No Name on the Bullet

No Name on the Bullet is a 1959 American CinemaScope Western film directed by Jack Arnold, and starring Audie Murphy, Charles Drake, and Joan Evans. It is one of a handful of pictures in that genre directed by Arnold, better known for his science-fiction movies of the era. Although it is one of Universal Pictures' modestly budgeted vehicles for World War II hero Audie Murphy, the top-billed actor is unusually, but very effectively, cast as the villain, a cold-blooded gun-for-hire.[1]

No Name on the Bullet
DVD cover
Directed byJack Arnold
Screenplay byGene L. Coon
Story byHoward Amacker
Produced byJack Arnold
Howard Christie
StarringAudie Murphy
Charles Drake
Joan Evans
CinematographyHarold Lipstein
Edited byFrank Gross
Music byHerman Stein
Color processEastmancolor
Production
company
Universal Pictures
Distributed byUniversal Pictures
Release date
  • February 1959 (1959-02) (United States)
Running time
77 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Plot

When infamous hired gunman John Gant (Audie Murphy) arrives in the small town of Lordsburg, Arizona, the locals are terrified by his reputation and surprised by how young he is. Although Sheriff Buck Hastings would like to arrest Gant, he points out to the townsmen that Gant always coerces his rivals to draw their gun first, allowing him to kill them legally in "self-defense." While the men in the town speculate anxiously about Gant's target, Luke Canfield (Charles Drake), the town blacksmith and doctor, greets Gant and is totally unaware of Gant's reputation as a hired gunman. During his first meeting with Gant at the smithy, Luke demonstrates his perfect aim with a maul.

Luke proudly takes Gant on a tour through town and agrees to join him later for a game of chess. At home, Luke's fiancée, Anne Benson, tends to her father, Judge Benson, who suffers from tuberculosis. Luke's father Asa joins them for dinner, during which Buck arrives to warn Luke to stay away from Gant. Asa cautions Buck not to condemn Gant prematurely, but Buck is reluctant to accept his advice and reveals that he feels he will be powerless against Gant's superior gun skills. Later, mine owners Earl Stricker and Thad Pierce assume that their partner, Ben Chaffee, has hired Gant to kill them to take sole ownership of the mine. When they find Gant in the saloon and propose a counter-offer, however, Gant observes that no innocent man would be afraid, and turns them away.

Upon hearing that Stricker and Pierce were seen talking with Gant, Chaffee assumes that they want to kill him. He questions Luke about Gant, and after Luke fails to calm him, the physician walks through town, noting that the townsmen are all hiding behind guns and locked doors. While clerk Lou Fraden and his wife Roseanne discuss their certainty that her ex-husband has sent Gant to kill them, Luke confronts Gant, asking him why he has come. Impressed with Luke's bravery and integrity, Gant explains that he believes that Luke, who saves the lives of men "who deserve to die," is less ethical than he is. While they talk, a panicked Pierce shoots himself in his office and dies later that night. After this, Luke accuses Gant of murder. When Buck tries to throw Gant out of town, Gant refuses to leave. When the sheriff pulls a gun on Gant, Gant shoots him in the hand and renders him useless. When asked why Gant did not kill him, the gunman explains it was because no one was paying him.

Later, Judge Benson advocates using vigilante law to throw out Gant, but after Luke protests, suggests sacrificing the one man Gant is after to save the rest of the town. Meanwhile, Fraden, emboldened by alcohol, confronts Gant, who calmly encourages him to draw his gun. At Luke's urging, Fraden flees, leaving Luke to demand fruitlessly that Gant leave town. Next, Stricker gathers the townsmen to challenge Gant, and although Luke disapproves, he agrees to lead them, hoping to minimize the possible violence. Gant, angered to see Luke backed by a mob, warns the men that if they shoot him, he will still live long enough to kill Luke, saloon owner Henry Reeger (another man afraid Gant is after him), Asa, Stricker, and several other town leaders. The men disband silently. Later, Luke confesses to Judge Benson that he likes Gant, and the judge warns him that Gant's viciousness is a progressive disease that he cannot cure.

In the store the next day, Gant approaches Anne and questions her about her home life, but he will not reveal his target. At the same time, the judge speculates to Luke that if the hunted man refused to defend himself, Gant could be legally arrested for murder, but Luke declares that no man could die without fighting. Soon after, Chaffee kills Stricker in a shootout, prompting Sheriff Hastings to take off his badge and drop it on the street. Anne, who has grown suspicious about her father the judge, reads a letter locked in his drawer that reveals a past crime. Realizing the likelihood that Gant has been hired to kill her father, she goes to Gant's room with a gun. Gant bluffs her that her gun is unloaded, and then easily takes it away from her. Anne declares that the judge will not defend himself, prompting Gant to rip off a piece of the upper part of her dress.

Gant goes to the judge's home and tells him that his "friends from back East send their respects". The old man admits his past guilt and tells Gant that he knows enough to send himself, the governor, and several other wealthy and powerful men to prison, but all they have to do is wait and nature will do Gant's job for him. Unfortunately, his old associates are impatient. Of course, the Judge refuses to fight. Gant then shows him the piece of Anne's dress and implies that he has raped her. The old judge is angered enough to grab a rifle and follow Gant outside. The old man has severe coughing and fires a wild shot before collapsing on the porch steps. Luke arrives and sees Gant with his gun drawn and assumes that Gant shot the old man. Luke starts to throw a hammer at him, but Gant shoots him in the right shoulder. As Gant is walking away toward his horse, Luke uses his left arm to throw a hammer. Just as Gant turns around, he is struck in the upper part of his gun arm and breaking it, so that Gant can no longer shoot. As Gant laboriously mounts his horse, Asa tells Luke that the old man was not shot. Luke offers to tend to his arm, but Gant replies, "Everything comes to a finish" and rides away.[2]

Cast

Release

The film was released by Universal-International in February 1959. Film critic Dana M. Reemes notes that “according to trade reviews, No Name on the Bullet was strictly intended for the bottom half of the double bill.”[3]

Critical assessment

“Audie Murphy, along with Joel McCrea and Randolph Scott, held together the last vestiges of the B-Western during the fifties and sixties. In fact, Audie was the last authentic hero of the double-bill western picture.” - Film historian Lee. O. Miller in The Great Cowboy Stars of Movies and Television. (1979).[4]

The film has come to be regarded as one of Murphy's best movies, with its fans including director Joe Dante.[5] Film writer Jeff Stafford stated that, "unlike most of Murphy's earlier Westerns, No Name on the Bullet has a philosophical edge, which makes it closer in tone to Ingmar Bergman's The Seventh Seal (1957) than a six-gun oater like Destry (1954)".[6]

Biographer Dana M. Reemes, in his book Directed by Jack Arnold (1988) writes:

Even the most understanding and sympathetic reviewers entirely missed the film’s most interesting qualities. It is decidedly not an action melodrama, but rather a highly refined, even philosophical drama examining the nature of good and evil and the emptiness of merely conventional morality.”[7]

Reemes observes that “No Name on the Bullet...served its purpose as a bottom-billed western, and was promptly forgotten. This is unfortunate, as the intelligent script, restrained performances, and smooth direction leave the film relatively undated; certainly its meaning is as relevant as ever…”[8]

In 1969, Universal remade it as an episode of The Virginian entitled "Stopover", with singer/actor Herb Jeffries playing Murphy's character.

Theme

Film critic Dana M. Reemes formulates the picture’s theme as follows: “The central question of the drama is under what conditions, if any, a man has the power of life and death over his fellows.”[9] Reemes details an exchange in which John Gant, reputed to be a “notorious hired killer,” reveals his true ethical motivations over a game of chess with the town’s physician, Dr. Luke Canfield (Charles Drake). Canfield discovers, to his surprise, that Gant is “a quiet, intelligent, and highly cultured man…disarmingly articulate on question of morality.”[10] Dr. Canfield intones against Gant’s gunslinging and urges him to leave town. Gant offers a counter-argument:

If anything, Gant appears less dogmatic and more reasonable than the doctor. Gant poses the following hypothetical question: If, on the one hand, a criminal eludes justice, but a man like Gant puts a permanent end to his misdeeds, while, on the other hand, a doctor heals such a man so he may continue his rapacity towards the innocent- who, the gunman, or the doctor, is morally culpable?[11]

Reemes adds that “Gant is almost a metaphysical force that catalyzes the evil inherent in others. He is the only completely honest and integrated being in the story.”[12]

See also

References

  1. No Name on the Bullet at Audie Murphy Memorial Site
  2. Reemes, 1988 pp. 106-108: Plot summary
  3. Reemes, 1988 p. 106
  4. Miller, 1979 p. 331
  5. No Name on the Bullet at Trailers From Hell
  6. Jeff Stafford, 'No Name on the Bullet', Turner Classic Movies accessed 4 June 2012
  7. Reemes, 1988 p. 106
  8. Reemes, 1988 p. 109
  9. Reemes, 1988 p. 106
  10. Reemes, 1988 p. 106: Gant “cultured, if somewhat melancholic.”
  11. Reemes, 1988 p. 106: A portion of passage is edited out, for brevity, clarity
  12. Reemes, 1988 p. 108

Sources

  • Miller, Lee O.. 1979. The Great Cowboy Stars of Movies and Television. Arlington House Publishers New Rochelle, New York. ISBN 978-0870004292
  • Reemes, Dana M. 1988. Directed by Jack Arnold. McFarland & Company, Jefferson, North Carolina 1988. ISBN 978-0899503318
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