It’s no secret that I love westerns, and in my house we watch several every month. I grew up with the TV western reruns on The Family Channel and TNT, with many a Saturday morning starting with The Adventures of Brisco County Jr. and The Wild Wild West, before switching to Bonanza, The Big Valley, The High Chaparral, and The Rifleman.
Evenings often featured John Wayne movies, and I liked those too.
I don’t think I’ll ever stop enjoying America’s genre. Thankfully, there’s always something I haven’t seen yet. This year I’ve finally started digging into the filmographies of Randolph Scott, Audie Murphy, and James Stewart. Thanks to streaming, things that weren’t previously available are easy to find.
But not always.
The Sheepman, staring Glenn Ford and Shirley MacLaine, isn’t streaming anywhere as far as I know. It’s been highly recommended to me for a while now, often compared to my favorite comedy western, Support Your Local Sheriff. So while I was putting together an eBay order with a “buy three, get two 15% off” deal, I put it in the cart with the aforementioned James Garner movie (which somehow wasn’t already on my shelf).
Someday I’ll get rid of streaming and not miss it a bit.
Almost as soon as it arrived, I put it on, which I don’t always do. I’ve got many, many discs I’ve never watched. But this one called to me. Also, it’s a movie I knew I could watch with my mom. Her memory for recent events isn’t that good, but she loves seeing long familiar actors on the screen, and The Sheepman is full of them. In addition to Ford and MacLaine, film and TV favorite Edgar Buchanan plays his schtick and still manages to steal every scene. Slim Pickens has a minor role, as does Bonanza alum Pernell Roberts.
Leslie Neilson is the bad guy!
Ford plays Jason Sweet, a sheep rancher who brings his herd to Powder Valley and quickly establishes his tough guy bonafides. He finds the town thug, beats him up, and does a nifty quickdraw trick. Naturally, the cattlemen aren’t pleased about the idea of sharing their grazing land with sheep, but Sweet is too dangerous and clever to get rid of easily.
While he’s there, he might as well steal the cattle barron’s girl too, right?
Said cattle barron is Neilson’s Colonel Stephen Bedford (aka: Texas gunslinger Johnny Bledsoe), whom Sweet knew in a past life. They were once scheduled for a showdown, but neither showed up for fear that he’d lose. Now they make at playing nice, but we know it’s only a matter of time before the powder keg in Powder Valley explodes. Neilson plays it straight and slimey amidst the farce, though the movie isn’t as heavy on the comedy as advertised.
Not that I’m complaining. It’s still great.
Like any good western, The Sheepman is also a story of righting wrongs and finding redemption in community. Sweet’s fiance was killed by Chocktaw, an outlaw, played by a grubby looking Roberts, known for roaming around the valley. So when Sweet won the sheep in a poker game, he decided to use it as an opportunity to draw out the villain and get his revenge.
If he can find a new love, home, and make some money while getting justice, all the better.
There aren’t any real surprises in the story. Sometimes we just want western lite, and that’s what this is. MacLaine, in an early role, is delightful as she walks the line between ditzy and savvy. Ford is as dependable as ever. And Neilson is surprisingly menacing to anyone who only knows him from his clowning around later in his career.
Watch it if you can find it.