IMDb RATING
5.8/10
624
YOUR RATING
Cavalry Captain Farraday attempts to prevent the delivery of Gatling Guns into the hands of hostile Indians.Cavalry Captain Farraday attempts to prevent the delivery of Gatling Guns into the hands of hostile Indians.Cavalry Captain Farraday attempts to prevent the delivery of Gatling Guns into the hands of hostile Indians.
Robert Adler
- Raider
- (uncredited)
Carl Andre
- Raider
- (uncredited)
Forest Burns
- Union Soldier
- (uncredited)
Harry Carter
- Union Lookout
- (uncredited)
Gene Coogan
- Union Soldier
- (uncredited)
Jack Curtis
- Bartender
- (uncredited)
Russell Custer
- Townsman
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaJean Peters was tested for a role.
- GoofsThe clothing of the characters is rarely period correct. Men wear full front button shirts which were not invented (nor popularized) until the 1920s. belt loops are on pants are seen and they were not used until the early 20th century. A woman is shown riding on a wagon without a bonnet to cover her face from the sun, nor her hair from the trail dust. And many of the hats worn are clearly made of materials (felt for example) that was not used during the time period in which the film was set.
- ConnectionsFeatures Buffalo Bill (1944)
Featured review
It's a typical 50's Technicolor Western trotting out all the usual ingredients with the usual vim – no-nonsense people and plot was the motto.
Two Rebs steal the being-developed Gatling Gun from the Feds in an ingenious segment, eventually toting it further south but ending up stuck in a small town. This town gets quickly filled to the brim with Federal soldiers still on the hunt for their gun. Van Johnson (Reb) and Joanne Dru (Fed) fall for each other of course although of course they don't realise it until the climax. What interested me was the implication that the gun could be used by civilised whites against each other in a civilised slaughter but that selling it to the savage Reds was beyond the Pale. Both Feds and Rebs are eventually united to prevent the Reds using it during the noisy 5 minute siege. And of course the implication was only the Reds were low enough to actually use the horrible weapon the Feds had had the brains to design – at the time of production America had the same idea about the Russian Reds and the atom bomb.
It has a bit of everything Western in: romance and fights, trains and horses, shootings and slapstick comedy. It's fun, I loved it.
Two Rebs steal the being-developed Gatling Gun from the Feds in an ingenious segment, eventually toting it further south but ending up stuck in a small town. This town gets quickly filled to the brim with Federal soldiers still on the hunt for their gun. Van Johnson (Reb) and Joanne Dru (Fed) fall for each other of course although of course they don't realise it until the climax. What interested me was the implication that the gun could be used by civilised whites against each other in a civilised slaughter but that selling it to the savage Reds was beyond the Pale. Both Feds and Rebs are eventually united to prevent the Reds using it during the noisy 5 minute siege. And of course the implication was only the Reds were low enough to actually use the horrible weapon the Feds had had the brains to design – at the time of production America had the same idea about the Russian Reds and the atom bomb.
It has a bit of everything Western in: romance and fights, trains and horses, shootings and slapstick comedy. It's fun, I loved it.
- Spondonman
- Jul 15, 2012
- Permalink
Details
- Runtime1 hour 26 minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was The Siege at Red River (1954) officially released in India in English?
Answer