The Sheepman (1958) Poster

(1958)

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8/10
Nothing sheepish about this Beef and Lamb Hot Pot.
hitchcockthelegend2 January 2016
The Sheepman is directed by George Marshall and written by William Bowers, James Edward Grant and William Roberts. It stars Glenn Ford, Shirley MacLaine, Leslie Nielsen, Mickey Shaughnessy, Edgar Buchanan, Willis Bouchey, Pernell Roberts, and Slim Pickens. Music is by Jeff Alexander and cinematography by Robert J. Bronner.

Utterly delightful semi-comic Oater, The Sheepman pitches Ford as sheep farmer Jason Sweet, who arrives in Powder Valley - a place ruled by cattle ranchers only - and upturns the applecart by announcing he intends to let his sheep graze on the lands there. Trouble, motives and back stories will out!

With the exception of some poor rear projection work, this is a pic that's constructed with style and humour. The opening is a doozy as Sweet quickly puts down a marker in the town, with a glint in his eye and a punch of some force. It's an irresistible characterisation by Ford, deftly blending humour with machismo, setting up the rest of the film by firmly pulling us viewers onto his side. Supporting cast are bang on the money, doing justice to well written characters (the screenplay was Oscar nominated), with the writing also having some nous via twists and a commitment to never let the story be boring or twee.

An absolute must see film for fans of the irrepressible Glenn Ford. 8/10
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7/10
A most unusual sort of western.
planktonrules3 February 2019
"The Sheepman" is a comedy-drama...with an emphasis on either that changes throughout the course of the movie. It begins with Mr. Sweet (Glenn Ford) arriving in a new town and thoroughly ticking off almost everyone he meets. Why would be behave so? Apparently, he expects to be hated and he's just speeding up the process. And, the reason to hate him? He's planning on raising sheep in the range--a place where cattle is king and folks hate sheep! The rest of the film is about how the town tries to get rid of Sweet and how the clever Sweet takes to this unkindness.

Aside from some amazingly crappy rear projection used throughout the movie, it's a rather unusual and enjoyable film. The mood is odd however...at times a bit funny and at others deadly serious.
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6/10
Nice Comedy Western
jpdoherty8 December 2009
Warning: Spoilers
MGM's THE SHEEPMAN (1958 - aka "Stranger With A Gun") is a hugely enjoyable light hearted western that is fondly remembered by western fans! Beautifully photographed in Cinemascope and Metrocolor by Robert Bronner its Acadamy Award nominated script by William Bowers and James Edward Grant could at times be quite amusing. The fine Edmund Grainger production was brightly directed by George Marshall.

Glenn Ford Is Jason Sweet (a name that elicits guffaws from leading lady Shirley Maclaine in one scene) who arrives into a town of a predominately cattle rearing district to start raising - of all things - SHEEP! The locals are incensed and under the tutelage of big cattle rancher Colonel Stephen Bedford (a very young Leslie Neilson in his dramatic Pre Frank Drebin days) they make a stand against him. But it comes to light Jason and the Colonel are old enemies and eventually must face each other. In the meantime, after many attempts to rid the town of Jason and his woolly merchandise the Colonel sends for three hired gunmen led by Chockdaw Neal (the impressive Pernell Roberts) to take Jason down. They first ride roughshod over the sheep camp killing the hands and later, in an exciting set piece, Jason confronts Chockdaw in the town's Main Street for a one to one fast draw shootout before riding out to the Colonel's ranch for the final showdown.

Ford is excellent in what is one of his most likable roles! Combining the comedic talent he displayed in such films as "Teahouse Of The August Moon" (1956) and "Imitation General" (1958) together with his dramatic tough persona in westerns like "Jubal" (1955), "The Violent Men" (1956) and "3.10 To Yuma" (1957) his Jason Sweet is an altogether engaging and winning character. Giving great support and adding to the fun is Ford's long time friend and co-star from many movies Edgar Buchanan as the town's nosey parker, Mickey Shaughnessy as the Colonel's lame brained foreman, Pernell Roberts as the fearsome and violent gunman and Shirley MacLaine looking very pretty as the girl who secretly admires the Sheepman. Also notable and adding to the fun is the fine music score by MGM staff composer Jeff Alexander whose finest work and best known score is "Escape From Fort Bravo" (1953). For THE SHEEPMAN he invented some marvellous comical cues for the movie's amusing initial scenes. There are also some exciting dramatic cues and a lovely lingering main theme heard in its broadest rendition over the titles.

THE SHEEPMAN is an entertaining and much rewarding romp and is worth repeated viewings. The good news is that it has just had its first Region 1 release from Warner Home Video on their new Warner Archive series. It is a lovely 2.35 widescreen transfer! The bad news is there are no extras - only the bare bones - not even a trailer! For the outrageous price Warner's are charging for this disc could they not have stretched to a measly trailer? HUH!
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Mutton and Veal Don't Get Along
dougdoepke29 October 2007
In 1957, there was enough phony gun smoke on the screen to choke Superman. Most Westerns were filled with cardboard characters, unimaginative stories, and predictable showdowns. Too bad this under-rated little entry got lost in the shuffle, because it's both highly original and genuinely humorous, with an expert cast, a great script, and some magnificent Colorado landscapes.

What really distinguishes this oater is Ford's droll character (Mr. Sweet!) and the film's sprightly dialogue, neither of which sounds like you've yawned through it all before. In fact, Sweet is one of the few original cowboy creations of the time. He's a sly dog, so you never know what he'll do next, which keeps the audience riveted. Then too, Ford plays the part beautifully, his typical low-key manner making the many clever twists all the more surprising. Watch how adroitly Sweet wakes up the sleepy town at movie's outset. It amounts to a real head-turning treat.

So why do cattlemen hate sheep, the crux of the story. I don't think the screenplay explains, but it's because sheep don't just graze, they eat the roots, killing the forage, which leaves nothing for the cattle. So you know sheepman Glenn Ford is in for a passel of trouble when he brings his flock to cattle country. And trouble he gets in the form of slickster Leslie Nielsen (before Nielsen showed his own comedic talents).

And whose inspiration was it to cast the very un-frontier-like Shirley McLaine in the girl role. She's just wacky enough to make her pairing with Sweet seem natural. Then too, there're those two impossibly colorful characters-- the sneaky Edgar Buchanan at his slipperiest and the half-clown, half-thug Mickey Shaughnessy at his schizo best.

What really surprises me is that this little gem came from Western-averse MGM, which always seemed to be above such common fare as horse operas. Still, the movie does benefit from that studio's emphasis on production values-- even the outdoor sets are hard to detect.

My only complaint-- the two shootouts look like unimaginative sops to convention. It's as if the writers had to surrender to what someone thought the audience expected. Too bad. Anyway, don't let the movie's relative obscurity fool you. It's one of those sleepers that sometimes wandered away from the Dream Factory only to get lost in the crowd. Nonetheless, it's still well worth a look-see, even 50 years later.
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7/10
The Sheepman
Scarecrow-8830 May 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Man rides into town like he owns the place. Not exactly making instant friends in the town of Powderville, Jason(Glen Ford)is not the kind to mince words, he knows human nature all too well, can judge people pretty well indeed. He's a ballbreaker and would've made a fine businessman if he'd been born many years later past the old west, because Jason immediately upon entering town, finagles a good saddle and horse from those who normally could swindle more vulnerable, trusting folks..yes, sir, Jason understands all too well how to handle himself against tricksters who take advantage.

Jason even provokes a fight with "the toughest man in the territory", Jumbo(Mickey Shaughnessy) to prove a point..he's bringing sheep within cattle country and anyone who has a problem with that will have to settle it with him. Well, the richest cattleman in the territory does have a problem with Jason, Colonel Jon(Leslie Nielsen)and he's got the town in his favor, and will do whatever it takes to run his adversary out of Powderville. Being a good judge of character is an asset for Jason as he faces opposition at every turn, only snookered by a woman to be married to the Colonel..the lovely, delightful, fiery red-head Shirley MacLaine(just glows in this movie and has marvelous chemistry with Ford who she spars with during their spirited encounters).

It's simple, Jason will not conform to the Colonel's demands, rebelling against competition because he's not gonna allow someone to order him away, he's just too stubborn. Intruding upon cattle land is certain to raise the ire of a community who doesn't have a fondness for a sea of sheep to be grazing all over the territory. When a clever ruse(a celebration by the town, welcoming Jason as a new member, as fishy as it does appear)temporarily puts Jason on a train out of town goes awry, the Colonel hires gunfighters to settle the score..one among them being responsible for the killing of Jason's fiancé during a bank robbery, the other two put in prison by him. One thing's for certain, when Ford gets those angry eyes, and you make him mad, your ass is grass.

If seeing Ford squaring off with future BONANZA alum Pernell Roberts in a gunfight isn't enough, western fans get to watch him in a showdown with NAKED GUN's Leslie Nielsen..how cool is that?! Good fun with hilarious support from Edgar Buchanan as Milt, a man who might sell his own mother if the price is right(although, as someone always with dollars on his mind, he does often warn Jason about possible set-ups and strange behavior) and Shaughnessy as Jumbo, the Colonel's stooge who is upended by Ford numerous times, an enjoyable foil/laughingstock, the movie plays to the hilt.
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7/10
Thoroughly enjoyable western with romance asides...
moonspinner5512 April 2008
Terrific M-G-M oater with both a comedic and a romantic slant has Glenn Ford playing the new sheep farmer in a cattle community; he deliberately stirs up trouble for himself with the locals, particularly villainous old acquaintance Leslie Nielsen, when reminding them that the grazing land is his to use as well--and if they wanna run him out of town, he'll fight them to the bitter finish. Shirley MacLaine is at the peak of her charms as a sarcastic gal who initially plays both sides of the fence. Very entertaining western with colorful production makes no overtures to deep meanings or powerful statements. On the frivolous side though it may be, it is one of the most satisfying westerns of the 1950s. Screenwriters William Bowers and James Edward Grant (Oscar-nominated) have fashioned a surefire character for Glenn Ford, who is irresistible. Good show! *** from ****
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7/10
Let Sleeping Sheep Lie...
seveb-2517923 September 2018
This was always one of my favourites when I was a kid and it still doesn't disappoint after all these years. Don't let the unlikely title put you off, this is a very well put together traditional western, comedic without being an out and out comedy, it still manages to generate some tension at the appropriate times. With some clever dialogue and well constructed action sequences. Glenn Ford is ideal for the lead role, an articulate and initially underestimated stranger in town, in a similar vein to Jimmy Stewart's Tom Destry in "Destry Rides Again". Shirley MacLaine is well suited to the tomboy daughter of the silver haired cattle baron role. Leslie Neilson gets to show off his serious side to good effect as the slippery villain. And there is a strong supporting cast, including Edgar Buchanan as the archetypal western old timer, Mickey Shaunessy as the comic heavy and Pedro Gonzalez Gonzalez is the little Mexican sidekick. Slim Pickens delivers a memorable cameo as the Sherriff who goes fishing whenever there's trouble. And few can do swarthy gun slinger better than Pernell Roberts. My only complaint was the poor picture quality of the DVD. Other than that, highly recommended.
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7/10
Counting sheep
dbdumonteil31 July 2010
This is a very special western ,very tongue in cheek ,which was very unusual in the fifties where the masters produced unsurpassed classics (Ford,Daves ,Walsh,Mann....)Till the moment when Glenn Ford tells the story of his former fiancée to Shirley McLaine ,there's absolutely nothing dramatic in this plot which involves a Sheepman who has got problems with the inhabitants of a cattle village .Sheepman has to battle for sheep herds and for the "colonel"'s fiancée, a tomboy who was ahead of her time ,as far as woman's lib is concerned ,at least till her very last lines ;Glenn Ford ,Shirley McLaine and Leslie Nielsen do not take their roles seriously and it's much fun watching them battling against each others ;one can regret that Georges Marshall should have introduced drama in the second part .It should have stayed a comedy till the end!The scenes of the ball and the night train tooting alone are worth the price of admission.

Didn't Jason get the Golden Fleece?
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7/10
Only An Afterthought
DKosty1235 December 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Glenn Ford was very busy as an actor in 1958- 6 films including Torpedo Run and this movie. Because of his being busy, this movie though well cast is kind of an assembly line production. There are some accidents in this film that make people think it is supposed to be a comedy.

The biggest one is the cast. Leslie Nielsen, Edgar Buchanan, and Slim Pickens all became know for comedy later in their careers. Just because they are in this cast does not mean it is a comedy. Just because this is sheep versus cattle doe not make it a serious film either.

What we have is something in-between. Ford plays his role straight and yet at times is funny himself. Shirley MacLaine's role here as Fords girl Dell is not fully exploited here. I think that explains the whole movie. A good looking talented cast and an uneven script. Writer James Edward Grant would write a better western comedy with McLintock later featuring the Duke, Chill Wills and Buchanan amongst others but in this movie he is still working on how to shape a western comedy.

This film is a pleasant diversion for those who like the cast. I believe it was intended to be more serious than it is but with everyone being so busy cranking out other films, and a lot of old western actors, the film is just a pleasure to watch and wonder if they really had tried to make a comedy here, how it would have turned out?
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9/10
A Different Kind of Western
aimless-4628 April 2007
Although "The Sheepman" is full of comic moments, none of them could quite be considered to be of the parody or even the self-reflexive variety. George Marshall's 1958 western was produced a few years before the genre began imitating television westerns by moving in that direction with films like "Cat Ballou" and "Support Your Local Sheriff". Most of this film's humor comes from the off-kilter nature of Glenn Ford's cowboy hero Jason Sweet. He is my all-time favorite Ford character, alternating between standard western hero and detached manipulator. His scenes with Mickey Shaughnessy (as town bully Jumbo) are funny because they totally break genre conventions. The Coen Brothers have used a similar technique in many of their films, writing dialogue totally mismatched with what one expects from a particular movie stereotyped character. The effectiveness of the device (and its novelty in 1958) led to William Bowers & James Edward Grant receiving an Oscar nomination for the screenplay.

The story gets moving right away as the title character (Sweet) hits the town of Powder Valley, seemingly on a mission to alienate every citizen with whom he comes into contact. This also serves as a quick introduction to most of the supporting cast as he insults the railroad station master (Percy Helton), gives unsolicited advice to a young lady (Shirley MacLaine), tricks the livery stable owner (Edgar Buchanan of "Petticoat Junction" fame); and gets the better of the general store proprietor (Harry Harvey). He then picks a fight with Jumbo (Shaughnessy) and ends the day by announcing his intention to graze sheep on the nearby public lands. This puts him into conflict with a local cattleman named "The Colonel" (a very young and uncharacteristically serious Leslie Neilsen).

MacLaine's often exasperated heroine would serve as inspiration for the Suzanne Pleshette and Joan Hackett characters in "Support Your Local Gunfighter" and "Support Your Local Sheriff".

"The Sheepman" is refreshingly different; witty, unpredictable, and extremely entertaining.

Then again, what do I know? I'm only a child.
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7/10
Did Glenn Ford ever change hats?
helpless_dancer5 October 2001
Good western featuring a host of old familiar shoot-em-up faces. Edgar Buchanan was fine as the sleazy corral owner, but I was shocked to find good ol' Adam Cartwright as the sneaky, chicken poop "gunfighter". The opening segment was a laugh riot but there was plenty of gunsmoke and flying lead for the western purist. Very enjoyable.
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8/10
Glenn Ford is on the lamb with Shir
snicewanger19 June 2014
This is one of the 1950's best westerns in the Destry Rides Again mode of tongue-in-cheek westerns and foreshadows Support Your Local Sheriff by a decade. It's ideally cast and is certainly one of Glenn Ford's finest roles. He and Shirley MacLaine have marvelous chemistry. Familiar faces Edgar Buchanan, Mickey Shaughnessy,Willis Bouchey,Percy Helton,and Slim Pickins are around to give it the proper old western flavor and Leslie Nielsen is slickly handsome as Ford's rival for Shirley's affections. Pernell Roberts is an effectively slimy villain. Director George Marshall was an old hand at combining comedy with action and The Sheepman is one of his best efforts. The screenplay by James Edward Grant and William Bowers was nominated for an Academy Award.

The Sheepman still holds up well today and will appeal to anyone who is a fan of western's,comedies,or just plain entertaining movies. It's good, clean, old fashioned fun and a prime example of one of those kind of films"that they just don't make anymore!" More's the pity
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7/10
A courageous man
valadas21 April 2019
Warning: Spoilers
This is a 1958 movie. A western. I know that westerns are out of fashion now But I still like to watch one of the good old ones. A classic one like this one with the traditional figures of the hero and the villain and where the good always wins over the evil despite occurring in a society of which law and order are practiacally absent. Here in a small town dominated by a powerul man a stranger (Glenn Ford) arrives with a flock of sheep to be raised there in a a place ruled by cattle ranchers who don't view favourably his purpose and therefore try to put him off by several ways under the direction of a powerful colonel who runs the town. This leads to several events and even a few shootouts since that stranger has come to this town not exactly with the purpose of raising sheep there but chiefly to settle accounts with some people there including the colonel for some old events between them. There is also a girl there (the beautiful Shirley McLaine) who is the colonel's fiancee but who feels attracted to the stranger from the beginning which brings also a few interesting scenes between them. A movie not very good but not bad either,
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This is a standard sheepman vs. cattleman plot played for laughs and it works.
Slim-49 October 1999
This movie is played for laughs, particularly in the early scenes. The Fall scenery of the Colorado Rockies is gorgeous. The pretty title theme by composer Jeff Alexander reappears later in another Glenn Ford outing, "The Rounders". The strong cast includes Glenn Ford, Shirley McLaine, and Leslie Nielson. Edgar Buchanan is particularly good in a supporting role.

This movie is fun to watch. Ford is good as the sheepman and Shirley McLain does well with her role as the almost-wife of bad guy Leslie Nielson. The film is a little short on action, but the witty script more than makes up for it. Most of the action occurs at the end with Sheepman Ford shooting the bad guys.

I particularly enjoyed Shirley McLain's performance. The script gives her a character with some potential and she makes the most of it. If she's done another Western I can't remember what it is.

>
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7/10
Jumbo and Milt
elo-equipamentos2 June 2017
This a enjoyable comic B Western that l saw for first time in late 1976 in my hometown when l was a boy, Glenn Ford is amazing as outsider and how he wants that the people know him before to bring all sheep to a Cattle's valley, but for me the movie resume in two different and amusing persons Milt (Edgar Buchanan) and Jumbo (Mickey Shaughnessy) Milt is clever, peaceful and funny, Jumbo is thug, stupid and funny, they are the true stars of this comic western, the remains of the movie is usual as always, Milt and Jumbo are remarkable guys!!

Resume:

First Watch: 1976 / How Many: 5 / Source: TV-Cable TV-DVD / Rating: 7.5
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7/10
A Western spoof featuring Glenn Ford and a lot of other veterans of the genre
jacobs-greenwood10 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Directed by George Marshall, and written by William Bowers and James Edward Grant (who earned an Oscar nomination for their story & screenplay written directly for the screen), this above average Western comedy features Glenn Ford in the title role. Though three of the other leads are Shirley MacLaine, Leslie Nielsen and Mickey Shaughnessy, the rest of the cast is full of familiar faces (like Ford's) from this genre, though many have merely cameo roles (like Slim Pickens as the Marshal who goes fishing every time there's trouble).

The first 20 minutes of the film are the funniest, as Ford's "stranger in town" character blows through so many of the "tried and true" Western clichés, spoofing them as he goes. The latter two thirds grow more serious as Ford and Nielsen battle each other for control of the town, and MacLaine. I'm not sure where this one was filmed, but the "purple mountains majesty" and the abundant yellow aspen trees made for a beautiful backdrop.

Jason Sweet (Ford) made quite an impression on the people of Powder Valley within the first few minutes of his arrival by train. After "insulting" the town's station master (Percy Helton, uncredited), a lady who's having trouble controlling her horse that turns out to be Dell Payton (MacLane), its wise guy Milt Masters (Edgar Buchanan; Roscoe Ates appears uncredited as another of its loafers), whom he later out horse trades, and its general store proprietor (Harry Harvey), he describes and then asks the town folk where their toughest hombre might be. Finding the aptly named Jumbo (Shaughnessy) in the Chinaman's (Lee Tung Foo, uncredited) restaurant, Sweet picks a fight, which he wins, and then states his intention to bring sheep to graze among the cattle on the area's public lands. On the way out, he has a brief conversation with Milt, whom he'd sized up a man without honor (e.g. willing to rat out anybody for $1), before checking into the town's only hotel.

Though Dell shows up to warn him that Powder Valley is now a peaceable place without the usual Western trouble, Sweet is greeted by Jumbo, who insists upon taking him to meet his boss, "the Colonel". Sweet then demonstrates that he's easily the quickest man (with a gun) in town and that, if the Colonel wants to see him, he should come to see Sweet. However, Jumbo and a couple of other toughs later persuade, at the point of a gun, Sweet to come with them. Upon being taken to the Colonel's, where Sweet learns that Dell is his fiancée, he comes face to face with the town's leading rancher (Nielsen). As it turns out, Sweet knows this "Colonel", who is really Johnny Bledsoe, a former gunslinger like Sweet who'd decided to go straight and settled in Powder Valley six years ago. The two decide not to resolve their conflict at this time, though it's clear neither will back down - Sweet is determined to raise sheep in the valley, Col. Stephen Bedford will figure out a way to drive Sweet out of "his" town.

The two men's methods are completely different - Sweet is straightforward, Bedford's are more underhanded. Though Sweet is able to use Dell and her carriage to surprise Jumbo and some other toughs, making them help his Mexican sheepherder Angelo (Pedro Gonzales-Gonzales) unload his sheep from the train, he is later manipulated by Dell himself. Her father (Willis Bouchey) and her fiancé convince her to invite Sweet to a party and then use her charm to distract him while Bedford's men round up Sweet's sheep and load them back on the train. During this time, Dell learned that Sweet once had a fiancée that was killed, and had settled down to raise sheep after winning them in a poker game. Jumbo, with pistol drawn, then "puts" Sweet, Angelo, and also Milt on the train, whose conductors are instructed to drive 200 miles before stopping to unlock it cars.

However, Sweet is able to turn the tables on Bedford once again, and informs the rest of the town's people that Bedford had been using Milt to buy up all the area's public grazing lands for himself. After her father checks out Sweet's story, Dell breaks her engagement and later, with Milt, helps Sweet avoid an unfair fight with Chocktaw (Pernell Roberts), a former foe hired by Bedford to run off Sweet's sheep and kill his hired help. Once the odds are evened, Sweet easily wins the shootout with Chocktaw and Jumbo rides off to inform Bedford. Inevitably, this all leads to a showdown between Sweet and Bedford, who's naturally got more surprises up his sleeve. Whereas Bedford's trick, using a seemingly harmless (but actually armed) old pistol, enables him to wound Sweet, Sweet's shot kills Bedford. Having made his point, being too stubborn to let anyone tell him what to do, Sweet decides to have Jumbo corral his sheep to market where Milt will sell them. Naturally, Sweet then decides to become a cattle rancher and win Dell as his own.
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7/10
Pretty good serious-comic Western with George Marshall's inspired direction and a sensational Glenn Ford
ma-cortes26 June 2013
Highly watchable Western comedy about confrontation between Sheepmen , cattlemen and homesteaders . This is a classic Hollywood Western , it turns out to be a mixture of action , fights , shootouts and humor . In a Western little cattle-town , a pattern of the other celebrated cow towns of the Old west , appears a stranger called Jason Sweet (Glenn Ford) and behaves impulsively . The reason appears with his stock : a herd of sheep . Glenn Ford is the brave gunslinger along with Edgar Buchanan , they are fighting to stifle the conflicts between Sheepmen , homesteaders and cattlemen who hire gunfighters (Pernell Roberts of Bonanza) . Meanwhile , astute as well as imaginative Sweet develops a loving triangle between a copper-haired haired heroine tomboy (Shirley MacLaine) and a treacherous villain called Col. Stephen Bedford (a young Leslie Nielsen) . The astonished inhabitants decide to run him out at all costs . Ford finally cleans up an uncontrollably lawless Western town. ¨Draw fast when you call him the Sheepman¡ ¨ .

This fresh , genial picture gets action Western , shootouts ,laughters marvelous outdoors , a lot of attractive roles and turns to be quite entertaining . It's a medium budget film with good actors , technicians, production values and pleasing results . This spirited realization that never flags results to be a potpourri of Western , comedy , irony and action . Glenn Ford is pretty good in the title role , he is a Sheepman faced in by cattle ranchers but determined to stay , as he intends to graze on the range . Glenn Ford ideally cast as an obstinate Sheepman and he shows his usual delicious fair play for comedy . He plays a gunfighter/Sheepman , a roguish revenger with remarkable self-assurance and establishing himself as a man to be reckoned with . Main cast is frankly good , the great Leslie Nielsen as a nasty villainous , his enthusiasts will be surprised to find him and not least Shirley MacLaine . Furthermore , an extraordinary support cast such as chubby Mickey Shaughnessy as Jumbo McCall , Edgar Buchanan as Milt Masters , Willis Bouchey as Frank Payton , Pernell Roberts as Chocktaw Neal and always likable Slim Pickens as Marshal . Interesting as well inspired screen play by William Bowers and James Edward Grant , it includes splendid roles . Glamorous cinematography , photographed in glowing Metrocolor by Robert Bronner . Evocative and atmospheric musical score by Jeff Alexander .

The motion picture well produced by Edmund Grainger was directed in sure visual eye by George Marshall . He realized a variety films of all kind of genres , though especially Western , the best are starred by James Stewart and Glenn Ford . Marshall directed Western along half century , his first Western was ¨Wild gold¨(1934) and he subsequently made his masterpiece ¨Destry rides again¨(1939) in which combines action , charmingly natural story , humor and drama ; in 1951 directed a new version under title ¨ Frenchie ¨ with Eddie Murphy and Marie Blanchard in similar characters to James Stewart and Marlene Dietrich . As Marshall introduces comicalness in realist Western , including a little genre satire on the conventional Western thrown in for good measure . As he directed Western with funniness such as ¨Texas¨ also starred by Glenn Ford and Edgar Buchanan . He went on filming parody/western such as ¨Fancy pants¨(1950) , ¨Advance to the rear¨(1964), and musical Western as ¨Red Garters¨and ¨The second greatest sex¨. Others Western he directed are the following : ¨When Dalton rode¨, ¨Valley of the sun¨, ¨The savage¨, ¨Pillars of sky¨, ¨the guns of Fort Petticoat¨ and the episode titled ¨The railway¨ from ¨How the West was won¨ .
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7/10
One Of Glenn Ford's Best
damianphelps14 March 2021
This movie works on a lot of levels. Awesome cast, good story, great action and good laughs.

Ford is a different tough guy to most western stars, less physically imposing his toughness or power comes completely from his uncompromising attitude against his foes. It makes a nice change , similar to Joel McCrea but a better actor.

The movie has all the elements that you would be looking for when watching this, its a very satisfying movie :)
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6/10
As Mark Twain famously described Scotch cuisine . . .
oscaralbert29 March 2021
Warning: Spoilers
. . . "Mutton is a mealtime spoiled." THE SHEEPMAN is likely to put many if not most viewers to sleep as they count the slaughtered title characters (sheep AND men). What seems to begin as a pilot for a doomed television situation comedy (complete with the banal musical cues) ends up with four murders (of men) but no wedding (shotgun or otherwise). This fiasco may have worked as a James Garner and Doris Day vehicle, but it falls flatter than a flapjack with its B-movie casting. War historians report that the main reason Koreans tortured American P. O. W.'s with fish head soup was that sheep were too hard to come by. When U. S. hill folks are attending a potluck in the hollow and are offered second helpings on lamb chops, their inevitable reply is "No thank you; please pass the skunk strips."
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8/10
VERY ENJOYABLE
steve-667-1019018 March 2020
It's hard not to like Glen Ford. He made some terrific westerns. Some call this one a comedy. Light hearted yes, perhaps in the same vane as McClintock. But not a comedy. The real charm is the script I reckon. It's natural, clever and kind of real. Sweet is a cool character who can be ruthless instantly. The pacing is good thanks to the script and the actors are engaging. I have to say, there's not a great deal of chemistry between McClaine and Ford and her personality is too "modern" for me; if that makes sense. Anyhow, it's not a film that requires too much analysis. It's just a really enjoyable flick.
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6/10
Good
trz195112 March 2021
My favorite Shirley MacLaine western!

Mr. Ford: you're one of my favorites, but please comb your hair!

Leslie Nielsen: Fine actor (did you know he tested for Judah in "Ben-Hur"? ) but whenever I see him now I think of "AIRPLANE!" and other comedic roles. A great actor who had a wonderful sense of humor. Police Squad, for instance.

Shirley, I can't be serious.
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8/10
An exciting picture, solidly based on one of the fiercest Western issues...
Nazi_Fighter_David3 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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7/10
good mix western and humor
petersjoelen4 February 2024
Ford entering a small town with a flock of sheep instead of cattle is of course asking for trouble and under the initiative of Leslie Nielsen's character he is roughly thrown out of the town, but Ford does not give up that easily.

The tone is light in this western but not too much so it works very well.

In the end it turned out to be a nice, successful mix of western and comedy in which Ford plays his cool role wonderfully with a wink.

Nielsen as the villain does a nice job, who would have ever thought that he would become so comically famous in the naked gun.

Shirley MacLaine was also still young at the time and she plays her stubborn role with apparent pleasure.
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One of the best comedy/western movies I have seen.
zogobnl1 September 1999
The interface between cattle ranchers and sheep herders is played for more amusement than viciousness. This movie came out before the violence reached the degrading state, but still has lots of excitement and suspense. Families with fairly young children can see this together without fear, boredom, or embarrassment. While it may not quite meet the current PC view of women, it still shows the female lead with a lot of personality and originality, without trying to make the men look stupid.
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6/10
the sheepman
mossgrymk22 March 2024
Meh serio/comic western. First half is trying too hard to be "Maverick" and not quite making it. Problem is that where James Garner and, to a lesser extent, Jack Kelly were charmingly roguish the character of Jason Sweet, as written by William Bowers, James Edward Grant and William Roberts, directed by George Marshall and acted by Glenn Ford comes across as more of an obnoxious butthole as he gratuitously cheats horse traders and storekeepers and starts fights in restaurants. Perhaps realizing that they've fallen short of rebottling the "Maverick" formula the film makers switch to a darker, more Anthony Mannish revenge story but that, too, is beyond the modest talents of Marshall and is on the pallid side with a wooden bad guy turn from Leslie Neilson and what I'm fairly sure is the dullest Shirley MacLaine performance ever. Give it a generous C plus for some amusing stuff with Edgar Buchanan as the horse trader and Slim Pickens as a cowardly sheriff.
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