The Night of the Grizzly backdrop
The Night of the Grizzly

The Night of the Grizzly

5.8 / 1019661h 48m

Synopsis

Marshall "Big Jim" Cole turns in his badge and heads to Wyoming with his family in order to settle on some land left him by a relative. He faces opposition both from a neighbor who wants that land for his own sons, and from a grizzly bear nicknamed "Satan" who keeps killing Cole's livestock.

Genre: Adventure, Western

Status: Released

Director: Joseph Pevney

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Main Cast

Clint Walker

Clint Walker

Jim Cole

Martha Hyer

Martha Hyer

Angela Cole

Keenan Wynn

Keenan Wynn

Jed Curry

Ron Ely

Ron Ely

Ted Curry

Nancy Kulp

Nancy Kulp

Wilhelmina Peterson

Kevin Brodie

Charly Cole

Ellen Corby

Ellen Corby

Hazel Squires

Jack Elam

Jack Elam

Hank

Don Haggerty

Don Haggerty

Sam Podds

Leo Gordon

Leo Gordon

Cass Dowdy

User Reviews

Wuchak

**_Bucolic Western with Clint Walker tangling with a satanic bruin_** A man & his loved ones (Clint Walker, Martha Hyer, Don Haggerty, etc.) take over an inherited ranch in Wyoming, but are beset by a rogue grizzly, a mogul who wants the land (Keenan Wynn), his troublemaking sons (Ron Ely and Sammy Jackson) and a mysterious man from the past (Leo Gordon). “The Night of the Grizzly” (1966) was reworked from an unused script of Walker’s successful Western series Cheyenne with some fans of that show viewing it as the unofficial epilogue since Clint’s character often spoke of getting a ranch. The tone is reminiscent of “Shane,” which also featured Ellen Corby and Nancy Kulp, but this is less cinematic, no doubt due to the lesser budget and the fact that it was helmed by Joseph Pevney, known for directing some of the better episodes of Star Trek, like “Arena” and “The City on the Edge of Forever.” This happened to be Pevney’s final theatrical film, although he continued to direct TV movies and shows. Western fans might be turned off by a cutesy vibe that smacks of Disney-goes-West but, if you can roll with that side element, there’s more than enough for maturer viewers to appreciate, not to mention quite a bit of action, like brawls, gunfights, knife fights and an extremely violent bear. Speaking of the latter, while exaggerated, savage bear attacks did happen in the Old West, such as the three cowboys massacred in 1870 near the San Benito Ranch by Hollister, California (south of the Bay Area). One of them was decapitated (!). The flick has a welcome warm heart amidst the mayhem and is augmented by Walker’s quality example of manhood. For instance, he says to his beloved: “Angie, there ain’t a man alive that doesn't have trouble. How he handles that trouble is what counts. In every man's life there’s a Cass or a Satan, one kind or another, trying to whip him, beat him down, destroy him. He can't run away from it. He's got to stand strong and fight! Whatever it is, he's got to fight! That’s how God made a man.” It runs 1 hours, 41 minutes, and was shot in San Bernardino National Forest at Holcomb Valley north of Big Bear Lake, as well as Big Bear Valley, which is east of the lake. Studio stuff was done a Paramount Studios. Jack Elam is also on hand in the cast. GRADE: B

CinemaSerf

The aptly named “Big Jim” (Clint Walker) has had enough of marshalling and so takes his family and heads off to Wyoming where he has been left some land. No sooner have they arrived than he discovers that his neighbours ain't so neighbourly. The “Curry” family, who carry quite a bit of weight in the town have their own eyes on his patch, and “Jed” (Keenan Wynn) is making few bones about his desires. Just to add to his woes, there's also an hungry bear on the warpath and it is making short work of the stock. Using the bear as an excuse, “Curry” hires in the bounty hunting “Cass” (Leo Gordon) who has a past with both “Jim” and his wife “Angela” (Martha Hyer) and whom he hopes will rid him of the unwanted gent. Walker does what he always does: punch his way through his action scenes with perfect choreography and just the right amount of mud; Hyer smiles at just the right places, Jack Elam shows up but uncharacteristically low-key and there is also a bit of fun courtesy of shopkeeper “Willy” (Nancy Kulp) whose shop is constantly the location of fisticuffs that must play havoc with her stocktaking. It's really Wynn who takes the plaudits here as at least he adds a little character to this otherwise rather dry story, and - of course - there is also the bear. Now unlike some films of this genre, we do actually have a bear and we see it, too. It's an impressive eight-foot tall creature that also seems impervious to bullets and that after a few encounters I was hoping would manage to survive the variety of traps and trickeries planted amidst it's own environment. Any sense of menace is kept to the very end, but even there the film has a timidity to it that it travels with throughout. It's watchable enough, but Walker just lacks the charisma to lead from the front.