One Foot in Hell

One Foot in Hell

The story of the day hell came to town wearing a badge!

Director: James B. Clark

Writer: Sydney Boehm

Producer: Sydney Boehm

Mitch Barrett becomes embittered because his wife is allowed to die when he can't pay for the medicine she needs. The remorseful townspeople hire Mitch to be a deputy sheriff, thereby enabling him to plot an elaborate bank robbery with the help of an artist, a pickpocket, a gunslinger and a bar-girl.

90 min Rating: 5.3/10 Released

Top Cast

Alan Ladd
Alan Ladd
Mitch Barrett
Don Murray
Don Murray
Dan Keats
Dan O'Herlihy
Dan O'Herlihy
Sir Harry Ivers
Dolores Michaels
Dolores Michaels
Julie Reynolds
Barry Coe
Barry Coe
Stu Christian
Larry Gates
Larry Gates
Doc Seltzer

Movie Info

Director: James B. Clark

Writer: Sydney Boehm

Producer: Sydney Boehm

Production Companies: 20th Century Fox

Countries: United States of America

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User Reviews

What Others Said

John Chard: The last man and one dollar and eighty seven cents. One Foot in Hell is directed by James B. Clark and written by Aaron Spelling and Sydney Boehm. It stars Alan Ladd, Don Murray, Dan O'Herlihy, Dolores Michaels, Barry Coe and Larry Gates. A CinemaScope/De Luxe Color production with music by Dominic Frontiere and cinematography by William C. Mellor. Incensed by the circumstances which led to the death of his wife and unborn child, Mitch Barrett (Ladd) plots revenge against the whole town of Blue Springs. Alan Ladd's last Western doesn't find him in the best of shape or on the best of form, but it's a most interesting and entertaining picture regardless. In a veer from the norm, Ladd is playing a man gone bad, fuelled by hatred and thirsting for revenge, Mitch Barrett assembles a small group of strays and ruffians and sets his plans in motion. He wins the trust of the town and operates behind the facade of the law. Along the way he is extremely callous, the value of life means nothing to him now, while inner fighting and romance destabilises the group until the big denouement arrives. The pace sometimes sags and there's a distinct rushed feel about the final quarter (one main character annoyingly dies off screen?!), yet there's still a lot to like here. The CinemaScope production is nice to look at, there's some very good scenes such as those involving cattle and liquid fire, while the all round nasty edge to the plotting and characterisations (Julie Reynolds' back story is a shocker) keeps it from being run of the mill. It's not the big Western send off that Ladd fans would have wanted, however it's still a recommended Western to like minded genre fans. 7/10