A gunfighter who survives his own hanging helps a young widow who is trying to keep a ruthless land baron from taking her ranch.
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Sadly Over-hyped
One of my all time favorites.
I really wanted to like this movie. I feel terribly cynical trashing it, and that's why I'm giving it a middling 5. Actually, I'm giving it a 5 because there were some superb performances.
Actress is magnificent and exudes a hypnotic screen presence in this affecting drama.
I've been watching movies for many many years and seen some of the best , along w/ some of the worse. The Hanged Man is not the best But its not bad either. Steve Forrest's acting adds to the plot w/ a dimension of calm cold bloodiness that was prevalent back then. Cameron Mitchell seemed to be a little hammy but from reading history a lot of the big cattle ranchers/mine owners acted that way they thought they were above the Law. Overall it was a little above ave. There's a few other well known actors in it Will Geer Rafael Campos. It does encourage you to see other movies especially w/ those guys. If I may in a personnel note, its a shame us movie goers see actors faces that we have seen before but we don't know there names. A lot of them deserved more..
The title role of The Hanged Man is played by Steve Forrest who plays a notorious gunfighter who was duly hanged for a crime he committed and declared dead. But the only problem was the report of his demise was greatly exaggerated. Whether he was cut down too soon or the rope wasn't tight enough or some unseen power intervened, point is that Forrest is still walking around and breathing. And he's reflecting on a new chance at life because his old life had led him up thirteen steps to the hangman's noose. And he's legally dead.His first chance at redemption comes in helping widow Sharon Acker and her little boy Bobby Eilbacher fight off the designs of mining tycoon Cameron Mitchell. He's not too squeamish about his methods and has young gunslinger Brendon Boone on his payroll who despite the mystique surrounding Forrest is eager for showdown.This unsold TV pilot which was produced by Bing Crosby didn't break any new ground and westerns on television were getting scarce. Around this time Bonanza and Gunsmoke ended their runs and the few that have succeeded them up to this time haven't had their staying power. Speaking of Bonanza this was Ray Teal's farewell role and Bonanza fans will remember his semi-regular presence as sheriff Roy Coffey of Virginia City.The Hanged Man might have been picked up for a television series fifteen years earlier when westerns were a glut on the market. As it is western fans will have little reason to complain.
Rugged Steve Forrest gives a properly steely and stalwart performance as James Devlin, a tough, cynical gunfighter who after miraculously surviving a hanging decides to dedicate his life to doing good instead of bad. Devlin comes to the aid of Carrie Gault (the engagingly spunky Sharon Acker), a feisty widow who's being pushed around by evil land baron Lew Halleck (a smoothly hateful Cameron Mitchell). Director Michael Caffey makes the most out of Ken Trevey's interesting script; he coaxes fine acting from a solid cast, maintains a snappy pace and compellingly mysterious mood throughout, and stages the thrilling shoot outs with a reasonable amount of flair and skill (the final confrontation between Devlin and Halleck is especially tense and exciting). Keith C. Smith's polished cinematography gives the movie a plausibly dusty, gritty look while Richard Markowitz's spare, spooky, stirring score likewise hits the spot. Popping up in nice supporting roles are Dean Jagger as a kindly lawyer, Will Geer as a nutty, rascally old ranch hand, Rafael Campos as a naive young priest, and Hank Worden as a chatty, friendly old geezer. An offbeat and intriguing allegory on fate and redemption, "The Hanged Man" is well worth checking out.
This is a pretty pointless movie. A western about a gunfighter who is hung but somehow comes back to life. He then fights an army of bad guys. These two events are totally unrelated and are the only discernable plot to the movie. Oh yeah, and for some reason this guy can read people's minds through the whole movie. Not much else to say here, except I am wondering how this managed to actually fill 90 whole minutes.