God Moves In Mysterious Ways. Gun Glory is directed by Roy Rowland and adapted to screenplay by William Ludwig from Philip Yordan's novel, Man of the West. It stars Stewart Granger, Rhonda Fleming, Chill Wills, James Gregory and Steve Rowland. Music is by Jeff Alexander - with the title song "The Ninety and the Nine" song by Burl Ives - and cinematography is by Harold J. Marzorati. What we have here is a very familiar tale. Granger is gunslinger Tom Early, who returns to his home town after a number of years to find his wife has died and his son (Rowland) is unsurprisingly miffed at his father having abandoned them. The townsfolk, also, are not exactly enamoured to have him back either, but since they are in the grip of terror brought about by violent cattle baron Grimsell (Gregory), a chance for Early to make peace with all is in the offering. Granger was winding down his contract with MGM and this could hardly be seen has a triumphant fanfare finale. Yet for committed Western film fans there's still plenty to enjoy. Handsome is a word that springs to mind, Granger and Fleming positively ooze sexual beauty, the Calif locations (Bronson Canyon - Whoosh!) are magnificently brought to life via CinemaScope (Metrocolor), while costuming and set designs are most appealing. The script is weak, though, and familiarity of story demands that elsewhere the pic needs to cover the shortcomings. Action scenes are all too brief, but the stunt work on show is impressive and the construction of shoot-outs, and a rockslide sequence, certainly stirs the blood. Elsewhere, Jacques Aubuchon's lecherous windbag act gets tiresome pretty quickly, and the overt religion angles are heavy handed (even the musical score is full of biblical swirls) - the latter of which a shame because Chill Wills as The Preacher turns in the best perf in the pic. Hardly a must see movie, then, but Oater fans, and fans of the stars, are not short changed (Gregory does good villainy as well). Even if ultimately it comes off as a "going through the motions" movie that's very pretty but of little substance. 6.5/10


Gun Glory (1957)
With rifle or pistol - he was the fastest deadliest shot of the western plains!
Stream Gun Glory (1957) on Zoovie — free, HD, no signup. starring Stewart Granger, Rhonda Fleming, and Chill Wills. Filed under Western — multiple servers per title.
What is Gun Glory (1957) about?
An ex-gunslinger returns home; shunned by townsfolk he is the only one who knows how to stop a ruthless cattleman from driving his herd through their town.
Listing updated · catalog data daily-synced from TMDB
- Production:
- Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
- Country:
- United States of America
- Languages:
- English
- Budget:
- $1,707,000
- Revenue:
- $2,550,000
- IMDb:
- tt0050467
Where can I watch Gun Glory (1957) for free?
Who stars in Gun Glory (1957)?
Stewart Granger as Tom Early, Rhonda Fleming as Jo, Chill Wills as Preacher, Steve Rowland as Tom Early, Jr., James Gregory as Grimsell, Jacques Aubuchon as Sam Winscott, Arch Johnson as Gunn, Rayford Barnes as Blondie.
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Did You Know?
- ★This film had a budget of $1,707,000 and earned $2,550,000 worldwide — a profit of $843,000 (49% return on investment).
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Where can I watch Gun Glory online for free?▼
You can watch Gun Glory (1957) online for free on zoovie.cc. Click play above to start streaming in HD quality.
Is Gun Glory worth watching?▼
Gun Glory has mixed reviews with a rating of 5.8/10 based on 17 votes.
What genre is Gun Glory?▼
Gun Glory is a Western film released in 1957.
Who stars in Gun Glory?▼
The cast of Gun Glory includes Stewart Granger, Rhonda Fleming, Chill Wills, Steve Rowland and James Gregory.
How much did Gun Glory make at the box office?▼
Gun Glory had a budget of $2 million and earned $3 million worldwide.






























