An army officer tries to help the Indians placed in his charge, but finds himself interfering with their way of life.An army officer tries to help the Indians placed in his charge, but finds himself interfering with their way of life.An army officer tries to help the Indians placed in his charge, but finds himself interfering with their way of life.
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Standard B with Good Camera-work
Will anyone be offended if I say that Edward Platt was not as good a screen actor as Henry Fonda, nor John Ericson as interesting as John Wayne? I mention these startling opinions because the first half of this movie is a remake of FORT APACHE.
I'll go further with these radical insights and assert that Paul Landres was not as good a director as John Ford. While most of the actors are at least adequate, there are some wonky lines offered that didn't sound very convincing.
After the borrowed beginning, this settles down into a standard B western in which Ericson winds up fighting H.M. Wynant, the Indian chief who leads his warriors into battle by standing on a rock and raising his arms. It's an attempt to save the B Western by some serious location shooting in Deschutes National Forest in Oregon, and the camera-work of Ellis Carter is up to the job; he chooses lighting that suggests the forests of the Hudson Valley School of painting, rather than the Frederick Remington lighting that Ford lighted for his color excursion to the Southwest. However, the rest of it is standard fare.
I'll go further with these radical insights and assert that Paul Landres was not as good a director as John Ford. While most of the actors are at least adequate, there are some wonky lines offered that didn't sound very convincing.
After the borrowed beginning, this settles down into a standard B western in which Ericson winds up fighting H.M. Wynant, the Indian chief who leads his warriors into battle by standing on a rock and raising his arms. It's an attempt to save the B Western by some serious location shooting in Deschutes National Forest in Oregon, and the camera-work of Ellis Carter is up to the job; he chooses lighting that suggests the forests of the Hudson Valley School of painting, rather than the Frederick Remington lighting that Ford lighted for his color excursion to the Southwest. However, the rest of it is standard fare.
Acceptable, above-average B Western
Googling will lead to at least two reasonable offerings of this film, though the one that I settled on had foreign subtitles and a strident musical score.
Even at the start of the film, the fort didn't appear to have a very large garrison, which was significantly depleted after a couple of unwise deployments of troops. But it did have three very attractive women, including a Native American played unconvincingly by white actress Toni Gerry. I recognised only a couple of the cast.
Towards the end there was a surprise death, an unusual strategy by the soldiers and a brutal man-to-man fight.
Even at the start of the film, the fort didn't appear to have a very large garrison, which was significantly depleted after a couple of unwise deployments of troops. But it did have three very attractive women, including a Native American played unconvincingly by white actress Toni Gerry. I recognised only a couple of the cast.
Towards the end there was a surprise death, an unusual strategy by the soldiers and a brutal man-to-man fight.
Really strange Cavalry horse opera
I sincerely doubt any cavalry fort in the nineteenth century would have girlfriends or wives of the soldiers living there on the base. Most likely they would live in the nearest town or city, even in a different state if the territory wasn't settled. Easy chances were handed out to kill the renegade warrior Black Eagle, but refused to stretch out the running time. Lola Albright is almost unrecognizable in a heavy dress and makeup of the time period the film is set.
A slightly above average Calvary vs Indian Western.
The plot is tired and the characters are never fully developed, but there is enough action to keep you interested. The original score by Dunlap is uplifting, and I have to think that the novel this one is based on(By Sheriffs)is a better read than movie. The brutal hand to hand combat between hero and Indian Chief at the picture's climax is a surprise. The rest is pretty much routine.
One frontier vixen
Nice outdoor location cinematography is the best feature of Oregon Passage, a
western shot on location, well, Oregon. John Ericson stars in this film and he's
got himself an impossible mission. He wants to bring in Shoshoni chief Black
Eagle alive.
Turns out to be an impossible task after martinet eastern Major Edward Platt takes command. The fact that his new bride Lola Albright has some history with Ericson doesn't help matters.
Albright is the real star here, one frontier vixen. Even the Shoshonis here say that fair haired women are to be avoided. This one sure should.
Battle scenes are nicely staged and the plot is most adult.
Turns out to be an impossible task after martinet eastern Major Edward Platt takes command. The fact that his new bride Lola Albright has some history with Ericson doesn't help matters.
Albright is the real star here, one frontier vixen. Even the Shoshonis here say that fair haired women are to be avoided. This one sure should.
Battle scenes are nicely staged and the plot is most adult.
Did you know
- TriviaFilmed on location in Oregon.
- GoofsToni Gerry (Little Deer), portraying an Indian woman, is wearing lipstick and light-colored nail polish.
- Quotes
Sylvia Dane: When *can* I have a talk with you?
Lt. Niles Ord: Maybe when things quiet down.
Sylvia Dane: Quiet down? The place is a permanent morgue now. Aren't you taking army life just a bit too seriously?
Lt. Niles Ord: I'm a professional soldier, Sylvia.
Sylvia Dane: I like you better when you act like a professional lover.
- ConnectionsReferenced in M Squad: Shot in the Dark (1958)
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 20m(80 min)
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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