Black Spurs (1965)
6/10
The Easy Way Is The Wrong Way
25 December 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Seasoned western leading man Rory Calhoun plays a cow hand named Santee who embarks on a different career as a bounty hunter hen he learns he can pick up $3-thousand for catching a Mexican bank robber who sports those eponymous spurs. After he guns down El Pescadore (Robert Carricart of "Fun in Acapulco"), Santee appropriates the black spurs of the title that the Mexican wore. Meantime, Santee's prospective bride, Anna (Terry Moore of "Mighty Joe Young"), who abhors his change of profession, leaves him before he can marry her. Anna lectures him at one point that the $3-thousand is "easy" money. This theme of "easy money" permeates this oater. "Johnny Reno" director R.G. Springsteen's "Black Spurs" was one of several westerns that venerable Paramount producer A.C. Lyles produced during the 1960s with actors and actresses whose careers were fading into obscurity. The interesting but formulaic Steve Fisher screenplay adheres to the old school of westerns where bounty hunters were reviled for their cynicism. Actually, Santee doesn't gun down every man that he stalks like those ruthless bounty hunters in Spaghetti westerns; Santee allows one or two to live. Later, he refuses to pursue the bounty on a man's head until it totals over $500. The black spurs that he took from the Mexican serve as a metaphor for what Santee has become.

The first major turning point of the film occurs when Santee the bounty hunter decides to turn into a full-fledged villain. He cuts a shady deal with a notorious, well-heeled, land owner, Gus Kile (Lon Chaney, Jr.), who wants to attract the railroad to the town that he owns. Naturally, Kile's town is named Kile, and the land around it is worth about ten cents an acre. Were the railroad to locate in Kile, Kile's acreage would increase to as much as $10 dollars an acre. Instead of running their line through the town of Kile, the railroad has chosen to lay tracks through the nearby town of Lark. Santee learns that the railroad discriminates against lawless, wide-open towns. Santee and Kile set out to transform Lark into a town so wild that the railroad will relocate to Kile. Santee convinces a local Lark saloon owner, Pete Muchin (Richard Arlen of "Wings"), to go into business with him. Santee imports gambling machines and girls to Lark. Straight-up, honest, lawman, Sheriff Ralph Elkins (James Best of "The Dukes of Hazzard"), tries without success to evict Santee from town, but he doesn't have enough support from local citizens to run him out.

Reverend Tanner (Scott Brady of "$"), baits Santee into brawling, but the parson loses to our protagonist. Santee learns that Tanner is not you're your ordinary, everyday gospel minister. At the same time, Tanner doesn't let Santee alone and struggles to appeal to his conscience. Meantime, villainous Bill Henderson (Bruce Cabot of "Big Jake") arrives with Shifty (Joseph Hoover) and his wagon load of slot machines. Sadie (Linda Darnell of "Forever Amber") brings her dance hall girls to town. Pretty soon the town of Lark is wide-open. Santee encounters Sheriff Elkins's wife, and the woman turns out to be none other than Anna. She insists adamantly that Santee clear out of town. Eventually, Sheriff Elkins stirs up too much trouble for Henderson's taste. Henderson and his cronies tar and feather the scrupulous lawman without Santee's approval. Santee learns the terrible truth about Anna and why she couldn't wait for him after he went in pursuit of the "easy money" on El Pescadore It seems that she got pregnant, and the ladies of the town shunned her business because they regarded her as a tramp. Santee learns that the little boy, Chad, is really his own son. Santee's conscience prompts him to back out of his deal with Kile. In a bizarre reversal of roles, Santee appropriates Elkins' badge and cleans up the town.

Springsteen stages several okay shoot-outs, and "Black Spurs" doesn't wear out its welcome. The gunfight involving Deforest Kelly as a crooked lawman who wants to kill Santee is rather slick. Kelly gives two prisoners in his jail a choice. They are about to swing on the gallows, but he will let them conveniently escape from jail, if they were cut down Santee in the street when they make their big break. Predictably, everything goes wrong, and Kelly pays for his treachery. Aside from some scenes set on the trail, most of the action in "Black Spurs" transpires in town. The film chronicles the changes that occur in our hero's life, and we see Calhoun go full circle until he is back on the side of law and order. Although it came late in Calhoun's career, "Black Spurs" contains more plot that most of his westerns that he made during his heyday in the 1950s.
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