The Man from the Alamo

August. 07,1953      NR
Rating:
6.4
Trailer Synopsis Cast

During the war for Texas independence, one man leaves the Alamo before the end (chosen by lot to help others' families) but is too late to accomplish his mission, and is branded a coward. Since he cannot now expose a gang of turncoats, he infiltrates them instead. Can he save a wagon train of refugees from Wade's Guerillas?

Glenn Ford as  John Stroud
Julie Adams as  Beth Anders (as Julia Adams)
Chill Wills as  John Gage
Hugh O'Brian as  Lt. Lamar
Victor Jory as  Jess Wade
Neville Brand as  Dawes
Jeanne Cooper as  Kate Lamar
Marc Cavell as  Carlos (as Mark Cavell)
Edward Norris as  Mapes
Guy Williams as  Sergeant

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Reviews

Onlinewsma
1953/08/07

Absolutely Brilliant!

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Ezmae Chang
1953/08/08

This is a small, humorous movie in some ways, but it has a huge heart. What a nice experience.

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Mandeep Tyson
1953/08/09

The acting in this movie is really good.

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Fatma Suarez
1953/08/10

The movie's neither hopeful in contrived ways, nor hopeless in different contrived ways. Somehow it manages to be wonderful

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LeonLouisRicci
1953/08/11

There is always something interesting and just a bit different in this Director's Movies. This one is no exception. It is replete with thought provoking ideas like cowardice, bigotry, loyalty, and other values only found in the better Westerns.This is an action filled Film with guns blazing, galloping Horses, Wagon Trains, bushwhackers, Mexican impersonators, fist-fights and all that is expected in this type of thing. But the difference here is the intelligence. The injection in a popular genre some things that rose above the material.Budd Boetticher, Anthony Mann, and sometimes John Ford and Howard Hawks always gave more than the raw material. This is a modest effort from one of the Greats with an OK cast and a Production that looks so much bigger than it was. That was Boetticher, he was always so much bigger and better than what he was allowed.

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MartinHafer
1953/08/12

When I received a DVD from Netflix with this film and "The Cimarron Kid" on it, I wondered why I'd placed this disk on my queue. After all, I am not a huge fan of westerns and the films appeared pretty unremarkable. However, when I noticed both films were directed by Budd Boetticher, I remembered that THIS was why I'd put these films on my list many months earlier. Boetticher was a wonderful director who managed to make his westerns better than the norm--with stories that lack many of the usual clichés.This film is set during the war for Texas independence from Mexico in the mid-1830s. Soon after the film begins, you see a brief recreation of the Battle of the Alamo. Just before the compound is overrun, the commander has the married men draw lots--the one selected will sneak away from the fort and look after the families left behind. Glen Ford is the one chosen, but when he arrives home he learns that his family had been murdered. And, people begin to talk and think he was a coward since he left--though he was following orders. And, now that the battle is over, he's going to use all his energy tracking down the gang (dressed as Mexicans) responsible for his family's deaths. So, he infiltrates a gang...hoping to find out who is ultimately responsible.The film is helped by having some good support for Ford. Neville Brand (one of the scariest looking heavies in film history), Victor Jory, Hugh O'Brian and Chill Wills all are available to provide nice color and good old dependable acting. And, Boetticher at the helm sure didn't hurt, either. Together, they are able to take an okay story and make it a lot better than it should have been. While it's not as good as the Boetticher/Randolph Scott collaborations, it's quite good.By the way, they did NOT have revolvers and repeating rifles back then. The very first guns of these types were not yet available until AFTER this war and really were very rare until well into the Civil War. All too often, I have seen Hollywood mess up this detail--perhaps because it would be less exciting to see everyone stop to reload after each shot...and because reloading would take at least 30 seconds (and quite possibly more). But, unfortunately, that IS how they would have fought in the old days. And, by the way, the inexperienced women in the film managed to reload in about five seconds---something even the best soldiers never could have accomplished at the time!

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bkoganbing
1953/08/13

Glenn Ford plays the title role in The Man From The Alamo which probably should be better titled The Man Who Left The Alamo. Don't worry, Glenn had good and sufficient cause for doing so.Ford is one of the men who was there at the mission fort at San Antonio De Bexar when word is received of some renegade Texans raiding some of ranches up where Ford and his family have settled. He and three others draw lots to see who goes out of The Alamo to check on their families. Ford gets the short straw and when William B. Travis played by Arthur Space draws his famous line in the sand, Ford is the only one who opts out of the fight.Of course when Ford arrives he finds his and the other families dead at the hands of renegade Victory Jory and his band who are in league with Santa Anna. After that it's a struggle to clear his good name and alert others to the dangers of Jory's band.The Man From The Alamo is a short, but action packed western. Budd Boetticher got good performances out of his cast which besides those mentioned include Julie Adams. Hugh O'Brian, Neville Brand, and Chill Wills who as we all know was in John Wayne's blockbuster film on the same subject.The film is very similar to a lot of the westerns that Boetticher did with Randolph Scott and I wouldn't be surprised if the film wasn't created with Randy in mind originally for the lead. If it was, Glenn Ford was more than adequate in the part.Western fans and other fans will not be disappointed.

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bengleson
1953/08/14

By chance, June clouds threatening, I sat down and watched this entertaining western on a Saturday afternoon. An earlier commentator ended his praise for this film by noting that it is "an excellent western for a Saturday afternoon." And it was. The ethical dilemma of leaving a field of battle (in this case the Alamo)to try and save the lives of loved ones is a powerful theme. The repercussions to John Stroud, Ford's weary but stalwart character, are scorn, accusations of cowardice and worse. The best part of the film are the sweeping shots of the Texas plains. The movie is well-composed, capturing the majestic plains and hills with a strength of purpose that demands an emotional response. One of the early films of Jeanne Cooper, who is a favorite of mine.

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