The Outcasts of Poker Flat (1952) Poster

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6/10
Hunkering Down.
rmax30482317 April 2015
Warning: Spoilers
De Maupassant wrote "Boule de Suif", his short story of a number of diverse people thrown together in a coach in 1880. Bret Harte wrote "Outcasts of Poker Flat" in 1869. The two stories share far too much to be coincidental. I'm virtually certain that de Maupassant, anxious for celebrity, read and copied the framework of "Outcasts of Poker Flat". Here, as elsewhere, the expression "virtually certain" means I doubt that what I've just said is true.

These outcasts are four mainly harmless people who have been driven out of town because of their devalued status. Dale Robertson is the smooth gambler who maybe cheats at cards. Anne Baxter, I'm not sure of. She aided the murdering thief Cameron Mitchell in looting the bank back in the mining town of Poker Flat. Mitchell even gave her the loot to hold. But, as far as anyone can tell, none of the townspeople knew about it. Miriam Hopkins is the cynical whore monger. William H. Lynn is the bibulous numskull. He looks a lot like John Qualen and even sounds like him. I'm not at all sure that they aren't one and the same person. Has anyone ever seen both of them in the same room together?

On the trail out of Poker Flat, in a building snowstorm, the outcasts run into a pitiful young couple, Craig Hill and his pregnant girl friend, Barbara Bates. Bates is the pretty and fawning high school girl who plans to take over Anne Baxter's role as Queen of the Stage at the end of "All About Eve," released a few years after this. That she's pregnant and unwed isn't treated as a stigma here because "they ain't got no preacher in Sandy Bar".

The six characters hole up in an abandoned cabin while a blizzard blows outside. Actually, it's a rather cozy arrangement, what with that warm fire going. The opening scenes of the robbery are black and muddy, obviously echoing the lighting techniques of the noir films, but thereafter the images cry for color. There are some intrigues in the cabin. At night, with everyone else wrapped in blankets and sleeping, Baxter offers Robertson half the money from the bank robbery. She's very appealing in her close ups and is clearly expecting Robertson to spend the night under the same blanket. But Robertson is not that kind of guy. "Good-night," he says, closing the door behind him. Reminds me of one of Sir Richard Burton's footnotes in "The Arabian Nights": "The young man must have been a demon of chastity."

Craig Hill decides to trek down the mountainside alone to get help from the folks at Poker Flat. He may not make it through the storm but Baxter gives him five hundred dollars of the bank loot to incentivize the community. And then -- who should show up but Cameron Mitchell himself, more evil and snide and dark than ever. He has the only gun so he orders everyone else around. Robertson has by this time emerged as the manly hero but he can do nothing because his own revolver is in the fireplace, propping open the flue. This, by the way, may be Mitchell's best performance. He's as smart as he is malignant, and he doesn't overplay it.

Barbara Bates, as the pregnant girl, doesn't have many lines but she does get to ask, "I wonder how long we can last without any food." Hopkins replies, "I don't know. Don't think about it." That's not very helpful, is it? It's like saying, "Don't think of an elephant."

There are no particular grace notes in the narrative but it's well enough written and directed. It differs from the usual Western conventions in that Robertson, the hero, can have his revolver shot out of his hand by Mitchell. And the hero can lose a fist fight too. Almost all of the action takes place on a studio set or a sound stage but there is some pleasant second-direction shooting in a snowy forest. All in all, it's an effective Western.
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6/10
Overwrought, But Decent.
boblipton31 December 2008
Bret Harte's "The Outcasts of Poker Flats" is one of his two best known stories (the other is "Luck of Roaring Camp") and while his reputation has receded over the past century, his humanism and warmth towards the unlikely inhabitants of Gold-Rush California are worth remembering and enjoying. But while the story and performances in this version are good, director Joseph Newman -- who got his start doing "Crime Does Not Pay" shorts for MGM -- never quite got over the need to drive every point through with a stake. So Joseph Lashelle's beautiful photography is over the top, the music by Lionel Newman -- no relation -- is overwrought and so forth. The result is a decent film, but the melodrama tends to overwhelm the characters.
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8/10
"We've used that tree before and we'll use it again"
richardchatten8 May 2022
Bill Everson declared that most versions of Bret Harte's 1869 story were "strong on talk and dramatics, decidedly weak on visuals", which is a bit hard on Joseph LaShelle's atmospheric work on this instalment which resembles a film noir as much as a western.

You always know you're in for something special when it snows in a western, and this cross between 'Boule de Suif' and 'The Petrified Forest' doesn't disappoint, with Anne Baxter radiant in an early film in her transition from ingenue to lady with a past.
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8/10
Let it snow! Let it snow! Let it snow!
kalbimassey20 December 2023
In the aftermath of a violent robbery, the "Ahm gonna clean up this town" mob are out in force targeting four miscreants; guilty by association, Anne Baxter, past her sell by date floozy, Miriam Hopkins, career drunk, Billy Lynn and dapper cardsharp, Dale Robertson, driving them away, in the direction of an icy wilderness, supplied only with a portion of chicken so scraggy, it would raise customer complaints on the Kids' Menu at KFC! With Craig Hill and heavily pregnant Barbara Bates joining the group, the chicken seems especially paltry.

Self styled leader of the pack, Robertson, locates a desolate, isolated cabin, affording only the meagrest refuge from the ensuing storm. From this point everything that could go wrong.....does! Amidst deepening snow and plunging temperatures, the blocked chimney creates a serious smoke hazard. Oh!......and did I mention that all their horses escape? No doubt in search of warmer weather.

Only a visit from the Abominable Snowman could further aggravate the situation and sadistic, gun toting Cameron Mitchell duly obliges, keen to lay hands on 'his' money and his moll. The treacherous, trigger happy outlaw proceeds to hold the woeful bunch hostage, but as blizzard conditions grow more severe, the last morsel of chicken disappears along with any likely chance of escape. As reality hits home, the gunman becomes increasingly edgy and agitated, while Robertson retains a cool, pragmatic exterior. Could the gambler now be holding all the cards?

The starkly beautiful black and white cinematography perfectly captures the bleak, sombre mood of this gritty, atmospheric, noirish western, with its pervading themes of rejection, isolation and confinement. Unusual and unappreciated, 'Poker Flat' is a minimalist classic of its genre.
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8/10
Unusual western
plan9918 March 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Very well shot and the scenery looked like it was done on location and not in a studio, if it was done in a studio then it's very impressive that it managed to look so real, cold and snowy. An interesting plot and the hidden gun was a great plot device keeping the audience wondering when it was going to be retrieved.

Dale Robertson had several chances to disarm the baddie with almost no risk of failing to be successful but he took none of them so this did did spoil the film a bit.

A nice assortment of characters the old drunk being my favourite of course. Well worth watching especially for Western fans.
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