Stagecoach to Fury explained

Stagecoach to Fury
Producer:Earle Lyon
Screenplay:Eric Norden
Story:Earle Lyon
Eric Norden
Starring:Forrest Tucker
Mari Blanchard
Wallace Ford
Music:Paul Dunlap
Cinematography:Walter Strenge
Editing:Carl Pierson
Color Process:Black and white
Studio:Regal Films
Distributor:20th Century-Fox
Runtime:76 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English
Budget:$125,000[1] [2]
Gross:$600,000 (estimated)

Stagecoach to Fury is a 1956 American western film directed by William F. Claxton and starring Forrest Tucker and Mari Blanchard. It was the first film from Robert L. Lippert's Regal films; the B picture unit of 20th Century Fox set up to provide second features shot in CinemaScope.[3]

The film, with exteriors shot around Kanab, Utah was nominated for an Academy Award for black-and-white cinematography for the 29th Academy Awards.

Others in the film include Wallace Ford as Judge Lester Farrell, Ellen Corby as Sarah Farrell, Wright King as Ralph Slader, Paul Fix as Tim O'Connors, and Rodolfo Hoyos Jr., as Lorenzo Gracia.[4]

Plot

A stagecoach with a mixed group of passenger en route to the town of Fury makes a stop at a layover. Upon arrival the passengers are held up by Lorenzo Garcia and his gang of bandidos capture and disarm the passengers, shooting one when he stops to raise his fallen trousers when he puts his hands up. The two staff of the coaching stop are missing presumed murdered. Garcia questions former Army captain Frank Townsend, now riding shotgun on the stagecoach on the location of the Federal Government gold shipment they expected to be carried by the stagecoach. After Garcia shoots and wounds Tim O'Connor the driver to encourage information, Townsend reveals that the stagecoach was to remain at the layover until a wagon containing the gold shipment would arrive and transfer the cargo to the stage.

Garcia holds the prisoners as his band awaits the gold shipment. Among the surviving passengers are young gunslinger Ralph Slader, who the bandidos are eager to have a gunfight with, a cowardly judge escaping from the vengeance of criminals, a scheming woman who has arranged to rob and murder her husband and Townsend's fiancée. Though Garcia explains the passengers will remain safe if they follow his orders, Townsend feels that Garcia would not want any witnesses to his robbery to be left alive.

Production

Parts of the film were shot in the Gap in Utah.[5]

Reception

The film grossed $250,000 in its first five months and Variety estimated it to earn $600,000.[2]

Quotes

"Justice sometimes moves in strange company. Its judgement is not always empty. Though its sting be cruel."

See also

Notes and References

  1. Solomon, Aubrey. Twentieth Century Fox: A Corporate and Financial History (The Scarecrow Filmmakers Series). Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 1989. . p250
  2. More Regal Pix for 20th Expansion. Variety. 15. 27 March 1957.
  3. News: Scott, J. L. . Nov 7, 1956. 'Teenage rebel' human mother-daughter tale. Los Angeles Times. .
  4. News: STAGECOACH TO FURY. 1957. Monthly Film Bulletin. 24. 9. .
  5. 289.