Interestedly, the town abandons Kane when he needs deputies to fight with him. Actually, the scene where Kane leaves town then comes back is not typical because good guys do not run away from bad guys. Back to the female roles, Amy Kane (Grace Kelly) Kane’s new bride and Helen Ramírez (Katy Jurado) Kane’s ex-girlfriend is another indicator of “adult western” because it is bringing in the sexual-social element that is not in a classic western. Additionally, character reveals her religious belief as a Quaker, which is not a typical or “anti-western” component plus she ends up saving Kane’s life in the end which I feel might be both “anti-western” and “adult western.” The film’s male hero Kane does not have the typical classic element of a male camaraderie because his friend and deputy Marshal Harvey Pell (Lloyd Bridges) leaves his side because he did not get promote to Marshal and the history between his present girlfriend, Helen Ramírez and Kane. Finally, a “anti-western” concept of Kane throwing his badge on the ground and leaving the town is not a typical western action from a male