A Gunfight (1971)

Directed by Lamont Johnson, A Gunfight is a gritty, psychological revisionist Western starring Kirk Douglas and Johnny Cash in a tale that strips away romantic notions of frontier justice. Produced by Cash’s own production company, the film explores themes of masculinity, mortality, and spectacle, set in a town where violence becomes entertainment.

Plot Summary
Two aging gunfighters—Will Tenneray (Douglas), a former outlaw turned rancher, and Abe Cross (Cash), a drifting ex-gunslinger—reunite in a dusty town. Both are broke, disillusioned, and haunted by their pasts. When a local entrepreneur proposes a public duel for profit, the men agree to face off in a ticketed arena, with the winner taking the purse and the loser buried in glory.

As the town prepares for the event, the film delves into their psyches: Tenneray is desperate to provide for his family, while Cross seeks meaning in a life defined by violence. The final showdown is brutal and unromantic, with no music, no fanfare—just two men confronting death in front of a cheering crowd.

Cast Highlights

  • Kirk Douglas as Will Tenneray
  • Johnny Cash as Abe Cross
  • Jane Alexander as Tenneray’s wife
  • Karen Black, Keith Carradine, and Eric Douglas in supporting roles

Behind-the-Scenes Trivia

  • This was Johnny Cash’s first major film role, and he reportedly insisted on realistic gun handling
  • The film was shot in Santa Fe, New Mexico, with stark cinematography emphasizing isolation and decay
  • Produced by Johnny Cash Productions, it was one of the first films financed by a musician-owned company
  • The duel was inspired by gladiatorial combat, with bleachers, ticket sales, and betting—highlighting the commodification of violence
  • The ending is deliberately ambiguous and bleak, challenging traditional Western tropes

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