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Riding Shotgun Poster

Riding Shotgun

He held a town at bay... to save it!
1954 | 73m | English

(1550 votes)

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Popularity: 3 (history)

Details

When a stagecoach guard tries to warn a town of an imminent raid by a band of outlaws, the people mistake him for one of the gang.
Release Date: Apr 01, 1954
Director: André de Toth
Writer: Thomas W. Blackburn, Kenneth Perkins
Genres: Western
Keywords stage, deputy, outlaw, stagecoach, stagecoach robbery
Production Companies Warner Bros. Pictures
Box Office Revenue: $1,400,000
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Aug 03, 2024
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Randolph Scott Larry Delong
Wayne Morris Deputy Sheriff Tub Murphy
Joan Weldon Orissa Flynn
Joe Sawyer Tom Biggert
James Millican Dan Marady
Charles Bronson Pinto
James Bell Doc Winkler
Fritz Feld Fritz
Richard Garrick Walters
Vic Perrin Bar-M Rider with Lynching Rope
John Baer Deputy Ross Hughes
William Johnstone Col. Flynn
Kem Dibbs Ben
Nedrick Young Manning
Name Job
Rudi Fehr Editor
André de Toth Director
Thomas W. Blackburn Screenplay
Kenneth Perkins Story
Bert Glennon Director of Photography
Edward Carrere Art Direction
Ben Bone Set Decoration
Gordon Bau Makeup Artist
James McMahon Assistant Director
C.A. Riggs Sound
Maurice De Packh Orchestrator
David Buttolph Original Music Composer
Name Title
Ted Sherdeman Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 9 14 5
2024 5 10 14 5
2024 6 9 22 3
2024 7 10 21 5
2024 8 6 14 3
2024 9 8 15 3
2024 10 6 13 2
2024 11 5 10 2
2024 12 3 6 2
2025 1 5 12 3
2025 2 3 5 1
2025 3 3 5 1
2025 4 1 2 1
2025 5 1 2 1
2025 6 1 1 1
2025 7 0 0 0
2025 8 1 3 0
2025 9 2 3 2
2025 10 3 4 2

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Reviews

John Chard
7.0

The Deepwater Dimwits. Riding Shotgun is directed by Andre De Toth and adapted to screenplay by Thomas W. Blackburn fro the story “Riding Solo” written by Kenneth Perkins. It stars Randolph Scott, Wayne Morris, Joan Weldon, Joe Sawyer, James Millican, Charles Bronson and James Bell. Music is by D ... avid Buttolph and Warnercolor cinematography is by Bert Glennon. Before he would make the Western movies with Budd Boetticher that would define him as a Western movie legend, Randolph Scott worked tirelessly in the genre. He would make 6 films with Ray Enright and 6 with Andre De Toth, all of these are good value for the Western fan. They vary in thematic quality, but production value was always decent and there was always Randy at war with some gruff or poncey bloke, nice location photography and of course some gorgeous ladies as well. That’s enough for genre fans who happily take these movies on their required terms. Anyone else got anything to say? Riding Shotgun has Scott as Larry Delong, a man who spends his time “riding shotgun” as a stagecoach guard. He has an ulterior motive, though, he’s constantly on the look out for a known outlaw, Dan Marady (Millican), and he wants him dead. Sure enough Malady is about the place and Larry falls into a trap and finds things spiralling so out of control, that by the time he manages to get back into town, practically everyone hates him and thinks he’s part of Marady’s murderous gang. Hate makes a man careless. Cue a scenario where Delong, who has been wonderfully providing us with a film noir like narration throughout (love the wry David and Goliath observation), literally has to make a one man stand against the dimwit townsfolk and also Marady and his henchmen who are fronted by twitchy gun Pinto! (Bronson). It clocks in at under 75 minutes, it’s brisk, it has Scott kicking ass big time and it looks lovely (unsurprising with Glennon photographing). Is it flawless? God no! There’s some distinctly below average acting around Scott (Morris/Millican), while Fritz Feld as the Cantina owner (erm, called Fritz) where Delong holes up, is annoying in the extreme. While as radiant and perky as Joan Weldon is, she’s no actress capable of grabbing a scene and shooting electricity through it. But this type of Scott Oater is comfort food to genre fans who once in a while like to down pistols and relax away from the more serious genre fare. 7/10

May 16, 2024