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The Tall Stranger 1957

Runtime

83 mins

Language

English

English

Penned by the writer of Hondo, the film follows a Union veteran who returns to his western home after the Civil War, only to become embroiled in a bitter land dispute pitting his avaricious half‑brother against a caravan of Confederate homesteaders seeking settlement. The conflict intensifies as loyalties are tested and violence erupts, forcing the soldier to choose between family and justice.

Penned by the writer of Hondo, the film follows a Union veteran who returns to his western home after the Civil War, only to become embroiled in a bitter land dispute pitting his avaricious half‑brother against a caravan of Confederate homesteaders seeking settlement. The conflict intensifies as loyalties are tested and violence erupts, forcing the soldier to choose between family and justice.

Does The Tall Stranger have end credit scenes?

No!

The Tall Stranger does not have end credit scenes. You can leave when the credits roll.

Take the Ultimate The Tall Stranger Movie Quiz

Challenge your knowledge of The Tall Stranger with this fun and interactive movie quiz. Test yourself on key plot points, iconic characters, hidden details, and memorable moments to see how well you really know the film.


The Tall Stranger Quiz: Test your knowledge of the 1957 western film *The Tall Stranger* with these ten multiple‑choice questions ranging from easy to difficult.

Which former Union soldier is the central protagonist of the story?

Full Plot Summary and Ending Explained for The Tall Stranger

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Read the complete plot summary of The Tall Stranger, including all major events, twists, and the full ending explained in detail. Explore key characters, themes, hidden meanings, and everything you need to understand the story from beginning to end.


Former Union soldier Ned Bannon, Joel McCrea, is shot in his side and left for dead while trudging home at the end of the Civil War. He comes to in a wagon, belonging to the widowed Ellen, Virginia Mayo, and her son Will, who are part of a wagon train of Confederate homesteaders. The group fears that the unknown shooter may return to finish the job, and some among them—Pagones among them—are openly hostile to a Yankee. Bannon recalls that just before he was struck down he spotted a small mob of cattle and drovers; the only clue he remembers is a pair of fancy spurs and a gold-plated rifle.

The settlers aim for California, but Bannon warns that there is no safe trail past Bishop’s Valley. Mort Harper and Purcell claim the route was broken a year earlier, a fact Bannon hasn’t learned about while away at war. In private, he confides to Ellen that Hardy Bishop, Barry Kelley, would never let anyone through his land, and that Bishop is his half‑brother, making Bannon an unwelcome presence even among those he has just met.

At Bishop’s ranch, the tension escalates as the landowner’s hands return with word of the approaching wagon train. Bishop senses a possible confrontation and readies his men. When the settlers arrive in Bishop’s Valley, Harper argues that the land is government property and ripe for settlement, while Bannon insists the valley won’t be easily seized. The discussion grows heated, and Harper, along with Purcell, forces Bannon to leave the settler camp at gunpoint. He heads for Bishop’s ranch, wary and unyielding.

A perilous reckoning unfolds as violence provokes a fragile alliance. Bishop’s foreman Stark tries to calm the situation, but Bishop’s plan remains harsh: he will protect his land, and if necessary drive the settlers away. Bannon arrives, and a tense exchange leads to a physical brawl in which Bishop is soundly beaten. With his last few bullets, Bishop refuses to shoot and instead talks, hinting that the real trouble lies with Harper’s schemes. Bannon agrees to stay long enough to learn what Harper is up to, while Bishop contemplates how best to handle the rustlers who threaten his property.

Two men posing as miners, Zarata and Barrett, reveal a broader conspiracy. They are known to Harper and Purcell, yet they keep the settlers in the dark. Harper’s plan unfolds: Bishop will be drawn into an attack on the settlers, and Zarata will slip in with a dozen men to kill anyone who returns to Bishop’s ranch. In exchange, Zarata would receive half of Bishop’s cattle, though Harper hints at larger profits if the cattle market is opened up. Zarata even hints at a remembered acquaintance with Ellen from St. Louis, which Ellen denies as the two warily circle one another.

A tense moment erupts when Red, a settler, is shot during a failed attempt to defuse the situation. After Red’s injury, a deathly hush falls over the camp as a widow’s scream punctuates the chaos. Bannon, Stark, and Chavez retrieve Red and try to shelter him, but the tragedy leaves a question in the air: who fired the killing shot that struck the woman? Bannon begins to suspect Zarata’s rifle—same weapon that wounded him earlier—and shares this with Ellen, who later confronts Zarata with that evidence.

Dialogues of suspicion intensify as Ellen confronts Zarata; Will discovers the danger around him. When Barrett appears, Ellen shoots him, and Zarata wrests Bannon’s pistol and flees toward the settlers. Will races to find his mother, and Harper urges the settlers to pursue Bannon, who with Ellen and Will manages to escape before their pursuers reach them. The smoke of the conflict lingers as Harper retrieves Zarata’s rifle, a reminder of how closely the ties between greed, land, and vengeance bind these people.

Bannon heads to Bishop’s ranch with a plan to harness a truce and capture Harper. If negotiation fails, Bishop promises to handle the rustlers himself. That night, the bunkhouse is attacked and several men are killed or trapped. Bannon, Ellen, and Will stay behind as Bishop and Bannon join forces in a daring defense. In the barn, they stack a wagon with wet straw and set it alight, driving the attackers back with smoke and gunfire. Zarata slips into the barn, but Bishop corners him; with no bullets left, Zarata shoots Bishop before being strangled from the saddle in a brutal, fatal moment.

Harper storms the house, shoots Charlie, and seizes Ellen as a hostage. Bannon confronts Harper, who appears to bluff with an empty gun, and Bannon calls the bluff—shooting Harper when he reaches for another pistol. As the dust settles, Bishop dies after one final, quiet exchange with Bannon, and the two men share a moment of grim respect.

With the threat neutralized, the settlers prepare to leave for California, but Bannon arrives with a different proposal. He asks the settlers to stay in Bishop’s Valley, a choice they accept, even as Ellen and Will have already left. Bannon catches up to them, and the valley remains their home—at least for now—fitting the uneasy balance between survival and the sharpened will to claim a hard-won land.

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The Tall Stranger Themes and Keywords

Discover the central themes, ideas, and keywords that define the movie’s story, tone, and message. Analyze the film’s deeper meanings, genre influences, and recurring concepts.


strangerman with no nameland grabsingle motherleft for deadtall manattempted murdernude bathingpost american civil warhalf brother half brother relationshipfeudcattle ranchergravestonevalleyriflemurderhollow point bulletsabotagebathing in a riverinterrupted rapeformer prostituteboy with a broken armbunk housecounting bulletsdeath of brothermother son relationshipbare chested manhostagesettlerstruggle over a gunclassical westernranchhorseback ridingmccrea and mayoshowdownwagon trainwild westfrontier justiceold westfistfightgunfightshootoutviolenceambushhorsespurskissbeatinggang of outlawscowboy and outlaw
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