The Sundowners is a 1950 American Western film directed by George Templeton, produced by Republic Pictures, and starring Robert Preston, Robert Sterling, and John Barrymore Jr.. Not to be confused with the 1960 Australian pastoral drama of the same name, this earlier film is a gritty frontier tale with noir undertones.
Plot Summary
The story follows the Kettle family, a group of brothers who drift across the frontier. Kid Wichita (Robert Preston) is the charismatic but reckless leader, while James Kettle (Robert Sterling) and Tom Kettle (John Barrymore Jr.) struggle with loyalty, morality, and survival.
The brothers become embroiled in cattle rustling and outlaw schemes, leading to violent confrontations with ranchers and lawmen. As tensions mount, betrayal and tragedy strike, forcing the family to reckon with the consequences of their choices. The film’s tone is darker than many contemporaneous westerns, emphasizing fatalism and the destructive pull of outlaw life.
Cast
- Robert Preston as Kid Wichita
- Robert Sterling as James Kettle
- John Barrymore Jr. as Tom Kettle
- Jackie Lynn Taylor as Kathleen
- Chill Wills as Uncle
- Don Beddoe as Sheriff
- Cathy Downs as Mary
Production Notes & Trivia
- Produced by Republic Pictures, known for efficient, mid‑budget westerns.
- Directed by George Templeton, who worked extensively in television and film.
- Robert Preston, later famous for The Music Man (1962), plays against type as a morally ambiguous outlaw.
- John Barrymore Jr., son of legendary actor John Barrymore, appears in one of his earliest screen roles.
- The film’s title reflects both the drifting nature of the characters and the twilight of their way of life.
- Stylistically, the film blends traditional western tropes with a noir sensibility, focusing on doomed characters and moral ambiguity.
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