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Il terrore delle Montagne Rocciose

Titolo originale: Siege at Red River
  • 1954
  • Approved
  • 1h 26min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
5,8/10
665
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Van Johnson and Joanne Dru in Il terrore delle Montagne Rocciose (1954)
Western classicoDrammaOccidentale

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaCavalry Captain Simmons attempts to prevent the delivery of Gatling Guns into the hands of hostile Indians.Cavalry Captain Simmons attempts to prevent the delivery of Gatling Guns into the hands of hostile Indians.Cavalry Captain Simmons attempts to prevent the delivery of Gatling Guns into the hands of hostile Indians.

  • Regia
    • Rudolph Maté
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Sydney Boehm
    • J. Robert Bren
    • Gladys Atwater
  • Star
    • Van Johnson
    • Joanne Dru
    • Richard Boone
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    5,8/10
    665
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Rudolph Maté
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Sydney Boehm
      • J. Robert Bren
      • Gladys Atwater
    • Star
      • Van Johnson
      • Joanne Dru
      • Richard Boone
    • 26Recensioni degli utenti
    • 8Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Foto8

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    Interpreti principali39

    Modifica
    Van Johnson
    Van Johnson
    • Capt. James S. Simmons (Jim Farraday)
    Joanne Dru
    Joanne Dru
    • Nora Curtis
    Richard Boone
    Richard Boone
    • Brett Manning
    Milburn Stone
    Milburn Stone
    • Sgt. Benjamin 'Benjy' Guderman
    Jeff Morrow
    Jeff Morrow
    • Frank Kelso
    Craig Hill
    Craig Hill
    • Lt. Braden
    Rico Alaniz
    Rico Alaniz
    • Chief Yellow Hawk
    Robert Burton
    Robert Burton
    • Sheriff
    Pilar Del Rey
    Pilar Del Rey
    • Lukoa
    Ferris Taylor
    Ferris Taylor
    • Anderson Smith
    John Cliff
    John Cliff
    • Sgt. Jenkins
    Robert Adler
    Robert Adler
    • Raider
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Carl Andre
    • Raider
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Forest Burns
    Forest Burns
    • Union Soldier
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Harry Carter
    Harry Carter
    • Union Lookout
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Gene Coogan
    Gene Coogan
    • Union Soldier
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Jack Curtis
    Jack Curtis
    • Bartender
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    Russell Custer
    • Townsman
    • (non citato nei titoli originali)
    • Regia
      • Rudolph Maté
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Sydney Boehm
      • J. Robert Bren
      • Gladys Atwater
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti26

    5,8665
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    7lorenellroy

    Enjoyable and rousing Western

    Jim Farady (Van Johnson)and his associate Benjy (Milburn Stone) appear to be hucksters ,travelling the West selling patent medicine (a muscle builder)but in reality they are spies for the Confederacy and are transporting a stolen Gatling Gun to the Confederate lines ,a journey that will take them through Indian Territory ,and the natives are not friendly. They attract the attention of a shrewd Pinkerton man Frank Kelso (Jeff Morrow)and are forced to smuggle the guns out concealed in a hospital wagon driven by the unsuspecting Nora Curtis (Joanne Dru)who is attracted ,somewhat against her will to Farady.they are betrayed by their ostensible escort ,Manning (Richard Boone)who has plans to sell the guns to the Indians for an attack on a nearby fort ,plans Farady sets out to foil.

    The movie is immaculately shot in Technicolor by Edward Cronjager and Rudolph Mate ensures the action moves along with vigour .The acting is good and the movie never flags ,even finding time for a unique drunk scene -the inebriate in question being Nora .

    The climax may appear familiar and if so this is unsurprising -the climactic battle is lifted from Buffalo Bill ,the Joel Macrae movie from an earlier decade ,and intercut with close up of the actors in this movie

    Its a solid action Western and enjoyable for lovers of the genre
    7jromanbaker

    An Unpretentious Western

    An unpretentious Western totally unlike ' The Unforgiven ' which I reviewed just before this film. This is the kind of Western that is there as simple entertainment for those who like the genre. It gives a picture of the West as it really never was and the audiences of the time ( early to middle 1950's ) loved its nonsense because it kept to its formula. This formula consisted of colourful scenery, villains and heroes, women with improbably good clothes and makeup, a few battle scenes, horses and Indians and a lot of delightful hokum. The epitome of this is Saloon Bar music with the same ' tune ' played in film after film; 2Oth Century Fox was the past master of this ridiculous fiction. The whole concept of this image of the West was there to lull its audience into lies about how conquered America was constructed to put its indigenous people into Reservations. I accept the lie of this image of how the West was won as simple and superficial enjoyment; a guilty pleasure that entertains. This is totally unlike the Western with a message and often a fake finger wagging liberalism. This liberalism was to ease a conscience; a collective conscience of guilt and I dislike it. As they say in Film Noir ' it was too late for tears '. This simple film is all about the Gatling Gun and how it must not end up in Native American hands. It has a ridiculous song which is endearing and has Van Johnson, Joanne Dru and Richard Boone. An ' A ' cast in a basically' B ' film, and they all act to form and just as the audience expected them to do. There is a stirring climax and the Gatling Gun ( a horrible form of human extermination ) and it is made to look like a naughty toy. The mindless child I still am thoroughly enjoyed it.
    7Spondonman

    Feds and Rebs agin the Reds

    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.
    6ma-cortes

    Nicely-photographed, well made and competently paced Western by veteran filmmaker Rudolph Maté

    This well unfolded tale is set at the end of the American Civil War, 1861 - 1865, it concerns the battle for one of the first Gatlin Machine Gun. As a confederate officer called Farraday, Van Johnson, posing as a Medicine Man along with his colleague, Milburn Stone , go throughout towns singing and delivering their supplies. They ride on a carriage captioning : Doc Sunderland, Muscle Builder, great scientific discovery. Meanwhile, the bad boy, Richard Boone, takes the Gatlin gun so that he can sell it to the violent Indians. Along the way captain Farraday falls in love for a beautiful nurse, Joanne Dru who formerly played a classic Western : Red River by Howard Hawks . The last and most desperate battle in the winning of the West!. And the two best soldiers in the line that day were the Giorgia captain and the Yankee spitfire!.

    Decent Western in B-style with plenty of intrigue for good measure, noisy action, thrills , Indian attacks and cavalry charges . A plain, simple and nice plot deals with an undercover captain named Farraday who tries to prevent a Gatlin machine gun passes into the hands of hostile Indians . Varied cast provide adequate interpretation. But the rousing musical score by Lionel Newman, Cryl Mockridge, as well as appropriate production design by Lyle Wheeler, George Patrick and colorful cinematography in brilliant Technicolor by Edward Cronjager are the real stars of the film . Main starring, Van Johnson and Joanne Dru, who replaced Jean Peters, are pretty well. And support cast is frankly good, such as : Jeff Morrow, Milburn Stone, Craig Hill, among others. Special mention for Richard Boone who steals the show, giving a terrific acting as a strong villian.

    This is an attractive western with action all the way produced by short-lived Panoramic Productions, being professionally directed by Rudolph Maté, though it has failures and some stock-shots. Maté, 1898-1964, was a good craftsman initially working in Europe, he even photographed the classic Passion of Joan of Arc by Karl Theodor Dreyer , as Nazi government rising, he then emigrated America where worked as a prestigious cameraman, and subsequently directed various films of all kinds of genres with penchant for thrillers, dramas, Adventure, Sci-Fi and westerns such as DOA, The dark past, Union Station, Branded, When worlds collide, The green glove, Second chance, The black shield of Falworth, The violent men, Three violent people, Deep six and For the first time. Rating : 6.5/10. Well worth watching.
    6Wuchakk

    Decent early 50's Western with Van Johnson and Richard Boone marred by dubious bits

    A Confederate captain (Johnson) goes undercover in the North to steal a Gatling gun with his sergeant (Milburn Stone), but a Pinkerton operative is suspicious (Jeff Morrow). As they take advantage of an unknowing Rebel-hating woman (Joanne Dru), they hook up with a mercenary (Boone) to help them get through Indian country.

    The era of 1953-1954 featured great Westerns like "Shane," "Destry," "Garden of Evil," "Johnny Guitar" and "Vera Cruz," as well as formidable ones like "Arrowhead," "Escape from Fort Bravo," "Gun Fury," "Hondo," "Pony Express," "Broken Lance" and "The Raid." I bring that up because "Siege at Red River" (1954) doesn't exactly place with these Westerns as it's flawed by amusing, yet generally unfitting humor and a too-busy giddy-up score, which is seriously quaint.

    This isn't helped by splicing in Indian-fighting footage at the climax from "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon" from five years earlier. Another problem is the disingenuous geography in the first half that's supposed to be areas near the Ohio River, but is obviously the Southwest (of course, this was more of a 'B' Western and it would simply cost too much to transplant the cast & crew to somewhere in the East for those particular scenes).

    Nevertheless, there's a lot to enjoy in this old Western. Van Johnson's non-cowboy mannerisms actual fit the role since Capt. James S. Simmons/Jim Farraday hails from Atlanta back East. Johnson had charisma to spare and Milburn Stone is entertaining as the sidekick. Meanwhile Boone was unsurpassable as the unlikable character with "toxic masculinity." Add to this winsome Dru, the beautiful scenery and the interesting Gatling gun subplot and you have an entertaining enough early 50's Western with some lame elements.

    It runs 1 hour, 25 minutes, with outside shooting done in east-central Utah at Professor Valley, Colorado River, Castle Valley and Dead Horse Point; as well as in Durango, Colorado, which is 158 miles southeast of there.

    GRADE: B-/C+

    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      Jean Peters was tested for a role.
    • Blooper
      Many of the firearms shown are not those that would be used (or even invented) during the Civil War. Winchester are shown and they wouldn't be invented until after the Civil War and would not be widely sold until the early 1870s. The soldiers and Indians are using carbine single shot rifles which are correct for the period.
    • Connessioni
      Features Buffalo Bill (1944)
    • Colonne sonore
      Tapioca
      (uncredited)

      Music by Lionel Newman

      Lyrics by Ken Darby

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    Dettagli

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    • Data di uscita
      • 1 maggio 1954 (Stati Uniti)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • The Siege at Red River
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Castle Valley, Moab, Utah, Stati Uniti
    • Azienda produttrice
      • Panoramic Productions
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 1h 26min(86 min)
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.66 : 1

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