8/10
A top budget western!
1 February 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Present-day fans will probably find it hard to believe that Alan Ladd was once a top Western star. In fact, a top movie star, period. In England, Ireland, Australia and New Zealand, he always rated well ahead of John Wayne.

In fact, Ladd's name on a cinema billboard guaranteed sell-out business. The only time that Wayne ever achieved this sort of overseas popularity was when he co-starred with Maureen O'Hara in The Quiet Man (1952).

Ladd's following was highest of the high in the States too. In 1953, over two million readers of Photoplay magazine voted him as the world's number one male movie star. (Marilyn Monroe was the 1953 female choice).

Ladd westerns that continued to draw huge British, Irish and Oz crowds long after their original release, included: The Light of Western Stars (1940) (available on Public Domain DVDs) in which Ladd's role was small and which director Lesley Selander had him play mostly with his back to the camera - an exciting film anyway, the third version of the Zane Grey novel, produced by "Pop" Sherman on a top budget, this one also starred Victor Jory and Jo Ann Sayers;
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