Un vaquero rescata a una mujer secuestrada por los apaches y la lleva a Papago Wells, donde encontrarán a un grupo de personas que también han sido víctimas de los ataques de los indios.Un vaquero rescata a una mujer secuestrada por los apaches y la lleva a Papago Wells, donde encontrarán a un grupo de personas que también han sido víctimas de los ataques de los indios.Un vaquero rescata a una mujer secuestrada por los apaches y la lleva a Papago Wells, donde encontrarán a un grupo de personas que también han sido víctimas de los ataques de los indios.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Lonnie Foreman
- (as Thomas Pittman)
- Sgt. Sheehan
- (as Francis DeSales)
- Lugo
- (as Frank deKova)
- Conley
- (as Reg Parton)
Reseñas destacadas
Calhoun gets good support from Bates as his scorned former lover, while Myron Healey has a reasonable role as an initially resilient Confederate, who succumbs to panic at the thought of never seeing his family again. Leo Gordon is imposing as the principal agitator among the group, spurred on by greed and selfish motivations to survive at any expense.
It's economical and typical of Columbia Pictures westerns at the time, with director Nazarro keeping the melodrama to a minimum and the tension palpable. Apache sympathisers might be offended, with the tribe depicted simply as marauding scalpers, while Craig's nubile wife-to-be would surely irk the feminists as she fusses over domestic duties trying to impress Pittman and clumsily convince him to take her as his wife and mother to his future progeny. But despite the chauvinism, I still found the movie a reasonably taut, formula western worthy of a 70 minute pause while channel surfing.
Saddle Tramp Logan Cates (Calhoun) takes control of an assorted group of civilians and cavalrymen when they are thrust together by fate and come under siege from marauding Apache Indians. With inner conflict threatening the group and the Apache attacking like ghosts of the desert, their chance of survival is slim. But why does Calhoun keep looking at the sky?
Canteen Bombs of the Apocalpyse.
Routine and of standard siege formula stock, Apache Territory is however brisk and enjoyable if willing to forgive the cliche's and stereotypes. Plot unfolds as a group dynamic cracking under the strain whilst the nasty old Indians attack at intervals and use psychological warfare in the process. Within the group there's a double dose of love interest, with one of them featuring Calhoun and Bates as old lovers now thrust together under trying circumstance. Into the mix are a coward, an aloof racist, a cavalry Sergeant struggling to control his group, a hero in waiting and a Prima Indian who hates the Apache and also has some gold in his possession. So with no food and the water running dry, it's shaping up to be a hopeless situation.
Gila monster up the trouser leg?
Clocking in at just over 70 minutes the film never outstays its welcome, and in spite of the standard characterisations on the page, the cast do well to keep things pleasingly watchable. Calhoun (Powder River/The Hired Gun) makes for a good rugged hero, leading off the film with some telling gusto, New Yorker DeKovo (Run of the Arrow/Arrowhead) once again doesn't embarrass himself in another Native American role, while Dehner (Apache/The Fastest Gun Alive) and Gordon (Hondo/7th Cavalry) show why they were much used character actors. Filmed in Eastman Color, the budget just about stretched to feature some views of Red Rock Canyon, but mostly the action is based on a sound stage set. 6/10
There is sad trivia attached to the film. Within 12 years of this film's release three of the principal cast members would be dead. Bates in 1969 and Craig in 1970 died at their own hands and young Tom Pittman was killed in a car accident just a couple of months after Apache Territory was released to theatres, he was 26 years old.
Obviously shot mainly on one set, which makes it resemble an episode of 'Star Trek', but also gives it a certain claustrophobic tension; it has two interesting and highly contrasting female characters, the handsome and seemingly capable Barbara Bates (whose last film this was), and fragile Carolyn Craig, both of them played by actresses who later committed suicide.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesHas the dubious distinction of three of its leading cast members dying prematurely: Tom Pittman died aged 26, Carolyn Craig at age 36, and Barbara Bates at age 43. Pittman was killed in a car crash, whilst Craig and Bates both committed suicide.
- PifiasWhen the trooper runs at the Apaches to throw the third canteen bomb, its fuse is not lit and the explosion occurs in front of him before he lets go of it. Apparently the script just called for him to be killed off somehow, because the other two just threw theirs from the same close distance, while he had to run right into the middle of the Indians to 'throw' his.
- Citas
Jennifer Fair: You're like a rock. Immovable. You're like a man whose barricaded himself from everyone. I never could get past that barricade, Logan. Never.
Logan Cates: A man can't help the way he is, Jen.
Selecciones populares
- How long is Apache Territory?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idioma
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Apache Territory
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- Empresas productoras
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
- Duración
- 1h 11min(71 min)
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.37 : 1