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The Forty-Niners

The Forty-Niners (1954)

1h 11m | PG-13

⭐ 5.2 / 10

1849 California and the Gold Boom. Marshal Sam Nelson goes under cover to find out the identity of a trio of killers.

Director: Thomas Carr

Studio: Westwood Productions

Genre: Western

Video: 720p

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Cast

Bill Elliott

Bill Elliott

as Sam Nelson

Virginia Grey

Virginia Grey

as Stella Walker

Harry Morgan

Harry Morgan

as Alf Billings

John Doucette

John Doucette

as Ernie Walker

Lane Bradford

Lane Bradford

as Bill Norris

I. Stanford Jolley

I. Stanford Jolley

as Everett (as Stanford Jolley)

Reviews

By John Chard

The Cold Water Ruckus. The Forty-Niners is directed by Thomas Carr and written by Dan Ullman. It stars Wild Bill Elliott, Harry Morgan, Virginia Grey, John Doucette and Lane Bradford. Music is by Raoul Kraushaar and cinematography by Ernest Miller. 1849 There was gold in California. According to the Eastern newspapers the mountains and streams were full of it. People from all over the country came here by the thousands, and were called The Forty Niners. Some of them worked hard for their golden dreams - - others robbed, plundered and killed for the gold. The entire burden of law enforcement had to be done by a handful of men - - the few United States Marshals the Federal Government could spare to protect its citizens… Wild Bill Elliott goes under cover to find out the identity of some dastard killers in this pleasant mystery based black and white Oater. Backed by an Elliot voice narration throughout, it’s obvious that Carr and Ullman are firmly tuning into a dragnet for the Western crowd vibe, and it actually works. With Elliott proving to be a likable lead man and Morgan enjoying himself as a shifty card cheat and blackmailer, the material on the page is delivered with entertaining gravitas. The pace is brisk, the action plenty and there’s enough twists in Ullman’s screenplay to keep you guessing. Yes for sure the ending is never in doubt, this is classic “B” Western territory after all, but a good time to be had here for the discerning Western fan. 6.5/10