission. It seems that a wagon train is headed east...and there's gold hidden in some of the wagons. The plan is to use this gold to help finance the war. However, there are a few complications, Will Owen (McCrea) is a decent guy and his conscience bothers him about leading the folks into an ambush. Second, Jesse Wallace (Sullivan) is a bit of a scum-bag and Will needs to keep an eye out for him as well...especially since Jesse is much more concerned about making himself rich instead of helping his cause. Finally, Will likes these folks and has fallen for one of the women (Arlene Dahl). So what's to become of this secret plan?

This is a pretty standard film done about a topic that's been covered quite a few times in other films. This isn't so much a complaint as an observation that it's not the most original movie ever made! Still, despite this, McCrea was such a wonderful actor in westerns that I was able to cut the film some slack. It's also very competently made, enjoyable and in full color and worth seeing if you like the genre. My only gripe is late in the film when Will tells everyone he HAD intended to lead them into an ambush...and never really explains why he was planning on doing this. His doing it for his Confederacy is far different than his possibly being a bandit since he'd just learned that the war was over!!!

By the way, one of the interesting bits of casting here is Ramon Novarro as Don Antonio. In the 1920s and 30, Novarro was a huge star...handsome and on top of the MGM food chain. But with time and changing tastes, in the 1940s, Novarro made very, very few films and this is one of your rare opportunities to see the middle-aged actor.
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