IMDb-BEWERTUNG
5,4/10
525
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuIn 1897 Arizona, an ex-marshal is sent to the territorial prison where many of his enemies, among guards and inmates alike, are eager for a chance at payback.In 1897 Arizona, an ex-marshal is sent to the territorial prison where many of his enemies, among guards and inmates alike, are eager for a chance at payback.In 1897 Arizona, an ex-marshal is sent to the territorial prison where many of his enemies, among guards and inmates alike, are eager for a chance at payback.
William 'Bill' Phillips
- Red
- (as William Phillips)
Eric Alden
- Tim
- (Nicht genannt)
Murray Alper
- Driver-Guard
- (Nicht genannt)
Larry J. Blake
- Hysterical Prisoner
- (Nicht genannt)
Stanley Blystone
- Bit Role
- (Nicht genannt)
Rudy Bowman
- Prisoner
- (Nicht genannt)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
An interesting and moving Western with a suspenseful premise , un ex-lawman is imprisoned at a jail surrounded and harassed by enemies thirsty for vengeance. Containing emotion, thrills , shootouts, fights and intrigue. In 1897 Arizona, an ex-marshal called Billy Reynolds (Dale Robertson) is sent to the territorial prison where many of his enemies, among wardens and inmates alike, are eager for a chance at payback and merciless revenge. Serving time in an Arizona prison, he's especially beset by a jailed killer seeking vengeance for his own incarceration. Complicating matters further is the incarceration of Gorman's girlfriend Abby (Virginia Mayo) who helps Gorman (Stephen McNally) plan a break-out while at the same time is unsuccessful hiding her feelings for Reynolds. Very savage thrill...every scorching scene...real as flesh! In 3-D, 500 desperate men caged-up with one woman!
A prison western with thriller, suspense, noisy action, violence and spectacular final scenes. This grim Western has a pretty extraordinary main and support cast, but no more remarkable that the plot and script, both of which are hard to swallow, especially when captured bandit queen Virginia Mayo is assigned to an all-male prison. However, the actual depiction of life in jail seems depressingly accurate, apart from Virginia Mayo's presence. Starring Dale Robertson gives a passable acting as ex-marshal Reynolds, sent to state prison for killing two men in self defense, and he learns that killer Jessie Gorman, brother of the two men Billy shot, is in the same prison and vows vendetta. Along with three main protagonists: the beauty Virginia Mayo, the tough Dale Robertson and baddie Stephen McNally, in Devil's Canyon stands out a magnificent support cast with plenty of familiar faces, most of them from Western genre, such as: Arthur Hunnicutt, Robert Keith, Jay C. Flippen, George J. Lewis, Whit Bissell, Morris Ankrum, James Bell, Earl Holliman, Irving Bacon, among others.
Cameraman Nicholas Musuraka's sombre lighting keeps Technicolor under control, though a better remastering being really necessary. Nicholas Musuraka is considered to be one of the best cameramen of the Film Noir genre. Well photographed by Musuraka (Cat People , I Walked with a Zombie) who along with John Seitz and John Alton are deemed to be the best photographers of the fabulous Noir Movies shot in the Forties and Fifties. The motion picture was uneven and professionally directed by Alfred L. Welker. This film was made from his last years, in fact Alfred L. Welker was working from the 30 in the business . He realized a catalogue of routine assignments broken by highlights including : ¨The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes¨ 1935 and ¨He walked by night¨ 1949 the prototype serial-killer film noir , and a string of Western oaters . Alfred Werker directed all kinds of genres : Drama , Film Noir , Adventures , sagebrush Westerns , such as : The Last Posse , Devil's canyon , Repeat Performance , Pirates of Monterrey , Whispering Ghosts , The Mad Martindales , Moon Over Her Shoulder , My Pal Wolf , Rebel in city , At Gunpoint , The Young Don't Cry , Canyon Crossroads and Sealed Cargo . His best film was ¨He walked by night¨ (1948), although this noir thriller is credited to Alfred Werker , a lot of it was shot, uncredited, by Anthony Mann, who had already made some top-notch thrillers in low budget. Rating: 5.5/10 . A good western but not too much . Worthwhile seeing .
A prison western with thriller, suspense, noisy action, violence and spectacular final scenes. This grim Western has a pretty extraordinary main and support cast, but no more remarkable that the plot and script, both of which are hard to swallow, especially when captured bandit queen Virginia Mayo is assigned to an all-male prison. However, the actual depiction of life in jail seems depressingly accurate, apart from Virginia Mayo's presence. Starring Dale Robertson gives a passable acting as ex-marshal Reynolds, sent to state prison for killing two men in self defense, and he learns that killer Jessie Gorman, brother of the two men Billy shot, is in the same prison and vows vendetta. Along with three main protagonists: the beauty Virginia Mayo, the tough Dale Robertson and baddie Stephen McNally, in Devil's Canyon stands out a magnificent support cast with plenty of familiar faces, most of them from Western genre, such as: Arthur Hunnicutt, Robert Keith, Jay C. Flippen, George J. Lewis, Whit Bissell, Morris Ankrum, James Bell, Earl Holliman, Irving Bacon, among others.
Cameraman Nicholas Musuraka's sombre lighting keeps Technicolor under control, though a better remastering being really necessary. Nicholas Musuraka is considered to be one of the best cameramen of the Film Noir genre. Well photographed by Musuraka (Cat People , I Walked with a Zombie) who along with John Seitz and John Alton are deemed to be the best photographers of the fabulous Noir Movies shot in the Forties and Fifties. The motion picture was uneven and professionally directed by Alfred L. Welker. This film was made from his last years, in fact Alfred L. Welker was working from the 30 in the business . He realized a catalogue of routine assignments broken by highlights including : ¨The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes¨ 1935 and ¨He walked by night¨ 1949 the prototype serial-killer film noir , and a string of Western oaters . Alfred Werker directed all kinds of genres : Drama , Film Noir , Adventures , sagebrush Westerns , such as : The Last Posse , Devil's canyon , Repeat Performance , Pirates of Monterrey , Whispering Ghosts , The Mad Martindales , Moon Over Her Shoulder , My Pal Wolf , Rebel in city , At Gunpoint , The Young Don't Cry , Canyon Crossroads and Sealed Cargo . His best film was ¨He walked by night¨ (1948), although this noir thriller is credited to Alfred Werker , a lot of it was shot, uncredited, by Anthony Mann, who had already made some top-notch thrillers in low budget. Rating: 5.5/10 . A good western but not too much . Worthwhile seeing .
I taped Devil's Canyon when TCM screened it in November 2009 b/c another western with a historical theme (Great Day in the Morning)was next and I had plenty of tape (I'm still an analogue guy). Reasons for giving it a chance included Dale Robertson in his prime, Steve McInally who was a dependable western heavy, plus Virginia Mayo's OK, but esp. b/c RKO in its decline often made uniquely flawed but curious products.
What's strange about Devil's Canyon (besides the absence of a canyon) is the prison set, which appears only partially, but the walls appear to be enormous hewn stones that cast off strange pastel glows that change with the time of day. As a complement to these eerie atmospherics, the script and scenario range from casually crude to bluntly stupid. As a friend once said of a similar film, "It's just like a porn flick except everybody keeps their clothes on."
The film's best passage--the attempted prison break--takes advantage of the set. The escapees anticipate which doors the guards will open and ambush their entrances, eventually controlling the entire prison, which sets up Robertson's gatling gun throwdown.
Overall, the direction and editing of Devil's Canyon overall are unredeemable, but if you're not asking for much in those regards, the film's visuals have the quality of a meaningless dream.
What's strange about Devil's Canyon (besides the absence of a canyon) is the prison set, which appears only partially, but the walls appear to be enormous hewn stones that cast off strange pastel glows that change with the time of day. As a complement to these eerie atmospherics, the script and scenario range from casually crude to bluntly stupid. As a friend once said of a similar film, "It's just like a porn flick except everybody keeps their clothes on."
The film's best passage--the attempted prison break--takes advantage of the set. The escapees anticipate which doors the guards will open and ambush their entrances, eventually controlling the entire prison, which sets up Robertson's gatling gun throwdown.
Overall, the direction and editing of Devil's Canyon overall are unredeemable, but if you're not asking for much in those regards, the film's visuals have the quality of a meaningless dream.
DALE ROBERTSON is a marshal unjustly prisoned in an Arizona jailhouse who hinders and then helps a prison break plan concocted by VIRGINIA MAYO. This has the look of a low-budget movie that was put together hastily with a second-rate script and designed as a programmer to fill out a double bill.
VIRGINIA MAYO looks absolutely beautiful but her hairdress and costuming is strictly from the 1950s--and so is her overall demeanor as a tough gal who thinks she's in love with the brutish STEPHEN McNALLY.
Among the supporting cast, Whit Bissell, Arthur Hunnicutt, Robert Keith, Earl Holliman and Irving Bacon have all seen better days.
It affords only minimal entertainment with a standard prison break climax not too convincingly staged. Of the actors, only the handsome and stalwart DALE ROBERTSON looks as though he believes in his role, bringing strength and sincerity to his role as the marshal.
You can afford to miss this one.
VIRGINIA MAYO looks absolutely beautiful but her hairdress and costuming is strictly from the 1950s--and so is her overall demeanor as a tough gal who thinks she's in love with the brutish STEPHEN McNALLY.
Among the supporting cast, Whit Bissell, Arthur Hunnicutt, Robert Keith, Earl Holliman and Irving Bacon have all seen better days.
It affords only minimal entertainment with a standard prison break climax not too convincingly staged. Of the actors, only the handsome and stalwart DALE ROBERTSON looks as though he believes in his role, bringing strength and sincerity to his role as the marshal.
You can afford to miss this one.
Film noir, prison break drama or western? It doesn't seem to know and you'll give up caring to figure it out about a third of the way in. This is a lacklustre B movie in any genre. Starts out a western shoot em up then takes on a Cagney in the big house edge. A good scene at the end with a gatling gun though, if you don't mind fighting to stay awake to get that far. Notable if spotting Earl Holliman in early bit parts is one of your favorite past-times, and Virginia Mayo is watchable if you like your western dames talking tough as nails and looking like they stepped out of a 50's LIFE ad for Lee Jeans. Otherwise, skipping this would probably be more to your liking.
And I agree with the other reviewer that the title refers to Ms. Mayo's *mm-hmm*. If you can find an actual canyon anywhere in this picture you paid closer attention than I did.
And I agree with the other reviewer that the title refers to Ms. Mayo's *mm-hmm*. If you can find an actual canyon anywhere in this picture you paid closer attention than I did.
This routine oater sees eye-catching Virginia Mayo aiding a gang of outlaws in a small desert town by helping to arrange a massive jailbreak. It's a strictly by-the-numbers affair, featuring characters segregated into either the good or bad, and a particular cheapness to the sets. RKO Pictures were well known for churning out low budget programmer after low budget programmer and DEVIL'S CANYON is a good example of their 'shoot fast for a quick buck' mentality.
The movie features a number of notable character actors from the era, including Whit Bissell, Morris Ankrum and Irving Bacon, but only Dale Robertson, as the upstanding hero, is given much of a character, while Mayo seems to be relegated to the role of clothes horse for much of the running time.
Things do pick up with a couple of decent shoot-outs and an elaborate, large-scale climax which doesn't disappointment, but by the looks of it the gimmicky 3D fails to make much, if any, of an impact other than in the opening titles.
The movie features a number of notable character actors from the era, including Whit Bissell, Morris Ankrum and Irving Bacon, but only Dale Robertson, as the upstanding hero, is given much of a character, while Mayo seems to be relegated to the role of clothes horse for much of the running time.
Things do pick up with a couple of decent shoot-outs and an elaborate, large-scale climax which doesn't disappointment, but by the looks of it the gimmicky 3D fails to make much, if any, of an impact other than in the opening titles.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThe film reproduces the actual prison quite well. Yuma Territorial Prison in Yuma AZ opened on July 1, 1876, and shut down on September 15, 1909, and housed over 3,000 men and over two dozen women for crimes ranging from murder to polygamy. The site is now operated as a historical museum by Arizona State Parks as Yuma Territorial Prison State Historic Park.
- PatzerEarlier in the movie one of the prisoners attempts to escape by climbing a wall, but he is gunned down by a prison guard using a Gatling gun. The Gatling gun fires numerous rounds at or around the prisoner and the wall he is climbing, yet absolutely no bullet holes or impact splinters are seen. Later in the film, the same Gatling gun is fired numerous times at a wall: this time, the expected bullet holes and impact fragments are clearly evident.
- Zitate
Virgil Gates: You know, that's pretty good stew as stew goes around here. Of course, I wish old Cookie would stay out of it with his feet when he's mixin' it up.
- Crazy CreditsOpening credits: Arizona Territory in 1897 was the last of the old frontier. The story we are about to tell is well known to historians. Names have been changed but the lust and brutality, the love and sacrifice of the people involved remain unchanged. The woman outlaw and her lovers belong now to folklore - - in 1897 they lived.
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- Infierno en el desierto
- Drehorte
- Produktionsfirma
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 1.000.000 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 25 Minuten
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.37 : 1
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