Rails Into Laramie (1954) Poster

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5/10
Ridin' the rails .......
revdrcac17 August 2006
John Payne stars in this 1954 sagebrush saga, which also features several western favorites as co-stars. The railroad sends a representative to get to the bottom of a gang's attempts to disrupt the rail-lines.

The film is well-paced and Payne is a good choice to play the lead role. Dan Duryea steals many of the scenes he appears in and the great Lee Van Cleef was fine in his all too brief supporting role.

Payne appeared in a number of Westerns in the '40's and '50's, but was never able to reach the same success as John Wayne, Jimmy Stewart or Glenn Ford had in the genre. This film was a good example of his work and should be enjoyed by die-hard Western movie fans........
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6/10
Saving the Railroad
Henchman_Number17 July 2013
Troubleshooter Jefferson Harder (John Payne) is sent to Laramie by the Army to investigate the sabotage that is preventing the railroad from finishing it's line connecting the East and West. Upon arrival Payne quickly finds out the worst kept secret in town, that old buddy and current town saloon owner Jim Shanessy (Dan Duryea) is behind the chicanery, though nobody is ever able to prove Shanessy and his henchmen (Myron Healey and Lee Van Cleef) are involved. The town leaders, while happy about support from the Army, are disappointed from the start that they have only sent one man to do the job and grow increasingly critical of the heavy-handed tactics employed by Payne to clean up the town.

Rails Into Laramie packs a lot of action into it's 80 minute run time. Between busting bad guys heads Payne barely has time to strike up a romantic relationship with Dance Hall owner and partner of Jim Shanessy, Lou Carter (Mari Blanchard). Very little melodrama to be found in this one as Payne spends most of his time eradicating the town's scofflaws.

This movie follows the Universal International Pictures formula of using off the A-list leading actors with familiar casts, packaged in a medium budget production. A formula that worked very well for them and it works here too. John Payne may be the best leading actor of the post World War II era that few people remember today. A versatile actor Payne looked equally a home whether in the saddle, a crime drama or a comedy. Here he carries the day in this action saddle flick.

Good drive-in grade Western flick.
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7/10
The Equality State
bkoganbing4 July 2013
In this quality B western rails are going into Laramie, Wyoming, but they're not leaving. That's because saloon owner Dan Duryea with the implicit connivance of the town's merchants is finding all kinds of ways to keep the railroad workers spending their pay in their town and not getting any work done. All this is troubling the railroad owners and troubleshooter John Payne is detached from the army to deal with the trouble.

Rails Into Laramie takes elements from the DeMille classic Union Pacific and Destry Rides Again and a nice story is concocted. Payne is a stalwart no nonsense hero who when he's not on the job is a bit of a hell raiser himself. But when he's given this job he's quite serious.

Dan Duryea the chief villain is married to Joyce McKenzie, but has his partner in the saloon Mari Blanchard on the side. He's also got to do his bidding treacherous telegrapher Douglas Kennedy, bully boy railroad worker Charles Horvath to intimidate the others, and a pair of killer brothers Myron Healey and Lee Van Cleef.

If you know the plots of both the previous mentioned films than you know the result in the end. What I really liked about Rails Into Laramie was the fact that Wyoming was organized as a territory at the same time as the transcontinental railroad was coming through and women got the vote. They also got some other rights and that fact is integrated into the plot.

One of John Payne's good B westerns from the Fifties and the rest of the cast supports him well. And Dan Duryea is always excellent.
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6/10
Friends Fall Out
boblipton1 April 2020
Army sergeant John Payne is ordered to clear up the situation in Laramie single-handedly. He finds his childhood buddy Dan Duryea running a saloon and paying off everyone in sight to keep the work moving as slow as possible; the longer it takes, the more of the rail workers' pay he can pocket. Payne gets himself appointed marshal and jails all the baddies.... but their friends on the juries keep setting them free.

It's another of the 'Shaky A' westerns from Universal in this period, directed by the reliable Jesse Hibbs. Like most of the westerns from Universal in this period, it's in Technicolor, has a couple of minor stars, a few key character actors like Barton Maclane and Lee van Cleef and a spectacular finale of a fight in a train that's about to crash into a passenger train. The result is good, if standard fun.

It's produced by Ted Richmond. He began producing B movies for Columbia in 1940. When Cohn shut down his series, he switched to Universal, where he worked on all sorts of programmers. He produced 56 movies by 1957, and then slowed down. Over the next 22 years, he produced 10 movies, including PAPILLON. He died in 2013 at the age of 103.
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6/10
"You either go backwards or forward. You can't stand still."
classicsoncall28 January 2016
Warning: Spoilers
The premise of this picture managed to puzzle me right from the start and I couldn't figure it out. In any other Western, the town boss or main villain would be looking for a way to buy out all the surrounding ranchers so he would have control of the property when the railroad would eventually come through. A railroad station usually meant increased business traffic for the local establishments, which were also usually controlled by the principal bad guy. In this story, businessman Jim Shanessy (Dan Duryea) wanted to slow up or stop the railroad construction to keep the local workers hanging around his saloon in town or the one he owned at the mining camp. It all seemed kind of contrived to me.

As in any other Western however, the hero needs to step in and stop the skulduggery going on. Jeff Harder (John Payne) is a Cavalry sergeant disturbed out of his twenty eight day leave to go on a special mission to Laramie and solve the railroad problem. Arriving in town he quickly surmises that he'll eventually have to go up against long time pal Shanessy and his henchmen, Ace (Lee Van Cleef) and Con Winton (Myron Healey). Shanessy's business manager and partner Lou Carter (Mari Blanchard) appears to be the wild card in this stacked deck, and you might consider her eventual turn to be a bit of a twist ending.

The story introduces a nifty element of American history by inserting a sequence involving an all woman jury, the first of it's kind in the country making headlines in the Laramie Journal. This followed Wyoming becoming the first state to give women the right to vote, and it was an interesting departure from the main story. It also proved to be the impetus for the undoing of Shanessy as the town's principal money man, though it would take a bit more leg work on the part of Harder. Right up until the end I wasn't sure what Lou Carter was really up to but the closing clinch with Jeff Harder answered that question. Apparently he'd be facing a new hitch once his cavalry one ran it's course.
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6/10
The rail line has trouble reaching Laramie.
michaelRokeefe25 February 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Universal-International presents a western thought of as mediocre by critics; but this doesn't mean the movie is not worth watching. RAILS into LARAMIE stars John Payne as Jefferson Harder, who intends to go to Laramie and clean up the wide-open town. Plus there is the matter of the railroad having problems building their line into town. Everybody around knows that all of the crime is coming from a gang taking orders from Jim Shanessy(Dan Duryea). No charges are able to stick in court because somehow the all-male juries are intimidated. Shanessy is surprised when his old buddy Harder arrives in town. It doesn't take long for Jeff Harder to find out that the railroad is not progressing, because Shanessy and saloon gal-pal Lou Carter(Mari Blanchard)are a tough team keeping the railhead out of Laramie so both can control their criminal activities without any interference. Well, Harder is in town and is determined to clean up Laramie, so the rail line can come through.

Decent old west saga that also features: Barton McLaine, Ralph Dumke, James Griffith, Joyce Mackenzie and Lee Van Cleef.
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5/10
Routine and colorful Western decently played by John Payne and made in Universal International style
ma-cortes20 July 2019
A rebel soldier, John Payne, is assigned by his commander in chief to find who is behind the flop in the building of a railway in Laramie. The army official finds alcoholic people and drink plentiful in the railway workers. He also meets a beautiful ally, Mari Blanchard, an exdancer and owner of a bustly saloon along with Dan Duryea, an ex-colleague of Payne who is behind it all. As Duryea is really a booze peddler who along with his hoodlum, Lee Van Cleef, deliver alcohol to the labourers who are building the railroad. Both of them tangle into a twisted confrontation and at the end a thrilling fight takes place aboard a train. This is the saga of the man who blazed the trail for the iron horse across the wide frontier.

Run-of-the-mill Universal International Pictures with usual elements, such as noisy action, thrills, crossfire, drama, romance and some spectacular action scenes on a train. There is even some historical remark, as the jury who judges Dan Duryea is formed by women, and resulted to be actually the first served by women in the state of Wyoming 1870 . Stars John Payne, one of the popular actors of the forties and fifties, today a little forgotten. He starred the classy Miracle in 34th street and performed all kinds of genres as Noir: Slighly scarlet, Kansas City confidential, The vanquished, Adventure: Raiders of seven seas, Crosswinds, Tripoli, Iceland and Western : Santa Fe passage, Silver lode, Tennessee's partner, The Road to Denver. He also starred various Tv series and episodes as The restless gun and Zane Grey. Payne is well accompanied by a good support cast as the prestigious Dan Duryea here co-starring , the habitual baddie Lee Van Cleef pre-Sergio Leone, James Griffith, Harry Shannon, George Chandler, Stephen Chase, Douglas Kennedy and Joyce Mackenzie.

The motion picture titled Rails into Laramie was professionally directed by Jesse Hibbs though with no much enthusiasm. He directed a lot of films and several episodes of notorious TV episodes. His fetish actor was Audie Murphy, whom directed in known and big boxoffice films as To hell and back, World in my corner, Medal of honor, Ride a crooked trail. Rating 5/10. Passable and acceptable but average.
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5/10
There's only one problem...why? This part of the film never really made much sense...
planktonrules31 January 2016
A very common and rather clichéd plots for old westerns is the notion of someone trying to stop the railroad. While there really wasn't a historical basis, too many films were about a supposed overt or covert effort to stop progress. In most all of them, however, the reason why the baddies are doing this is pretty obvious...but in this one I really couldn't see why Shanessy (Dan Duryea) is doing this...and it's a major weakness of the film.

The man sent to help get the railroad built is an Army Sergeant, Jeff Harder (John Payne) and through most of the film, he makes very little progress thanks to Shanessy and a rather stupid town that tolerates Shanessy's antics. It all leads up to a murder conviction, a jail escape and train chase. None of it's bad...none of it's outstanding in any way. A standard and rather clichéd film.

By the way, late in the film a lady is shot from about 8-10 feet away with what is probably a .45 Colt cartridge. Amazingly, she survived...a miracle and a half!
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8/10
An enjoyable western
coltras3519 June 2021
A railroad sends an agent (John Payne) to Laramie to try to find out who is behind the efforts to stop the railroad from building its line into the area.

An enjoyable railroad western that is brisk and keeps your attention throughout. There's a nice buddy angle between John Payne and Dan Duryea, but when Duryea realises Payne isn't going to turn a blind eye to his crooked ways, he chooses to get rid of him the hard way. There's fistfights, attempted riots and Lee Van Cleef snarling with his trigger-happy fingers. There's also an interesting women's jury sequence. But what stands out for me is the wonderful looking trains; the finale with a shootout and a fistfight on top of the train is an exciting one. Mari Blanchard sizzles as Payne's love interest.

A satisfying railroad western that makes you feel good. Nice title song sung by Rex Allen.
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8/10
Get back to work you drunken bums!
alan-pratt30 May 2016
Progress on the railroad has pretty much ground to a halt as the workers spend most of their time drinking rotgut in Dan Duryea's boozer.

The leading citizens of the town request military help and tough soldier, Payne, is appointed as a sort of temporary marshal. Trouble is, he's an old mate of Duryea so it looks as though there's going to be a conflict of interests.

This is an above average Universal western: the two main protagonists play off each other well and there is excellent support from a very large cast of familiar westerners (many uncredited). Special mentions must go to Lee Van Cleef as a menacing, trigger happy bad guy (was he ever anything else?), Mari Blanchard as a saloon girl with a heart of gold (was she ever anything else?) and James Griffith, cast against type in a humorous role, as a bumbling ineffectual lawman.

Action scenes are well staged - particularly those on the trains - the photography is first class and the Technicolor beautiful as always.

Oh, and as an added bonus for B western fans, there's a title song over the opening credits rumbled out by the ever popular Rex Allen....
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Remake of Kansas Pacific
gwall-0703611 October 2019
Seems to be a re-hash of Kansas Pacific with a lot of the same actors!
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