Antes de la Guerra de Secesión, los esfuerzos del teniente Jed Sayre por conciliar la caballería y los navajos se ven socavados por su comandante racista y los simpatizantes de la Confederac... Leer todoAntes de la Guerra de Secesión, los esfuerzos del teniente Jed Sayre por conciliar la caballería y los navajos se ven socavados por su comandante racista y los simpatizantes de la Confederación.Antes de la Guerra de Secesión, los esfuerzos del teniente Jed Sayre por conciliar la caballería y los navajos se ven socavados por su comandante racista y los simpatizantes de la Confederación.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Chalmers
- (as Palmer Lee)
- Ammunition Sentry
- (sin acreditar)
- Poker Player
- (sin acreditar)
- Danforth
- (sin acreditar)
- Indian
- (sin acreditar)
- Tom Kehler
- (sin acreditar)
Reseñas destacadas
Thankfully, Audie Murphy saves the film with yet another spirited performance: while kissing Evans, he hears a snake (sounded like a rattlesnake but turned out to be some black reptile that looked suspiciously rubbery), kills it with with a handbag (!), out of which drops the McGuffin letter given by the fort commander. Murphy then has an inkling that that letter might carry dangerous tidings but he does not hesitate to risk court martial by opening and reading it, thereby confirming his worst suspicions.
At that point Murphy's resourcefulness emerges as he goes into the fort's arms depot tunnel, attaches fuses to dynamite and proceeds to blow the occupying Indians to bits - he really puts his shoulder to the wheel and thinks faster than anyone else!
Once the dust settled on the happy ending, I wondered whether I'll remember this film for any length of time (doubt it). 6/10.
This film would be an otherwise routine "Indians unjustly forced to go on the warpath by scheming white men" story, had it not been for the Confederate conspiracy angle. Audie Murphy is well... Audie Murphy. If you like Audie Murphy (I do) you will like him here. If you don"t there is no reason why you should like him here. Robert Stirling and Joan Evans are unconvincing as Southerners. Their Southern accents vary through out the film. Film buffs will enjoy seeing many familiar faces in the cast (Bob Steele, Greg Palmer, Russell Johnson, Dennis Weaver and Ray Collins.)
It's a pretty good Audie Murphy vehicle directed by Grederick de Cordova, who would spend decades producing THE TONIGHT SHOW. Joan Evans is Sterlings Unionist wife, and there a nice small role for Bob Steele, Look quick for Denver Pyle as a Confederate spy for that double BONANZA feeling.
The Breach Between The North And South Was Rapidly Widening. A Grim Spectre Of Civil War Hovered Over The Land. It Was A Time of Crisis. . .A Time For Choosing Sides.
Story essentially involves Jed Sayre (Murphy), a friend to the local Navajo Indians, relinquishing his command of Fort Union to Captain Lee Whitlock (Sterling), who after arriving with his sister Marcy (Evans), demands changes to how the Fort is run and expects Jed to end his friendship with the Navajo. When a prospector is discovered murdered it is presumed the Navajo are the guilty party, so setting in wheels in motion for Jed to try and quell the impending war with the Indians and thus having to fight his friend Menguito (Weaver) In the mixer is the impending Civil War, with deserters, traitors and political shenanigans at HQ also taking a hand in proceedings. While Jed and Marcy dance around the inevitable with their love/hate relationship.
In spite of dangling some interesting narrative threads, Column South sadly doesn't rise above being a routine Cavalry Vs Indians Western. But it's never dull and Murphy fans get the usual committed performance. What is of most interest here is the location for the shoot, shot in Apple Valley, California, it's an appealing Oater location with its surrounding hills and craggy rocks that are formed down in the valley. To my knowledge, Apple Valley was only used in one other Western film, Richard Carlson's Four Guns to the Border in 1954, which is a shame because as I say, it's both a looker and carries a harsh edge that some of the great Western movie photographers really could have done great work with.
As it is, Column South is better than average, and certainly an easy film to while away the time with. But the running time doesn't allow the interesting factors in the story to get expanded, thus leaving the film with unfulfilled potential. 6/10
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesDennis Weaver (Menguito) also portrayed an Indian in Asalto al fuerte Clark (1953).
- PifiasIn the cavalry train that leaves Fort Union for Fort Stanton there is a wagon transporting Marcy Whitlock that is marked with the letters US MD and a red cross. The red cross symbol was created in Geneva in 1863 and not in use with the US forces in 1861.
- Citas
Brig. Gen. B.N. Stone: I was told you were a man of intense loyalty... deeply devoted to the cause.
Capt. Lee Whitlock: The cause? Causes may start wars, but they don't win them!
- Créditos adicionalesOpening credits prologue: The breach between the north and south was rapidly widening. A grim spectre of civil war hovered over the land. It was a time of crisis... A time for choosing sides.
Selecciones populares
- How long is Column South?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
- 1.100.000 US$
- Duración1 hora 24 minutos
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1