High Lonesome is a 1950 American Western film directed by Alan Le May, best known as the novelist behind The Searchers. This was Le May’s only directorial effort. Produced by Joseph Kane for Republic Pictures, the film was released on April 1, 1950, with a runtime of about 80 minutes. Shot in Technicolor, it stars John Drew Barrymore (credited as John Barrymore Jr.), Chill Wills, and Stanley Clements.
Plot Summary
The story unfolds in the Texas Big Bend country, where a drifter named Cooter (John Drew Barrymore) is accused of murder after being found near a crime scene. Suspicion falls heavily on him, but the real culprits are a pair of mysterious outlaws, Horse Davis (Jack Elam) and Smoky (Skip Homeier), who manipulate events from the shadows.
Cooter finds himself caught between the hostility of ranchers and the menace of the outlaws, while Wade Phillips (Chill Wills) and his family struggle to determine whether the young man is guilty or innocent. As tensions rise, the truth about the killings and Cooter’s role gradually emerges, leading to a violent showdown that tests loyalty, justice, and redemption in the harsh frontier landscape.
Cast
- John Drew Barrymore as Cooter
- Chill Wills as Wade Phillips
- Stanley Clements as Pat Farrell
- Kristine Miller as Meagan Phillips
- Jack Elam as Horse Davis
- Skip Homeier as Smoky
- J. M. Kerrigan as Boatwright
- Frank Faylen as Charley
- Jeanette Nolan as Mrs. Boatwright
Production Notes & Trivia
- Directed by Alan Le May, author of The Searchers and The Unforgiven; this was his only film as director.
- Produced by Republic Pictures, known for efficient, colorful Westerns in the postwar era.
- Filmed in Technicolor, giving the rugged Texas setting a vivid visual appeal.
- John Drew Barrymore, son of legendary actor John Barrymore, made one of his earliest screen appearances here.
- Jack Elam and Skip Homeier provide memorable villainous turns, foreshadowing their later reputations as Western heavies.
- The film blends traditional Western tropes with a noir‑like atmosphere of suspicion and paranoia.
- Though not a major box office hit, it has gained recognition among Western enthusiasts for its unusual tone and Le May’s literary sensibility.
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