
Like ROBBERS' ROOST, GUN BELT is one of those movies with a great '50s Western cast, in this case including John Dehner, Douglas Kennedy, William Bishop, Jack Elam, and James Millican (good as a soft-spoken, confident Wyatt Earp). Familiar faces like Lane Chandler, Byron Foulger, Syd Saylor, and Chuck Roberson are also in the movie.
Montgomery plays Billy Ringo, a one-time outlaw who hung up his guns in favor of a respectable life as a struggling rancher. He's engaged to Arlene (Helen Westcott), and he's also raising his nephew Chip (Tab Hunter).
Chip's father Matt (Dehner) is serving time and goes "over the wall," setting up a bank robbery as soon as he escapes. A not-so-loving brother, Matt manages to frame Billy for the robbery. Matters go from bad to worse when Billy kills Matt in self-defense and Chip turns against Billy.

This is a fast-paced film with Montgomery once more quite appealing as a man who handles what could be unbearable pressures with grace and even confidence. He develops a plan to solve the problem, and by golly, that plan is going to work. He certainly has inspiration in the form of lovely Arlene, knowing that he will be marrying her immediately if he can stay alive and out of jail!

Instead the movie depicts a couple of mature grownups who have come to know each other well and developed an implicit trust; Billy explains to Arlene what has happened, she accepts what he says as the truth, and then they work together to solve his predicament.
In the supporting cast, Dehner is always a strong contributor to any film, and Kennedy, playing one of the bank robbers, is also a good actor.
I liked Millican's take on Wyatt Earp, and he and Billy have a nice rapport. The movie's allusions to real people are a bit curious, as while Wyatt and his brother Virgil (Bruce Cowling) are characters, Bishop's character is called Ike Clinton rather than Ike Clanton. Wonder why?

GUN BELT was directed by Ray Nazarro. It was filmed by W. Howard Greene at locations including the Iverson Ranch. I think I might have recognized the hotel from Randolph Scott's later DECISION AT SUNDOWN (1957) but am not certain.

The DVD print had an odd purplish tinge in a couple of scenes, which seemed like perhaps it could have been a DVD problem rather than a print defect, but other than that, it was more than acceptable.
GUN BELT has also been shown in the past on Encore Westerns Channel, so it may show up there again one day.
GUN BELT is a good example of the kind of solid, capably made Western entertainment that Hollywood once turned out on a regular basis. I enjoyed it, and I'm sure I'll be taking another look at it again at some point in the future.
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