Yuma (1971 film)
Yuma | |
---|---|
Genre | Western |
Written by | Charles A. Wallace |
Directed by | Ted Post |
Starring | Clint Walker |
Music by | George Duning |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
Production | |
Producer(s) | Aaron Spelling |
Cinematography | John M. Stephens (as John Stephens) |
Editor(s) | Art Seid |
Running time | 74 minutes |
Production company(s) | ABC Circle Films Aaron Spelling Productions |
Distributor | Worldvision Enterprises CBS Television Distribution (syndication) |
Release | |
Original network | ABC |
Original release | March 2, 1971 |
External links | |
[{{#property:P856}} Website] |
Yuma is a 1971 American Western television film directed by Ted Post and starring Clint Walker. It was shot in Old Tucson. The film was originally a television pilot that appeared on the ABC Movie of the Week.[1]
Contents
Plot
Dave Harmon (Clint Walker), a former lieutenant in the U.S. Army is sent to Yuma as the new United States Marshal. His wife was raped and son killed and the only description of the criminals responsible was they were wearing army uniforms. He has served in several locations as U.S. Marshal and all were near an army post. Yuma is a city with an army post commanded by Major Lucas (Peter Mark Richman) and an Indian reservation nearby.
Harmon rides into Yuma as the newly assigned Marshal and immediately encounters two drunk rabble rousers, the King brothers, who have hijacked a stagecoach outside of town. One is killed in a saloon by Harmon when he draws his gun, and Harmon locks the other in the town jail.
The second brother is subsequently murdered, shot in the back, using a gun from the Marshal's office during a nighttime jail break organized by Sanders (Robert Phillips), who is an associate of the freight company owner (Barry Sullivan), in an effort to get the third King brother, cattleman (Morgan Woodward) to kill the Marshal.
The murderer had tricked army Captain White (John Kerr) into coming with him to the jail and being an accomplice to the crime, as the freight owner, his employee Sanders, and the Captain are all involved in an ongoing scheme to defraud the Indians out of cattle they need for food that is due them according to a treaty.
The only witness to the break-in is Andres, a Mexican orphan boy that had earlier been taken in by Harmon. He was asleep on the floor in the jail when awoken by the noise of the break-in but only manages to see the intruders boots - one pair being the US Cavalry army boots worn by Captain White (this clue would later give Harmon the lead to investigate at the nearby army post).
The elder King brother rides into town and demands justice. He gives Harmon time to find his other brother's killer or he will return with his men and kill the Marshal. Marshal Harmon, showing no fear, but only a desire to do his official duty, sets out to find the killer and unravel the related corruption involving the Indians, who also threaten to revolt, but come to his assistance as the story unfolds.
Cast
- Clint Walker as U.S. Marshal Dave Harmon
- Barry Sullivan as Nels Decker, freight company owner
- Kathryn Hays as Julie Williams, the hotel owner
- Edgar Buchanan as Mules McNeil, a competing freight company owner
- Morgan Woodward as Arch King, cattleman
- John Kerr as Captain White
- Peter Mark Richman as Major Lucas
- Bing Russell as Rol King
- Robert Phillips as Sanders
- Miguel Alejandro as Andres, a Mexican orphan boy hired by Harmon to work in the jail
References
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External links
- Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). Yuma at IMDb
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- ↑ pp. 48-49 Karol, Michael The ABC Movie of the Week Companion: A Loving Tribute to the Classic Series iUniverse, 2008
- Pages with reference errors
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- Use mdy dates from October 2021
- Use American English from October 2021
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- 1971 television films
- American television films
- Western (genre) television films
- 1970s English-language films
- Films directed by Ted Post
- ABC Movie of the Week
- Television pilots not picked up as a series
- Films scored by George Duning
- United States Marshals Service in fiction
- American television film stubs