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The Cimarron Kid (1952) More at IMDbPro »


Overview

User Rating:
6.7/10   148 votes
MOVIEmeter: ?
Up 5% in popularity this week. See why on IMDbPro.
Director:
Writers:
Kay Lenard (story)
Louis Stevens (story)
Contact:
View company contact information for The Cimarron Kid on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
31 March 1952 (Sweden) more
Genre:
Plot:
Audie Murphy comes into his own as a Western star in this story. Wrongly accused by crooked railroad... more | add synopsis
Plot Keywords:
User Reviews:
Audie Murphy as outlaw Bill Doolin in a compact western more (5 total)

Cast

  (in credits order) (verified as complete)
Audie Murphy ... Bill Doolin / The Cimarron Kid
Beverly Tyler ... Carrie Roberts

James Best ... Bitter Creek Dalton
Yvette Duguay ... Cimarron Rose Adams (as Yvette Dugay)
John Hudson ... Dynamite Dick Dalton
Hugh O'Brian ... Red Buck
Roy Roberts ... Pat Roberts
David Wolfe ... Sam Swanson
Noah Beery Jr. ... Bob Dalton (as Noah Beery)
Leif Erickson ... Marshal John Sutton
John Hubbard ... George Weber
Frank Silvera ... Stacey Marshall
rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Eugene Baxter ... Tilden (uncredited)
Stanley Blystone ... Train Passenger (uncredited)
John Bromfield ... Tulsa Jack (uncredited)
Rand Brooks ... Emmett Dalton (uncredited)
Wheaton Chambers ... Webb Thompson (uncredited)
Tristram Coffin ... Silk Conrad (uncredited)
Frank Ferguson ... Prison Warden (uncredited)
Richard Garland ... Big Jim Moore (uncredited)
Chuck Hamilton ... Detective (uncredited)
Harry Harvey ... Store Clerk (uncredited)
Jack Ingram ... Train Passenger (uncredited)
Rory Mallinson ... Deputy (uncredited)
Gregg Palmer ... Grat Dalton (uncredited)
Eddie Parker ... Jergens (uncredited)
William Reynolds ... Will Dalton (uncredited)
Ann Robinson ... Stella (uncredited)
David Sharpe ... Charlie (uncredited)
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Directed by
Budd Boetticher 
 
Writing credits
(in alphabetical order)
Kay Lenard  story
Louis Stevens  story and screenplay

Produced by
Ted Richmond .... producer
 
Cinematography by
Charles P. Boyle (director of photography)
 
Film Editing by
Frank Gross 
 
Art Direction by
Bernard Herzbrun 
Emrich Nicholson 
 
Set Decoration by
Russell A. Gausman 
Joseph Kish  (as Joe Kish)
 
Makeup Department
Joan St. Oegger .... hair stylist
Bud Westmore .... makeup artist
 
Sound Department
Leslie I. Carey .... sound
Corson Jowett .... sound
 
Stunts
Bob Burrows .... stunts (uncredited)
Wayne Burson .... stunts (uncredited)
Richard Farnsworth .... stunts (uncredited)
Clyde Hudkins Jr. .... stunts (uncredited)
Leroy Johnson .... stunts (uncredited)
Eddie Parker .... stunts (uncredited)
David Sharpe .... stunts (uncredited)
George Sowards .... stunts (uncredited)
James Van Horn .... stunts (uncredited)
Willard W. Willingham .... stunts (uncredited)
 
Costume and Wardrobe Department
Bill Thomas .... costumes
 
Music Department
Joseph Gershenson .... musical director
Daniele Amfitheatrof .... composer: stock music (uncredited)
Milton Rosen .... composer: stock music (uncredited)
Hans J. Salter .... composer: stock music (uncredited)
Paul Sawtell .... composer: stock music (uncredited)
Walter Scharf .... composer: stock music (uncredited)
Frank Skinner .... composer: stock music (uncredited)
 
Other crew
William Fritzsche .... technicolor color consultant
 

Production CompaniesDistributors
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Additional Details

Runtime:
84 min
Country:
Language:
Color:
Color (Technicolor)
Aspect Ratio:
1.37 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Mono (Western Electric Recording)
Certification:

Fun Stuff

Trivia:
Film debut of William Reynolds. more
Quotes:
Warden: Hate gets under a man's skin. It spoils his whole life. It's like a bad growth, kid. You got to get rid of it. more
Movie Connections:
Featured in Budd Boetticher: A Man Can Do That (2005) (TV) more

FAQ

This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.
9 out of 9 people found the following review useful.
Audie Murphy as outlaw Bill Doolin in a compact western, 27 December 2001
Author: Brian Camp from Bronx, NY

THE CIMARRON KID (1951) was one of about two dozen westerns Audie Murphy starred in at Universal Pictures in the period from 1950-1966. In brief, it tells the story of outlaw Bill Doolin who rode with the infamous Dalton gang in the disastrous raid on Coffeyville, Kansas, and went on to lead the gang's survivors in a subsequent robbery spree. A WWII hero-turned-movie star, Murphy plays Doolin as a misunderstood youth who gets forced into a life of crime through guilt by association and persecution by an overzealous railroad detective. Further complications ensue when Doolin falls in love with a rancher's daughter who wants him to go straight.

The film was directed by western specialist Budd Boetticher who provides quite a number of interesting touches. One of the gang members, played by James Best, has a Mexican girlfriend, known as Cimarron Rose (Yvette Dugay), who is an equal participant in the action and is used to acquire information about payroll shipments and assorted robbery targets. The other major woman character, rancher's daughter Carrie Roberts (Beverly Tyler), is pretty strong and forthright on her own and makes no attempt to play coy in her meetings with Doolin. She even comes up with a plan to help him leave the outlaw life, but one which he rejects.

Also, there is a significant black character, a man named Stacy (Frank Silvera) who provides support services for the gang, and who, while not actually a participant in their crimes, is dealt an equal share of the proceeds. There is a scene of him at home with his family--a wife and three children--that indicates his choice of a domestic life over an outlaw one, yet he is always treated with respect by the other men.

The rest of the cast consists of a mixed bag of character actors like Noah Beery Jr., Leif Erickson, Roy Roberts, John Hubbard, and Rand Brooks, and up-and-coming Universal contract players: James Best, Hugh O'Brian, John Bromfield, John Hudson, William Reynolds, Palmer Lee (Greg Palmer). At times they threaten to crowd the soft-spoken, unassuming Murphy off the screen, but Audie ultimately manages to hold his own. Boetticher and Murphy would work together one more time on Murphy's last film, A TIME FOR DYING (1971), in which the actor has a cameo as Jesse James.

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