Three Violent People

1956 "Violent love ... violent hate ... violent conflicts."
6.3| 1h40m| NR| en
Details

A rancher, his shady bride and his one-armed brother fight amid carpetbaggers in Texas.

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TinsHeadline Touches You
GazerRise Fantastic!
Anoushka Slater While it doesn't offer any answers, it both thrills and makes you think.
Francene Odetta It's simply great fun, a winsome film and an occasionally over-the-top luxury fantasy that never flags.
jjnxn-1 Florid and melodramatic but in a good way. Anne Baxter and Charlton Heston interact with each other much better here than in The Ten Commandments probably because Anne is much more suited to playing a well educated woman of ill repute in the old west than a princess of the Nile. She and Tom Tryon also have an excellent vibe to their scenes. The beginning is on the humorous side with Elaine Stritch showing up and looking very young but still in possession of that basso voice. Then when we get to the ranch there is a fest for old TV viewers with Baretta, Klinger & Sgt O'Rourke from F Troop all showing up. The film is nothing original but is well shot and enjoyably action packed, a good example of the genre and Anne is very good.
MartinHafer This film reminds me of many wedding cakes. They look great but aren't especially delicious. "Three Violent People" is a sumptuous looking film--a movie with great color and scope. BUT, like the cake, it's not exactly great, as the film seemed, well, a bit dull and DEFINITELY over-wrought.The film begins with a Confederate soldier (Charlton Heston) returning home after being gone many years. He soon meets a 'woman of easy virtue' (Anne Baxter) and despite knowing NOTHING about her, marries her. This makes little sense. What makes little sense as well is his reaction to her much later when he learns about her sordid past. Their marriage, inexplicably, is ruined and Heston sulks for most of the rest of the movie. Now on WHAT planet does this make sense?! There's quite a bit in between--including a plot involving evil Yankees and the Reconstruction (a popular theme--though historians are now recognizing that this theme never really was a problem in real life) as well as Heston's one-armed brother (Tom Tryon). None of this is especially engaging. In fact the ONLY part of the movie I loved was when Heston turned Baxter upside-down and shook her when they first met--because she'd stolen his money! But then, this is when he asked her to marry him!! Duh.Overall, looks great--but that's really about all.
kennedya-1 How can you not like a film that has characters named Colt Saunders, Beauregard 'Cinch' Saunders, Ruby LaSalle and the ageless Gilbert Roland as someone rejoicing in the misleading nomenclature of Innocencio Ortega.The three violent people of the title is a gross numerical understatement - all the male cast in his part of the west seem to be capable of giving and receiving their fair share of violence -Forest Tucker and Richard Jaekel are particularly outstanding in this line of work and they get great back up from Bruce Bennett and Barton MacLane. Charlton Heston as usual mistakes tightening his jaw as equating to exuding dramatic power while Tom Tryon demonstrates the technique that got him cast as a emotionless extra terrestrial on at least one occasion. The show, as was so often the case, is stolen by Gilbert Roland. Enjoyable nonsense from the golden decade of the Horse Opera.
dinky-4 At the time of its release, "Three Violent People" attracted little notice. Most critics probably labeled it "routine" and then turned their attention to other matters. Now, in this age of decline in film quality, we can look back and be impressed by things we once took for granted: a strong, consistent, logically-developed plot; characters that have some style and substance; dialog which consists of more than merely "Watch it!" and "Move over!"Not that "Three Violent People" is some sort of undiscovered gem. By the standards of its day it was little more than a passable western with a better than average cast and lovely color photography, but what pleasure it now brings!Charlton Heston and Anne Baxter, (re-united from "The Ten Commandments"), make an attractive couple. He's strong and stalwart, she looks good in her elaborate costumes. (However did she fit those dresses into a trunk to carry on a stagecoach?) Tom Tryon may not seem fraternally related to Heston but he adds his usual dash of smoldering sensuality. He even manages to do a bare-chest scene even though he plays a man who's lost his right arm! (But then, Tryon usually managed to provide some "beefcake," even in a Disney comedy such as "Moon Pilot.") Also worth noting are three of Gilbert Roland's sons: Jamie ("MASH") Farr, Robert ("In Cold Blood") Blake, and Ross Bagdasarian, who later scored a hit with his Christmas song featuring Alvin and the Chipmunks.One final point, if Heston and Tryon are two of the "Violent People" of the title, then who is the third? Anne Baxter? She may be deceitful and manipulative, but "violent" doesn't seem like an apt adjective to describe her.