Rafe Covington
Tom Selleck
Rafe Covington

“A hero is measured by the enemies he makes.”
Rafe Covington is as good as his word, and he's determined to keep his promise to a dying man that he'll look after the man's widow and Wyoming ranch. But the widow doubts the integrity of drifter Covington. And an unscrupulous land grabber and his gunmen are sizing up the ranch the way a spider eyes a fly.
Trailer - Crossfire Trail
Rafe Covington
Tom Selleck
Rafe Covington
Anne Rodney
Virginia Madsen
Anne Rodney
Rock Mullaney
David O'Hara
Rock Mullaney
J.T. Langston
Christian Kane
J.T. Langston
Gene Thompson
Ken Pogue
Gene Thompson
Mike Taggart
Patrick Kilpatrick
Mike Taggart
Dewey
William Sanderson
Dewey
Taggart Gang
Daniel Parker
Taggart Gang
Snake Corville
Marshall R. Teague
Snake Corville
Beau Dorn
Brad Johnson
Beau Dorn
Bruce Barkow
Mark Harmon
Bruce Barkow
Joe Gill
Wilford Brimley
Joe Gill
Solid traditional Western with Tom Selleck, Virginia Madsen and Mark Harmon RELEASED TO TV IN 2001 and directed by Simon Wincer, "Crossfire Trail" is a Western starring Tom Selleck as a laconic Westerner named Rafe Covington who travels to Wyoming to honor his promise to a dying friend: Look after the man’s wife (Virginia Madsen) and ranch after he’s gone. The problem is, the charlatan mogul of the nearby town wants them too (Mark Harmon). While this was a TNT production, it’s on par with the average traditional Western/theatrical release, e.g. “The War Wagon” (1967) or “Open Range” (2003), and is more satisfying than most goofy spaghetti Westerns. Voluptuous Madsen is formidable in the female department while cutie Kyla (Anderson) Wise works well in the periphery as a barmaid. Moreover, likable Selleck towers in the role of the noble protagonist, who attracts an equally noble group of sidekicks (Wilford Brimley, Christian Kane and David O'Hara). The story surprisingly loses steam in the last act with a classic shootout-in-town between the heroes and villains. Don’t get me wrong, the fight is muscular and competently executed, it’s just a little lackluster somehow and gives away the flick’s TV origins. Nevertheless, this is a worthwhile modern Western with Harmon superlative as the swindling antagonist. THE MOVIE RUNS 1 hour 32 minutes and was shot at CL Ranch, Calgary, Alberta. WRITERS: Charles Robert Carner (script) and Louis L'Amour (book). GRADE: B
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