A Confederate officer and his men journey to Mexico to buy guns to continue the war effort. A Union officer determines to stop them.A Confederate officer and his men journey to Mexico to buy guns to continue the war effort. A Union officer determines to stop them.A Confederate officer and his men journey to Mexico to buy guns to continue the war effort. A Union officer determines to stop them.
Pedro Armendáriz
- Gen. Calleja
- (as Pedro Armendariz)
Renate Hoy
- Annina Strasser
- (as Erika Nordin)
George D. Wallace
- Fletcher
- (as George Wallace)
Emile Avery
- Mexican Soldier
- (uncredited)
Ray Beltram
- Barfly
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
Director George Sherman's output has not impressed me, but at least in RIVER BORDER he has a strong cast in good form, notably Joel McCrea (who does not play the squeaky clean guy this time), Yvonne de Carlo at her most stunningly beautiful, Pedro Armendariz, Al Bedoya, Ivan Triesault.
Cinematography and editing by Irving Glassberg and Frank Gross, respectively, deserve praise (though the fisticuffs seem a little bit contrived and McCrea allows himself to be punched more than recommended for one's good health).
RIVER BORDER refers to a kind of hole in the wall on the border with Mexico, with renegade General Calleja opposing Juarez and harboring criminals fleeing the law from Mexican and US territory. And into the action rides confederate Major Clete Mattson (McCrea) on the lam, planning to move gold stolen from the Union. He rides his horse as he comes under fire in a river, then retrieves a horse from quick sand in the movie's best sequence, and is savvy enough to deflect Calleja's venomous attacks.
The screenplay by Bill Sackheim has felicitous moments and flaws but generally holds your attention, helped by the fact that the film runs a short 80 minutes. 7/10.
Cinematography and editing by Irving Glassberg and Frank Gross, respectively, deserve praise (though the fisticuffs seem a little bit contrived and McCrea allows himself to be punched more than recommended for one's good health).
RIVER BORDER refers to a kind of hole in the wall on the border with Mexico, with renegade General Calleja opposing Juarez and harboring criminals fleeing the law from Mexican and US territory. And into the action rides confederate Major Clete Mattson (McCrea) on the lam, planning to move gold stolen from the Union. He rides his horse as he comes under fire in a river, then retrieves a horse from quick sand in the movie's best sequence, and is savvy enough to deflect Calleja's venomous attacks.
The screenplay by Bill Sackheim has felicitous moments and flaws but generally holds your attention, helped by the fact that the film runs a short 80 minutes. 7/10.
This isn't a particularly good or bad Western and the only reason I watched it is because Joel McCrea was a pretty good actor. Aside from his excellent as always performance, the film doesn't have a whole lot to distinguish it one way or the other. It's a definite time-passer, though Yvonne de Carlo and Pedro Armendariz do provide some decent supporting chemistry in this film about stolen Union gold during the US and Mexican Civil wars.
Armendariz plays a rogue Mexican general who sets up his own government along the US and Mexican border. Here is where wanted men and those who are seeking to do illegal stuff congregate. McCrea shows to buy arms for the Confederacy from the slick general and most of the movie concerns how McCrea can both keep the gold hidden AND eventually exchange it for weapons without getting killed or robbed. The film is competently made and interesting, but that's all.
Armendariz plays a rogue Mexican general who sets up his own government along the US and Mexican border. Here is where wanted men and those who are seeking to do illegal stuff congregate. McCrea shows to buy arms for the Confederacy from the slick general and most of the movie concerns how McCrea can both keep the gold hidden AND eventually exchange it for weapons without getting killed or robbed. The film is competently made and interesting, but that's all.
this was yet another solid performance by joel mccrea. yvonne de carlo also adds strength to this feature. the film portrays a turbulent time in our history and the the film portrays just how dedicated some membersof the confederacy were in prolonging the war.
Border River at it's time was one of a dwindling band of westerns where you could have a Confederate hero as the lead. Joel McCrea plays a man who was a major on Robert E. Lee's staff. He's pulled off one very big heist at the Denver Mint and he's got 2 million in gold bullion. But what to do with it? Actually the miracle is how he got it from Colorado to Texas, the stuff is pretty bulky.
McCrea crosses the Rio Grande to a place called Zona Libre where neither the writ of Emperor Maximilian nor that of Benito Juarez runs. Instead the guy in charge is Pedro Armendariz who's a tin-pot tyrant and his right hand man is Alfonso Bedoya who revs up his Gold Hat character from The Treasure Of The Sierra Madre. There's also saloon entertainer Yvonne DeCarlo who's the general's personal squeeze, but she takes a fancy to McCrea and later proves invaluable to him.
McCrea's interest is to buy supplies for the Confederate army with the stolen gold. But there's a real lack of trustworthy people around from Armendariz on down. There's a whole lot of intrigue going on in the Zona Libre. There's also the looming shadow of Juarez who'd really like to put Armendariz and remove a real problem from his rear.
Border River is a competently made western with the truest cowboy hero around Joel McCrea in the lead. He and DeCarlo work well together. But the ones to watch are Armendariz and Bedoya trying to outdo each other in evil. Bedoya looks like he's having a great old time out-acting the cast of about ten different films.
McCrea crosses the Rio Grande to a place called Zona Libre where neither the writ of Emperor Maximilian nor that of Benito Juarez runs. Instead the guy in charge is Pedro Armendariz who's a tin-pot tyrant and his right hand man is Alfonso Bedoya who revs up his Gold Hat character from The Treasure Of The Sierra Madre. There's also saloon entertainer Yvonne DeCarlo who's the general's personal squeeze, but she takes a fancy to McCrea and later proves invaluable to him.
McCrea's interest is to buy supplies for the Confederate army with the stolen gold. But there's a real lack of trustworthy people around from Armendariz on down. There's a whole lot of intrigue going on in the Zona Libre. There's also the looming shadow of Juarez who'd really like to put Armendariz and remove a real problem from his rear.
Border River is a competently made western with the truest cowboy hero around Joel McCrea in the lead. He and DeCarlo work well together. But the ones to watch are Armendariz and Bedoya trying to outdo each other in evil. Bedoya looks like he's having a great old time out-acting the cast of about ten different films.
In the last days of the Civil War, Confederate officer Joel McCrea and associates rob a Union storehouse of $2,000,000. They head down to a small patch of Mexican territory controlled by renegade general Pedro Armendariz and start negotiating to turn that into arms for the Confederacy. McCrea gets various offers -- and attempted beatings -- from people who think the gold and a ticket to Europe are better to have, although Armendariz's mistress, Yvonne De Carlo is warmly friendly.
This seems to have been movie shot in three-strip Technicolor, and under cinematographer Irving Glassberg, it offers the rich blacks that process excelled in. Director George Sherman, an expert in "Shaky A" westerns, directs the script well enough, and themain cast is excellent. With Armendariz weaselly under his bravado, De Carlo sad and cynical, and McCrea, as aways, bluff and straightforward. A very pleasant movie.
This seems to have been movie shot in three-strip Technicolor, and under cinematographer Irving Glassberg, it offers the rich blacks that process excelled in. Director George Sherman, an expert in "Shaky A" westerns, directs the script well enough, and themain cast is excellent. With Armendariz weaselly under his bravado, De Carlo sad and cynical, and McCrea, as aways, bluff and straightforward. A very pleasant movie.
Did you know
- TriviaAccording to Fred H. Detmers, Technicolor's domestic sales manager, in the June-July 1968 issue of "Films in Review," this was the last film shot in the Three-Strip Technicolor process; however, according to a number of other reliable sources, Foxfire (1955) holds that distinction.
- Quotes
General Eduardo Calleja: We will give these men a fair trial, then we will shoot them in the morning.
- How long is Border River?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 20m(80 min)
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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