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El Paso
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Directed by Lewis R. Foster
Produced in garish Cinecolor, this aspiring "A" Western features John Payne as Clay Fletcher, an Eastern lawyer assigned to track down a judge whose signature is needed for some estate papers. Clay traces the judge, Henry Jeffers (Henry Hull), to El Paso, a lawless town ruthlessly run by saloon owner Bert Donner (Sterling Hayden) and a corrupt sheriff, La Farge (Dick Foran). The judge has become a hopeless drunk and is used as a pawn by Donner, who terrorizes the local farmers off their land. When one settler, John Elkins (Arthur Space), shoots and kills a deputy in self-defense, Clay is at first inclined to trust that justice will prevail and arranges for traveling salesman "Pesky" (George "Gabby" Hayes) to keep Judge Jeffers sober long enough to render a just verdict. But a threatened Donner has both Jeffers and Elkins brutally killed and against the wishes of the judge's daughter Susan (Gail Russell), Clay takes matters into his won hands by organizing a vigilante group. Grandfather Fletcher (H.B. Warner) arrives to remind Clay of his judicial pledges but he, too, is killed by the increasingly insane La Farge. In the end, only the prospect of a mass lynching brings Clay around and the guilty all face a jury of their peers. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
For years, independent producers William H. Pine and William C. Thomas, aka "The Dollar Bills," had been purveyors of cheaply-made action fare that benefited from a production agreement with major corporation Paramount Pictures. El Paso was billed as the team's first major release but, true to their nicknames, Pine and Thomas cut a few corners and produced the western in Cinecolor, a cheap system that offered an unrealistic warm yellow glow. Action-wise, El Paso remains a fast-paced and mostly satisfying western melodrama burdened a bit by a rather shaky performance from leading lady Gail Russell. Reportedly suffering from a near paralyzing stage fright, Russell was known to fortify herself with alcohol and she is visibly grasping hold of the scenery in places. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide
 

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