"The Violent Men" marked the finest collaboration of Rudolph Maté with Glenn Ford in an intensely satisfying drama of rugged primitive justice
Ford is John Parrish, a former Cavalry captain who is itching to get married and start a new life
His fiancée Caroline Vail (May Wynn) is desperate to move east, and to see him selling his spread to Lee Wilkison (Edward G. Robinson).
Parrish is not even much of a cattleman
but he do understand that there is something big building up in the valley
In the Army, they used to call it 'enemy pressure.' First, Cole Wilkison (Brian Keith) comes back from Texas to help his brother run Anchor
Then a tough kid with a fancy gun (Richard Jaeckel) shows up on the Wilkison payroll
Then all the small ranchers are forced out, getting the same kind of offers
Parrish saw himself either running like they did, or stand and fight
But can he easily deals with a man who sends six killers to shoot an old man in the back? Can he easily argues with a man who started with a few acres of land and now owns practically the whole valley?
All that grass and sand ever meant to the ex-Confederate Army officer the past three years
It was a place to regain his health
Out of habit of taking advice, Parrish affirms: "What happen in this valley is no concern of mine." And much to the disappointment of the remaining ranchers and farmers, who pressure him to stay on, he decides to accept Wilkison's offer to fulfill the promise he made to his fiancée
When Lee's younger brother Cole made the wrong move, trying to push Parrish make up his mind by lynching one of his ranch hands, Parrish got mad and warns the two brothers that he is going to stay and will fight them for the privilege of being let alone
Brian Keith plays the traitorous brother who's behind the killing... He dreams to have position and respect in running one day Anchor
Lee's ambitious wife Martha (Barbara Stanwyck) secretly hates herself and her husband
Stanwyck plays the part of a loving wife who can't bear the touch of her husband's hands
Edward G. Robinson is good enough as the Anchor's crippled owner who promised the whole valley to his wife, unaware that she is having an affair with his younger brother
Dianne Foster is too sensitive as the unsociable adult daughter well aware of her mother's burdens
"The Violent Men" uses the wide-screen technology to emphasize the scope and power of this harrowing action-drama, making it a perfect example of the genre's most enduring classics