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  • "Silver Lode" has long been labeled as an anti-McCarthy western and has also been compared to "High Noon" (1952). The McCarthy witch hunt for communists in the motion picture business was in the headlines at the time this film was made. The persecution of the hero was said to be a thinly veiled protest of Senator Joseph McCarthy's persecution of the entertainment industry.

    All that aside, "Silver Lode" stands as a pretty good western in its own right. True, the story can be compared to "High Noon" however, it is nevertheless an entertaining movie by itself.

    Dan Ballard (John Payne) and Rose Evans (Lizabeth Scott) are about to be married when Marshal Ned McCart (Dan Duryea) and his three deputies (Alan Hale Jr, Harry Carey Jr., Stuart Whitman) ride into town looking for Ballard. McCart accuses Ballard of having murdered his brother and has come to arrest him and "take him back". At first the townspeople are on Ballard's side but gradually they turn against him especially when they believe that he has killed the town sheriff (Emile Meyer). Ballard then has to prove his innocence and expose McCart for the person he really is.

    In addition to those mentioned above, there is an impressive list of familiar faces in the supporting cast. Dolores Morin plays saloon girl Dolly, Robert Warwick plays Judge Cranston, Hugh Sanders, the Reverend, Morris Ankrum, Scott's father, John Hudson her brother, Roy Gordon the town doctor and Myron Healey, Lane Chandler, John Dierkes, Gene Roth and I.Stanford Jolley as various townspeople.

    Director Alan Dwan keeps the story moving and provides us with some good action scenes. And believe it or not there's not one fist fight in the entire movie.

    Forget about the comparisons with McCarthyism and "High Noon" and sit back and enjoy an entertaining western.
  • bkoganbing3 November 2005
    Federal Marshal Dan Duryea arrives in the town of Silver Lode with three deputies to arrest one of its citizens, John Payne, on a charge of murder. As things start to happen, Payne who at first has the whole town behind him, loses all his friends save for fiancé Lizabeth Scott and former girl friend Dolores Moran who works in the saloon. By the way, Duryea arrives on the 4th of July which was also to be Payne's wedding day.

    This is a classic version of the ill effects of mob violence. Some have said it's a polemic against McCarthyism, no doubt helped by the fact that Duryea's character name is McCarty. For myself Silver Lode is in the tradition of The Oxbow Incident and Fury, both classic films from major studios about vigilante justice.

    Silver Lode doesn't have the production values that 20th Century Fox or MGM could bring to a movie, it was done by RKO. Nevertheless supporting Payne, Duryea, and Scott are a solid cast of players, very much at home in westerns. This was also Dolores Moran's last film, she was married to producer Benedict Bogeaus.

    Payne had already essayed a very good role in Kansas City Confidential of a wrongly accused man and he follows it up here with an equally good portrayal. It's one of his best film parts.

    Allan Dwan keeps things moving at a brisk pace, Silver Lode doesn't bog down for a fraction of a second. One of the best B westerns ever done.
  • Released in 1954 - Silver Lode stands tall as a pretty decent Western in its own right. True. Its familiar story can easily be compared to "High Noon" in many ways, but, nevertheless, it is an entertaining cowboy flick, all the same.

    Filmed with the obvious restrictions of its B-movie budget, this vintage, Technicolor Western tells the tale of Dan Ballard, a decent man (relatively new to town) who (on his wedding day, which also happens to be the 4th of July) finds himself being accused of cold-blooded murder and the theft of $20,000.

    This unjust accusation is leveled at Ballard by Marshal McCarty, a very mean and forceful lawman, who unexpectedly arrives in town from Discovery, California, in the company of his 3 rough-looking deputies.

    Needless to say, an intense conflict takes place that quickly escalates into an all-out gunfight which has almost every able-bodied man in town involved (and even some of the women).

    With his life now hanging delicately in the balance, Ballard soon finds himself a hunted man in his own hometown. A vicious, mindless mob-mentality takes over as the citizens of Silver Lode pursue Ballard with a blind, hateful vengeance.

    Silver Lode was a film that was very much a product of its time. It was produced during the "McCarthy" era, when film producers, writers and actors were called to account during a (literal) political witch hunt.

    This film's screenplay reflects the concerns of the American people of that time in regards to matters such as truth and liberty in what they believed to be a free society.

    With a running time of only 80 minutes, Silver Lode moved along at a really good clip. Its cast included John Payne, Dan Duryea, Harry Carey Jr., and Lizabeth Scott.
  • Famed Western with a magnificent John Payne and a splendid Lizabeth Scott .This exciting picture tells the story of Dan Ballard( John Payne, Allan Dwan's usual actor)a respected citizen of a little town called Silver Lode , on his wedding day he has just promised marriage a young fiancée(Lizabeth Scott)and settle down for a peaceful existence.Just when they are about to marry on July 4 ,comes a vengeful agent named McCarty (Dan Duryea) and his henchmen(Harry Carey Jr, Stuart Whitman, Alan Hale Jr). McCarthy has sworn revenge and detain to undercover gunfighter. But Ballard escapes and is only helped by a gorgeous saloon girl named Dolly(Dolores Moran).

    This classic western is plenty of suspense as the dreaded final showdown approaches and the protagonist realizes he must stand alone against impossible odds as his fellow town people for help ,nobody is willing to help him but they pursue him , while he attempts to clear his name as wrongfully accused of murder . The narration is almost adjusted in real time,from the beginning,the wedding, until the ending confrontation and is approximately developed in eighty one minutes and the starring is given two hours to resolve the accusation as murderer. For that reason it results to be a ¨High Noon¨ (1954,Fred Zinnemann)variation along with a relentless allegory and criticism of HUAC black list and McCarthyst era. Ample support cast full of known secondary actors as Emile Meyer, Robert Warwick, John Dierkes, Harry Carey Jr, Stuart Whitman, Alan Hale, many of them usual in Western. Although made in low budget by the producer Benedict Bogeaus is a very efficient film and very entertaining.The picture contains an excellent cinematography by John Alton( Noir cinema's usual photographer) and appropriate musical score. This quickie is finely directed by Allan Dwan , a craftsman working from the silent cinema, but ¨Silver Lode¨ is his unqualified masterpiece. Dwan directed over 1400 films, including one-reels, between his arrival in the industry (circa 1909) and his final film in 1961. Among them some good Western as ¨ Restless breed, The rivers edge,Cattle Queen of Montana,and Montana Belle¨.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    A good western by Allan Dwan,much better than his exotic extravaganzas of the era ("Escape from Burma" "Pearls of the South Pacific").

    A transparent metaphor of the witch hunt.The villain is called McCarthy .The hero is a well-respected man,about to marry the daughter of a wealthy inhabitant.Up comes a so called US marshal,and he is accused of a crime ."We are behind you!" the incredulous people of Silver Lode say.But not for long.Without any real proof,the villain succeeds in turning the opinion round and the groom into an outcast.Only the bride and a "bad" gal working in the local saloon ,Dolly,still believe in him.Overnight,an honest man becomes the one you've got to get rid of.

    SPOILERS The ending climaxes the movie:the chased man takes refuge in a church (a symbol:since the Middle Ages ,such a place has been a sanctuary ,a place where even a criminal must not be arrested (remember "the hunchback of NOtre Dame").By entering the sacred place with a gun,McCarthy braves the law of God .That he can be killed by a bullet ricocheting off a bell on Independence day is ,as the priest says,a divine intervention.

    Like this?Try this "High Noon" Fred Zinnemann 1952
  • Warning: Spoilers
    On his wedding day, four 'marshals' arrive in town with a warrant for the arrest of Dan Ballard (John Payne). But the leader of the marshals is played by Dan Duryea...and the one thing that is nearly always certain...Duryea plays scumbags! Is he a real marshal and are his assistants also lawmen? Who knows. What is interesting is how the townsfolk react towards Dan...a man who was, until this day, their friend and neighbor.

    One thing I really appreciate about "Silver Lode" is that it is different. About 90% of more of the westerns you see have variations on about three or four plots....and this film is not just another familiar tale. The only negative is that if I had produced the film, I wouldn't have used Duryea. Don't get me wrong...Duryea was a great actor. But because of type casting, the audience would have likely known that he and his band of lawmen were phonies....and leaving it more vague would have made for a better fit. There also is one glaring plot problem involving the telegraph wires...and the actions of the telegrapher simply made no sense...and when you see this, you'll see what I mean. But despite these problems...the film is enjoyable and, most importantly, quite different.
  • gavin694221 August 2017
    In Silver Lode, Dan Ballard (John Payne) is arrested by four marshals for murder and theft but he denies the charges and searches for the real culprit even as the townsfolk start abandoning him.

    The film has a plot eerily similar to "High Noon" (1952), and Marshal McCarty appears to be a veiled reference to Senator Joseph McCarthy. So this then becomes one of those westerns that made sly political statements about witch hunts and blacklisting. The subtext is often more interesting than the western genre on its face, as a matter of fact.

    Not being a devotee of westerns or the films of Dwan, I don't really know much about this one... it seems to me to be low budget, comparable to many of the TV shows of the 1960s. I suppose in that respect, it is slightly ahead of its time, but certainly is not on the A-list of must-see westerns.
  • Silver Lode is directed by Allan Dwan and written by Karen DeWolf. It stars John Payne, Lizabeth Scott, Dan Duryea, Dolores Moran and Emile Meyer. Music is by Louis Forbes and cinematography by John Alton.

    Dan Ballard (Payne) is a respected resident of the town Silver Lode, but on his wedding day Marshal Fred McCarty (Duryea) rolls into town looking to arrest him, accusing him of having murdered the Marshal's brother. The townsfolk refuse to accept the charge and stand up for Dan, and Dan loudly protests his innocence, but once suspicious mud is thrown it begins to stick and soon Dan finds himself running out of friends and is therefore forced to prove his innocence.

    Two things always pop up when the film Silver Lode is spoken about, one is the similarities to High Noon, the other is the veiled allegory of Senator McCarthy and his witch hunts. These are two things which are hard to ignore, though as a "British" lover of Westerns myself, the McCarthy politico aspect doesn't really resonate, but Silver Lode deserves to primarily be known for being the damn fine Western that it is.

    Fickle mob rule and knee jerk reactions drive Silver Lode forward, it's a thematic powder keg ignited with some skill by the prolific Dwann. Aided by the supremely talented Alton, Dwann achieves so much mood and tension from a small town set up, this is never dealing in expansive vistas, its primary goal is to suffocate Dan Ballard. Where once was freedom and love, now is a place closing in on him, with the story moving into a noir realm as Dan becomes a man whose past is proving to be inescapable. Then there is fate, another big noir ingredient, which has a big part in proceedings as events conspire to make Dan seem more of a guilty man the harder he tries to prove his innocence!

    It's a lean and mean screenplay, devoid of filler and characterisations are colourful. Payne makes for a good put upon hero, his Dan Ballard as written is stoic and tough, and resilience needs to be his middle name. Duryea does another in his great line of weasels, and here he is wonderfully cloaked in suspicion from the off. Tagging behind him are his three equally suspicious cohorts (played by Stuart Whitman, Alan Hale Junior and Harry Carey Junior), while the upstanding town elders (Sheriff, Judge, Reverend) have time to make a mark before the fragile nature of small town justice begins to take a hold - and the clock is ticking down on Dan Ballard's life.

    Most impressive is the influence on the story of the lady characters, so often a token interest in the "B" Westerns of the 50s. Deftly perched on either side of Ballard, the femmes are key characters in the piece. Rose Evans (Scott) is virtuous, brightly attired in white, she's the town sweetheart who Dan is set to marry, the question is will her loyalty to Dan remain? Dolly (Moran giving the best performance in the film and getting all the best lines) is a slinky saloon gal, in purple frills and with a tongue as sharp as a scorpion's sting, she still carries a torch for the unobtainable Dan.

    Alton's colour photography is most appealing but we don't see the best of his work until the finale inside the town church. With clever use of light, shadows and colour enhancements, Alton is able to sum up the whole tone of the story in this segment. As for if the finale is worth the wait? It is, but it's a little mischievous. Certainly it's interesting, a quirk of fate again playing a hand as two men do battle in the church bell tower. Notably there's a religious angle dropped into the narrative, but I'm at a loss as to why that would be the case? Still, it's a very small irritant, for this is a cracker of a Western, a lesson in achieving big things from such small beginnings. 8.5/10
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Don Ballard((John Payne) was an industrious and lucky man. He had built up a sizable cattle ranch, was considered a leading citizen of Silver Lode, and was about to marry the wealthy knockout blond Rose Evans(Lizabeth Scott). But just as they were about to finish their wedding vows, a sinister force arrived in the form of Fred McCarty(Dan Duryea), and 3 deputies: Johnson(Harry Carey, Jr.), Kirk(Alan Hale, Jr.), and Wicker (Stewart Whitman). Ballard knew McCarty previously as a cattle thief and murderer, although he denied being such. He wanted revenge against Ballard for killing his brother over a card game in which Ballard won $20,000.: enough to start his cattle spread. McCarty claims he stole that money. McCarty claims to be a US marshal now, and insists on apprehending him immediately, and taking him to another town for trial, if he doesn't meet upon an 'accident' on the way. Most of the townies can't believe that Ballard is guilty of these charges, thus do what they can to obstruct his leaving Silver Lode. Although Sheriff Wooley(Emile Meyer) says McCarty's credentials look genuine, Ballard wants this confirmed by officials in San Francisco. Only problem is McCarty(presumably) cut the telegraph wire some distance out of town. This act should have been sufficient to cast doubt on the validity of McCarty's credentials, but little was made over this situation........Ballard gets one of McCarty's deputies(Johnson) to talk for a $5000. bribe, confirming that his marshal credentials are a clever fake, and telling where the telegraph line was cut. But official confirmation of this charge was still needed. An incident followed involving Ballard, Johnson, Sheriff Wooley, and McCarty threatening and shooting at each other in the livery stable. The sheriff, and Johnson ended up dead, and McCarty wounded. Ballard was blamed as the murderer, as MccCarty claimed. The populace turned against Ballard, who now had to fight for his life, killing several deputies or citizens in self defense, as he ran around town. Only Rose and the gorgeous saloon girl Dolly((Dolores Moran) still believed in him. These 2 might seem like natural enemies: a 'good' girl and a 'bad' girl. But they both had romantic attachments to Ballard , and cooperated in forcing the telegraph operator to fake a telegram saying that McCarty was a fake. Rose ran with this message to the church, where a mob was gathered, as Ballard and McCarty were above, in the bell tower. The telegram convinced the mob that McCarty was in the wrong. Ballard and McCarty were now on opposite sides of a large bell. See the film to find out what happened. Meanwhile, a valid telegram was received saying that McCarty was wanted for murder and rustling. In the fade out, Dolly is running with this to the church to show........Duryea is easily the most charismatic male, but in a negative way, with his nasal sneering voice. Payne looks more believable as a westerner than in some of his westerns. Dolores, as Dolly, is much more interesting, if shadier, than the prim Rose. This fits the standard formula of westerns.......See it in gorgeous Technicolor at You Tube.
  • Dan Duryea is the reason I decided to watch this western and he is wonderful but far from the only reason I rate the movie an 8. The action starts with Dan and three other riders (Harry Carey Jr and Alan Hale Jr for gosh sakes... you know you're in for a good time) riding into the town of Silver Lode on forth of July. They're looking for the man named "Dan Ballard" but everyone they ask gives them the cold shoulder, one remarks they know a gunfighter when they see one. Turns out Dan is a federal marshal named Ned McCarty (other reviews have noted the McCarthy similarity and I agree with them on that) come to take Ballard -- solidly played by John Payne -- prisoner back to California for a murder rap. The victim is, it turns out, McCarty's brother and there is also a matter of $20,000 stolen at the same time.

    At first the town's people are solidly behind Ballard but gradually they come around to bow McCarty's assumed authority and turn against Ballard. This is done rather well, not nearly as heavy handedly as might be. Many reviewers have noted the similarity to "High Noon", it's sort of a "High Noon" in reverse. While that's mighty high company the comparison is not out of line and the wonderful direction of Allan Dwan makes up for the lower production values. This is a good story, well made and worth looking for.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    THE SILVER LODE is a pretty good Technicolor western from RKO. The story is good, the cast is top notch, and the photography is particularly fine. This movie is supposedly an anti-Senator McCarthy parable, and if so I'll rate it an "F" and No Stars, but the idea this is about McCarthy is nonsense.

    John Payne and Lizabeth Scott have their wedding interrupted by a US Marshal (named McCarty, not McCarthy) and played by dependable bad guy Dan Duryea on a charge of murder. Duryea is a fake, and it seems he's more interested in a certain $20,000 than the untimely shooting of his brother. This "parable" obviously has exactly zero to do with investigating Communist infiltration of the film industry during the Cold War Era.

    One of the most cowardly things a filmmaker, author or journalist can do is to attack Senator McCarthy. McCarthy was a war hero who offended Hollywood's lefties by daring to expose the many Communists in their industry --- as verified by testimony from the much-honored director Elia Kazan. They took their revenge out by attacking the man with mountain-upon-mountain of cheap shots and lies for the past 50 years; and the lies continue today.

    Almost any American, not just the left, many otherwise well informed people, believe the lies, if only through sheer abundance. To pile more lies on top of this is sheer cowardice -- as is the idea of re-defining this 1953 western in terms of their evil and vindictive spin.

    Rent this one and enjoy it for the good western that it is.
  • What could easily have been just another low-budget Western oater or, worse still, the poor man's HIGH NOON (1952), is turned by excellent scripting (atypically the work of a woman!) and direction into a true gem of the genre during its golden age. In fact, the film wears its anti-Red Scare intentions proudly on its sleeve by actually naming its chief villain (Dan Duryea in formidable form) McCarthy and making him an outlaw posing as a fake U.S. Marshal! Reformed gunfighter hero John Payne (in his first of four movies for veteran director Dwan) has his 4th of July wedding (to local belle Lizabeth Scott) disrupted by the arrival in town of Duryea and his men (including Stuart Whitman and Harry Carey Jr.) claiming to have a warrant for his arrest for killing Duryea's brother and absconding with the sum of $20,000. So far so conventional plot-wise but what is remarkable here is the way that the film-makers chose to employ the townspeople who are constantly following the protagonists around the streets of Silver Lode, at first forcibly siding with Payne (to the point of holding Duryea et al at gunpoint) but, with time, being swayed by the latter's lies and an unfortunate series of events that lead them to believe Payne guilty of murdering their sheriff (Emile Meyer) and one of the marshals, as well as wounding Scott's hot-headed brother. Aiding Payne, apart from the unwavering Scott (of course), is his ex-flame, sultry saloon gal (Dolores Moran, the wife of producer Benedict Bogeaus and whose last film this proved to be) who spits one-liner put-downs to hero, villain and everyone in between; I really liked her character and, apparently, so did Dwan because he opted to close the film on the image of her running frantically clenching the all-important telegraphic confirmation (Duryea's men had intuitively cut the lines beforehand) of Payne's claims of innocence. However, in view of the film being a thinly-veiled allegory on the ongoing witch-hunts, it is a telling comment on the relative nature of truth that the girls had already won the day by forcing the gullible telegraph official to write down a false reply. The expected climactic confrontation between Payne and Duryea, then, takes place inside a bell tower – with the latter's bullet ultimately ricocheting on himself in God-like retribution – making for a doubly ironic ending to a film (beautifully shot in color by the great John Alton) that had held its audience entranced for all of 77 breathless minutes.
  • A man is accused on his wedding day of killing another man behind his back and stealing $20,000. How will he excuse himself ? An atypical western which is particularly worthy of the presence of two rare and magnificent actresses : Dolores Moran and Lizabeth Scott.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Although contrived and schematic, and an obvious attack on McCarthyism, "Silver Lode" is well structured for the first two thirds of the movie. Unfortunately the plot and moral vigour collapse in the final third.

    As in the similarly themed "High Noon", a man's wedding day is ruined by the arrival in town of an old enemy. The enemy, Ned McCarthy, claims to be a U. S.Marshal with a warrant for Dan Ballard's arrest for murder. Dan is supported by the town's people and he is given two hours to find a legal defence. Everything goes wrong, and bit by bit people lose faith in him. Eventually he is found with two guns in his hands and three dead bodies at his feet. The implication is obvious, and every-one except an old flame and his new fiancée leaps to the wrong conclusion. From this point onwards, the story is a mess.

    Dan goes on the the run, but it is not clear what he is trying to achieve, what information he is looking for. He kills not only McCarthy's henchmen, but also local people who are doing what they believe is their civic duty. Yet, when at the last minute, the truth is revealed, "Silver Lode" seems to suggest that everything is now fine - except that the town's people are all fickle vermin - and that it does not matter that innocent people have been killed.

    The blanket condemnation of the local people is a ludicrous over-simplification and over-generalisation. Even "High Noon" was more tolerant than this. (If a man is found with guns in his hand and is surrounded by dead bodies, it is not unreasonable that people assume he killed them). "Silver Lode" would have been a better film if the plotting in the last third had been more skillful, and had eliminated the killing of innocent people. It would also have been more interesting if the fiancée had been one of those who lose faith in Dan, and if an embittered Dan had left town at the end with his old flame.

    It would be quite easy to remake "Silver Lode" with substantial improvements.
  • I must admit here and now that I have not seen this film. However, in my research of such B-Westerns, I found that this film was originally shot in 3-D. That has not been mentioned anywhere.

    Perhaps the IMDb crew can investigate and make the appropriate notation wherever it is that such notations are made.

    I certainly would like to see this film, as it appears to have an interesting cast... John Payne, Dan Duryea, and Lizabeth Scott usually do good work, and the other reviews have generally been positive.

    From the reviews, this could perhaps be one of the best 3-D movies made during the 3-D movie craze in the early 1950's... Hondo being another one that could be better.
  • Straight Out of the Headlines comes this Anti-McCarthy Blow-Back from Hollywood.

    Fine Production and Good Cast with Dan Duryea, John Payne, and Lizabeth Scott Leading the Proceedings. Backed by Alan Hale Jr., Stuart Whitman, Harry Carey Jr.

    Scripted Dialog Debating Suspicions vs Citizen Rights, Mob Mentality, and other Topics of its Era.

    First-Class Cinematographer John Alton, Working with Technicolor, Adds a Bonus.

    The Movie Ends with a Heavy-Handed Religious Allegory.

    It's Peppered throughout with Gun-Play and is Suspenseful and Claustrophobic at times.

    B-Western Respectfully Distinguishes Art as Reflection and Commentary.

    If there is any Doubt About the Movie's Mission...

    The Fake Marshall's Name is McCarty.
  • As something original and different this is a pretty interesting movie to watch. It's a western but not one with a story that involves a typical gunslinger story or revenge plot.

    It's a movie in which a man who is about to get married has to defend himself in front of its town and town-folks, when he man, who claims to be an U.S. Marshall, rides into town with a warrant for his arrest and accuses him of having committed a murder. This whole story provides the movie with a different approach like you would normally expect from a western. If I have to compare it to anything else, the movie "The Ox-Bow Incident" is the one that comes the most close to it.

    Even though its an interesting and original approach it doesn't also mean that the movie is great throughout to watch. The movie does certainly feel a bit dated and its being a bit awkward to watch at times because its action and just the movie overall feels a bit clumsy and is cheap looking at times.

    The story itself also of course doesn't provide the movie with much spectacular fireworks. Not that the movie is dull or anything but at times I wished there would be some less talking and also less characters involved with the story.

    This movie would had most likely not cost a lot of money to make. It has an unknown director at the helm and also an unknown cast in it. Directing and acting-wise this is also not really a movie that impresses much but due to the fact that its original and different this movie still remains a perfectly good one and also interesting one to watch.

    7/10

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  • Warning: Spoilers
    Veteran director Dwan made hundreds of films over a long career (and indeed was of the most prolific of the classic Hollywood school) yet even amongst a body of distinguished work this tour de force is a masterpiece.

    Produced during the McCarthy period, when film directors, writers and stars where called to account in a political witch hunt, Silver Lode (like another colour Western laced with similar concerns, Ray's fabulous Johnny Guitar) is concerned with the nature of liberty, truth and memory in a free society.

    Dan Duryea is superb as the scheming villain 'McCarty' and John Payne makes a Ballard a suitably stalwart hero who has to prove his innocence before a deadline.

    The plot is structured around a number of instances which, each in turn, ostensibly weaken Ballard's claim to innocence. Ultimately he finds he is on the run - alone in a town full of people formerly his friends, but who now aim to hunt him down on the basis of accusation, suspicion and circumstantial evidence alone. Ballard's travails also reflect the nature of substantiation and memory, both in a political and cinematic sense, as he undergoes his constant quest for redemption.

    John Payne's stoic exterior has never been put to better use as he grabs desperately to each chance to prove his innocence as, one by one, those who welcomed him into their community as 'respectable' fall away. This may be his best film. The repetitive nature of this process, as incident follows incident only highlights the significant nature of his predicament and makes the audience 'could this happen in real life?' The answer in the 50's, sadly, was 'yes'.

    SPOILER

    In the superbly staged ironic finale, Ballard and McCarty fight it out in the town clock tower, and the villainous false Marshall is killed by his bullet ricochet from the Liberty bell. In a further ironic note, the document which has relieved Ballard from suspicion is itself a forgery, accepted unquestioningly by his supporters. And this all takes place on a national holiday, amongst flags and patriotic celebration, and on the eve of Ballard's wedding.

    Within the constrictions of a B-movie, and the repression of a communist witch hunt, this movie manages to slip through a neat and entertaining indictment of a system that forces the innocent to defend themselves against accusation, slander and lies. What adds to all this is the consistency of the film, its reiteration of political truth without digression or fudge.
  • I have seen this film so many times, which is a testimony to its brilliance. From the beginning, when the slippery Dan Duryea and his cohorts ride in to town, you know you're in for tensely packed film, and what's so amazing is that the excitement is packed into 77 mins. An unapologetic mirroring of the McCartyism witch-hunt, this film pulls no punches in portraying a well-respected man turned into a criminal when a man professes to be a marshal arrests him and plans to extract him from town. But the town citizens want none of this, and rally against the marshal, siding with the protagonist, but that support slow slips away, and protagonist is now the enemy. John Payne plays the protagonist really well, and this is probably is his best western.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This is another film from the 1000 films to see before you shuffle off this mortal coil list .... and I'm not really very sure why.

    It's a good story .... with a few eye-rolling moments - like when our hero is found in the barn holding not one but TWO guns and no-one left alive to say what happened. How inconvenient.

    The - as far as I can tell - utterly unknown cast do a good job. It's quite fascinating how the town is 100% in support of our hero at the start of the film and then how quickly they turn against him.

    It's a short movie and the ending is quite abrupt. We don't get to see what our hero does after he is reprieved and the town say "sorry".

    So a good movie ... but really one of the top 1000 ever?

    73/100.
  • The reason that led me to watch this movie is because it's listed in the book ''The 1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die'', and in the end it was worth-watching!

    This Western follows the footsteps of ''High Noon''; here John Payne plays Dan Ballard, a man arrested by four marshals for a murder he didn't commit, and while he struggles to find the real culprit the townspeople start leaving him to his destiny. The only ones on his side are his soon-to-be-wife Rose (Lizabeth Scott) and saloon lady Dolly (Dolores Moran).

    The things I liked about the movie are the music and the supporting cast: Dan Duryea shines as the evil sheriff McCarthy (that was a subtle reference to Joseph McCarthy) and in the end is killed by Payne in the church of Silver Lode; Stuart Whitman, Alan Hale jr. and Harry Carey jr. are great as the sheriff's henchmen, and they were specialized in Western movies.

    Still a well-made Western and I liked it very much.
  • It's the Fourth of July and Silver Lode is not only celebrating Independence Day. It's celebrating popular John Payne getting married to Lizabeth Scott. But then Dan Duryea rides into town with four companions. They US Marshals, he says, and here's his warrant for Payne for murdering Duryea's brother and stealing $20,000. At first the town doesn't believe it, and it's hard for the audience to figure out. But as time goes on, the opinion shifts from Payne's side to Duryea's. Even as the audience discovers the truth, Payne's position in the town weakens, and it looks like Duryea may not even get the chance to take him out of town; the town may lynch Payne.

    Allan Dwan directs a good A western for Benedict Bogeaus, and the performance are excellent, as is John Alton's typically fine camerawork. Duryea oozes unlikability, Payne plays bewildered very well, and the cast is ably eked out with Robert Warwick, Harry Carey Jr., Alan Hale Jr., Frank Sully, Stuart Whitman, and Dolores Moran in her last screen role. She was married to Bogeaus at the time. Dwan's handling of the story includes some obvious though telling symbolism . He was fond of doing that in his serious pictures at the time.
  • This is an action packed Western. That much I'll give it.

    Aside from that, it may be the stupidest Western ever made. Not the worst, but the stupidest.

    John Payne is accused by Dan Duryea of murder. Dan Duryea has papers claiming he is a U. S. Marshall, and the town judge looks at the papers, which are in order.

    However, like everything else, there is a plot hole to that. This is one huge plot hole, and a waste of the talents of the aforementioned actors, not to mention Deputies Hale, Whitman, and Carey.

    I'm a fan of old fifties Westerns, but this one is just stupid. I'm sorry.
  • Some have claimed how "impossible" it is not to compare this with "High Noon". I haven't seen "Noon" in years but this film was fresh in every way. Just to think of it - here is a collaborator with D. W. Griffith who has made more films during his successful career than any ten directors combined - and many of them Westerns! He was wowing audiences with his technical know-how long before "High Noon" was a twinkling in anyone's eye. How much the villain and McCarthy have in common is more in the domain of the scriptwriter than the director, perhaps - after all, the scriptwriters got the shaft more often than anybody else during the witch hunts. This is a lively tale and it moves quickly. The colors are wonderful and the tracking shots vivid. Come to think of it, I might just prefer it. It doesn't talk itself to death, but neither do the other Dwan films I've seen over the years.

    Curtis Stotlar
  • Undoubtedly influenced by the classic High Noon, Alan Dwan's under-rated Silver Lode followed shortly thereafter and cleverly proves to be a finely tuned counter point to the Fred Zinnemann Oscar winner, whilst continuing in the same vein of proving to be a stark allegory of the climate of fear and suspicion prevailing during the early 50's McCarthy era.

    Besides the obvious differences of being shot in quite brilliant Technicolour by John Alton, in Silver Lode the townspeople do the complete opposite of those in Hadleyville. There, they completely abandoned Marshal Will Kane about to marry Grace Kelly's peace-loving Quaker.

    The gripping Silver Lode sets up a diagonally opposite scenario. Relative new-comer to the town, the financially successful rancher Dan Ballard, is about to marry Rose Evans, daughter of one of Silver Lode's affluent businessmen. The ceremony, held during the town's Fourth of July celebration, is interrupted by the arrival of 4 strangers, claiming to be law men with a warrant for Ballard's arrest for murder. A local judge grants Ballard 2 hours to prove his innocence. Over the course of the action, easily swayed by the words of the calculating Fred "McCarty" (Get It?), the supposed marshal, leading the posse, we see the townspeople largely turn against Ballard, eventually forming a mob, to aid McCarty in hunting him down.

    It's a quite original premise. Silver Lode respectfully references High Noon, plays out much of the action in complete contrast, whilst seeking to transmit the same sort of thinly-veiled political message. And it notably succeeds.

    Whilst not boasting the star power wattage of Gary Cooper and Grace Kelly, Silver Lode features a strong B western cast headed by John Payne's Ballard and Dan Duryea's persuasively bullying McCarty. Dwan's directorial skills are creatively inventive, especially in the tracking of Ballard's flight from the mob, throughout all corners of the town and the church bell tower climax with its righteous religious overtones.

    Silver Lode is an extremely well made, interesting Western and a gamely bold jab at McCarthyism considering the time it was made. Definitely worth seeing.
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