5 Card Stud

{{short description|1968 film by Henry Hathaway}}

{{About|the 1968 Western film|the 2002 romance film|5 Card Stud (2002 film)|the poker game|Five-card stud}}

{{Use American English|date=October 2021}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2019}}

{{Infobox film

| name = 5 Card Stud

| image = 5CardStyd1968Poster.jpg

| caption = US film poster

| director = Henry Hathaway

| producer = Hall Wallis

| writer = Marguerite Roberts

| starring = Dean Martin
Robert Mitchum
Inger Stevens
Roddy McDowall
Katherine Justice
Yaphet Kotto

| music = Maurice Jarre

| cinematography = Daniel L. Fapp

| editing = Warren Low

| distributor = Paramount Pictures

| released = {{Film date|1968|07|12|Chicago|ref1={{Cite news |date=1968-07-12 |title=5 Card Stud (Advertisement) |work=Chicago Tribune |page=17, Section 2}}|1968|07|31|New York City|ref2=|1968|08|14|Los Angeles|ref3={{Cite news |title=5 Card Stud (Advertisement) |work=Los Angeles Times |page=13, Part IV}}}}

| runtime = 103 minutes

| country = United States

| language = English

| gross = $3,500,000 (US/ Canada)"Big Rental Films of 1968", Variety, January 8, 1969 p 15. Please note this figure is a rental accruing to distributors.

}}

5 Card Stud is a 1968 American Western mystery film, directed by Henry Hathaway and starring Dean Martin and Robert Mitchum. The script is based on a novel by Ray Gaulden and was written by Marguerite Roberts, who also wrote the screenplay of True Grit for Hathaway the following year.

Plot

In 1880, an unknown drifter and gambler in the small town of Rincon, 100 miles (161 km) from Denver, Colorado, is caught cheating at a five-card stud poker game. The players, led by the volatile Nick Evers, take the cheating gambler to lynch him. One of the players, Van Morgan, tries to prevent the others from administering frontier justice, but is unable to stop the hanging. Morgan leaves town, but later returns, when he hears that several of the other players from the poker game have become victims of grisly murders. Morgan starts relationship with Lily, the barbershop owner.

The town has a new resident, a stern and somewhat edgy Colt .45-carrying Baptist preacher, named Reverend Rudd. As more members of the lynch mob are killed off one by one by strangling, it becomes clear that someone is taking revenge, and it is up to Morgan to solve the mystery. Nick is shown to be the one telling Rudd who was at the game and involved in killing the stranger, who is Rudd's brother. Nick tells Rudd falsely that George was involved, Rudd kills George. As George is dying he puts his hands together like he is praying, Morgan knows that George never prayed, thus realizes that Rudd is the murderer, and he kills Rudd in a shootout. Last scene is with Morgan and Lilly as Morgan rides off to Denver and Lily is going to follow him in a week. Lily doesn't really play role in story...

Cast

Production

5 Card Stud was shot in Mexico and filming wrapped in May 1968.{{Cite news |date=1968-05-12 |title=Mexican Shots End for '5 Card Stud' |work=Springfield Leader and Press |page=B6}}

The song led by Reverend Rudd at his first service in Rincon is "Mercy's Call," a late-19th-century Baptist hymn written by W.H. Doane.

This film marked one of the final appearances of Inger Stevens, and the second time that Mitchum played an unorthodox preacher (following 1955's The Night of the Hunter). 5 Card Stud brought together director Henry Hathaway and Dean Martin for a second time; the first was the 1965 film The Sons of Katie Elder starring John Wayne.

Reception

In a contemporary review for The New York Times, critic Vincent Canby identified 5 Card Stud as one of a recent spate of "Buddy System" Westerns, such as: El Dorado (1966) with John Wayne and Mitchum; The Way West (1967) with Kirk Douglas, Mitchum and Richard Widmark; The War Wagon (1967) with John Wayne and Kirk Douglas; Bandolero! (1968) with James Stewart and Dean Martin; and Villa Rides (1968) with Yul Brynner, Mitchum and Charles Bronson. Canby wrote: "Without important exception, all of these titles, stories and settings are interchangeable, to say nothing of the stars, some of whom are beginning to look as if they'd been hatched from dinosaur eggs. ... Buddy System Westerns are somehow basically soft."{{Cite news|last=Canby|first=Vincent|date=1968-08-01|title=Screen: Buddies Out West|page=24|work=The New York Times}}

In the Chicago Sun-Times, critic Roger Ebert wrote: "'Five Card Stud' is not a great movie, but it's a polished, professional one, and it's a good deal more than a common Western. ... But, it also has something rather rare, a well-made story. Most action Westerns are directed by rote: good guy, bad guy, a standard pattern of fights, an eventual triumph for the gentleman in the white hat. Not this one, which presents a suspense story in a Western setting."{{Cite news |last=Ebert |first=Roger |date=1968-07-16 |title=Reviews: Five Card Stud |url=https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/five-card-stud-1968 |work=Chicago Sun-Times}}

References

{{reflist}}

=DVD reviews=

  • [http://www.dvdtalk.com/dvdsavant/s526stud.html DVD Savant review] by Glenn Erickson
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20061019185701/http://www.dvdverdict.com/reviews/fivecardstud.php DVD Verdict review] by Eric Profancik
  • [http://www.digitallyobsessed.com/showreview.php3?ID=3614 digitallyOBSESSED! review] by Mark Zimmer

{{Henry Hathaway}}

Category:1968 films

Category:1968 Western (genre) films

Category:American Western (genre) films

Category:1960s English-language films

Category:Films scored by Maurice Jarre

Category:Films directed by Henry Hathaway

Category:Films produced by Hal B. Wallis

Category:Films set in Colorado

Category:Films set in 1880

Category:Paramount Pictures films

Category:Films about poker

Category:1960s American films

Category:English-language Western (genre) films