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Surrender (1950) Online

Surrender (1950) Online
Original Title :
Surrender
Genre :
Movie / Drama / Romance / Western
Year :
1950
Directror :
Allan Dwan
Cast :
Vera Ralston,John Carroll,Walter Brennan
Writer :
James Edward Grant,James Edward Grant
Type :
Movie
Time :
1h 30min
Rating :
6.3/10
Surrender (1950) Online

Violet Barton, a femme-fatale goal-setter, fascinates men and readily returns their affection to obtain the wealth she desires, even to the point of bigamy. She has an affair with gambler Gregg Delaney but marries his best friend, Johnny Hale, when she discovers Hale is the richest man in Texas. This loses her the respect of her sister, Janet, who loves Hale, and Delaney, who loves Violet. Meanwhile, town sheriff Bill Howard is working hard to get Delaney to confess to a murder. Delaney manges to steer clear of the sheriff until Violet kills her lawful husband, Henry Vaal, and the sheriff is soon pursuing both Violet and Delaney into the desert.
Cast overview, first billed only:
Vera Ralston Vera Ralston - Violet Barton
John Carroll John Carroll - Gregg Delaney
Walter Brennan Walter Brennan - Sheriff Bill Howard
Francis Lederer Francis Lederer - Henry Vaan
William Ching William Ching - John Beauregard Hale
Maria Palmer Maria Palmer - Janet Barton
Jane Darwell Jane Darwell - Molly Hale
Roy Barcroft Roy Barcroft - Deputy Gerard
Paul Fix Paul Fix - Deputy Williams
Esther Dale Esther Dale - Aunt May
Edward Norris Edward Norris - Wilbur
Howland Chamberlain Howland Chamberlain - The Casino Manager
Norman Budd Norman Budd - Carson - the Blackmailer
Nacho Galindo Nacho Galindo - Gringo
Jeff York Jeff York - Canning


User reviews

Bluddefender

Bluddefender

This delirious, over the top western tale of l'amour fou features the always affable John Carroll as the jaded hero and Vera Ralston as a greedy, sociopathic woman of unsavory character who will stop at nothing, including murder, to achieve her desires. Ms. Ralston is not quite up to carrying the film, in a role which was perhaps more suited to the likes of Hedy Lamar or Marlene Deitrich. It's a sort of "Madame Bovary-Scarlett O'Hara goes to Texas" tale, with elements of noir. Besides Carroll (who actually gets to sing the title song) and a good performance by Walter Brennan as a self-righteous sheriff prone to prejudgments, there is little to entertain here other than the gay sub-context of Carroll's unshakable and undying affection for Ching.