Dallas

THE FURY OF VIOLENCE AND VENGEANCE ECHOES ACROSS THE TEXAS PLAINS!

6.5
19501h 34m

After the Civil War, Confederate soldier Blayde Hollister travels to Dallas to avenge the savage murder of his family. Discovering his enemy is now an esteemed citizen, Hollister plots to expose the outlaw and his syndicate.

Production

Logo for Warner Bros. Pictures

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Dallas 1950) Trailer

Dallas 1950) Trailer

Cast

Photo of Gary Cooper

Gary Cooper

Blayde "Reb" Hollister

Photo of Ruth Roman

Ruth Roman

Tonia Robles

Photo of Steve Cochran

Steve Cochran

Bryant Marlow

Photo of Raymond Massey

Raymond Massey

Will Marlow

Photo of Leif Erickson

Leif Erickson

U.S. Marshal Martin Weatherby

Photo of Antonio Moreno

Antonio Moreno

Don Felipe Robles

Photo of Jerome Cowan

Jerome Cowan

Matt Coulter

Photo of Reed Hadley

Reed Hadley

Wild Bill Hickok

Photo of Will Wright

Will Wright

Judge Harper

Photo of Byron Keith

Byron Keith

Jason Trask

Photo of Zon Murray

Zon Murray

Longfellow Cullen Marlow

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Reviews

J

John Chard

7/10

The Reb and the Blue Belly come to town.

Dallas stars Gary Cooper, Ruth Roman, Steve Cochran, Barbara Payton & Raymond Massey. It's directed by Stuart Heisler, photography is from Ernest Haller & pen duties fell to John Twist. Produced out of Warner Brothers, Dallas is vividly filmed in Technicolor out of the Iverson & Warner ranches in California. Very much a film with its tongue firmly in cheek, the film is a throwback to the Westerns of yore that exist without pretensions or deep penetrative meanings.

The plot sees Cooper's Civil War renegade, Blayde "Reb" Hollister, fake his own death so as to kill off his reputation and to free himself for the pursuit into Dallas of the brothers who massacred his family. In essence a routine plot, Twist's story is perked up along the way by many a fun and exciting diversion. There's role reversals, dandy fashions, horseback pursuits, shoot outs, a love triangle, vigorous dialogue and deft little twists to keep the piece purely from painting it by numbers.

Cooper seems to be enjoying himself too, which further enhances the feel good factor on offer. It's true he isn't really asked to do anything more than be a laconic dude on a mission. But when called on for action duties, he delivers the goods that his fans have come to expect during his successful career. The villains entertain (particularly Steve Cochran's vile and dopey Bryant Marlow) because each have their own little peccadilloes to keep them from over familiar blandness. The two ladies of the piece look gorgeous and hold up well in amongst the machismo, while the high production value allows Haller to really treat the eyes with the lush Technicolor and involving camera work around the locations.

It has ideals to being an "A" list Oater does Dallas, something it just can't quite attain. But it's not for lack of trying and the end result is one of pure entertainment, that, in truth, should be enjoyed on a cold winters day when the viewer needs a pick me up. 7/10

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