In the midst of a feud between two rancher families, a shrewd woman marries one of the ranchers and later tries to take his land through divorce and violent tactics involving a gang of outla... Read allIn the midst of a feud between two rancher families, a shrewd woman marries one of the ranchers and later tries to take his land through divorce and violent tactics involving a gang of outlaws.In the midst of a feud between two rancher families, a shrewd woman marries one of the ranchers and later tries to take his land through divorce and violent tactics involving a gang of outlaws.
- Jim Pozner
- (as Louis J. Heydt)
- Carl
- (uncredited)
- George
- (uncredited)
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
I don't know if this shouldn't be all from Marc's point of view. This is a boy scout in a pit of vipers. Ann needs to be accentuated as the devil woman. This movie is trying to push the old theme of the dutiful wife. It takes a great woman to support her man. It takes a devil woman to tear him down. It takes awhile to get there, but the last act really hits the nail on the head. I wish that they had more cattle, but 10k may be too many. I really like that almost everybody is out for themselves.
Overall the cast is commendable. One might wish for a lead male with more gravitas than Dennis Morgan, but he looks good and does what he can well enough, true also of the other men, but the standout is Steve Cochran, "the Elvis of Noir," who gets more screen time here than he did in his other movies worth watching. Like the real Elvis, Cochran can pout, curl his lip, swagger, make all the men want to chase him off and all the women forgive him anything, even wanton murder.
It's a surprisingly woman-centered film, and the two female leads--Patricia Neal and Dorothy Hart--rock the screen in a variety of ways. Neal's an unusually soulful actress even here as a villainess, and when at the peak of her foxy power she shows up dressed in black gaucho threads, you hate to see the scene end. Hart, whom I didn't remember, has screen presence even as a blonde Latina, she pronounces her Spanish dialogue convincingly, and her character shows surprising and convincing self-determination.
The scenario is remarkably complex even if not fully developed. For instance, the geography of town, ranch, river, and "lava" or grazing fields set up at least three competing power factions, though they're displayed more on a wall-map in the ranch-house than in the outdoor settings, which are standard western backlots and California foothills.
The only ridiculous turn in the plot occurs when the hero is shot in the back at short range, transported to the countryside, and obviously near death, whereupon Hart's senorita does surgery, after which he hero rises, after a few obligatory grimaces, resumes fighting with guns and fists. In less of a hurry, these complications could have led to a more interesting final showdown.
No hesitation in granting Raton Pass a 7 and only wish--with its wealth of materials--Raton Pass had spent a little more time, effort, and production costs on realizing the possibilities of an 8 or 9.
For the benefit of civic historical programs, I am trying to track down a copy of the movie. We are a small town trying to beat the doldrums that affect many small towns in America at this time. We are trying put together a film festival focused around "The Raton Pass" and the associated history of our area---the Santa Fe Trail. We have been through what seems to be all of the normal sources to find this movie. Can anyone help with a source?
Two families feuding over land either side of Raton Pass, New Mexico. Into their lives comes a beautiful seductress with manipulation and land dominance on her agenda...
Well well, what a treat. Something of a rare, little known or seen Oater, Raton Pass (AKA: Canyon Pass) really takes you by surprise. From the off we can see and hear this is a very nice production, with the twin greats of Steiner and Cline working their magic. Steiner's title music is Latino flavoured and then he introduces deft character motifs for the protagonists, while Cline's crisp black and white photography holds the eyes considerably.
For thirty minutes the picture simmers away like a standard "B" Western threatening to dull the senses with formulaic tedium, this is another reason why Steiner and Cline should be lauded as their work keeps you interested. But then the film completely turns, you notice that Cline's photography has suddenly shifted into film noir territory, and Neal has skillfully shifted from being the new loving wife on the block, to a complete femme fatale bitch! The plot dynamics now have a real edge, and as the smouldering Neal works her feminine whiles, this part of New Mexico territory boils away furiously until it inevitably explodes and spells doom and disappointment for some...
There's some crappy back projection work that undermines the quality elsewhere and the odd character is stereotypical of some Westerns of the period, but this has much to recommend. Marin (Johnny Angel/Nocturne/Colt.45/Sugarfoot) is fluid in his direction, while Neal and noir icon Cochran hold the screen as Max and Wilfred do their stuff. Currently licensed to TCM UK and available in HD format, I would urge any noir and Western fan in the UK to take the chance to see this rare picture the next time it shows. It doesn't deserve to stay rare. 7.5/10
Did you know
- TriviaLast movie Patricia Neal made under her contract with Warner Brothers.
- Quotes
Ann Challon: You could have kept him out of there.
Cy Van Cleave: Yeah, guess maybe I could've, if I'd tried.
Ann Challon: You swaggering stupid fool. If anything happens to him...
Cy Van Cleave: [slaps Ann across the face] Some kind of talk I just can't listen to. Not even from a harpy like you.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Along the Santa Fe Trail
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 24m(84 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1