Three men on camels chase a couple carrying gold through Death Valley.Three men on camels chase a couple carrying gold through Death Valley.Three men on camels chase a couple carrying gold through Death Valley.
Photos
Robert Bice
- Tomaso
- (uncredited)
Frank Lackteen
- Ceremony Leader
- (uncredited)
Artie Ortego
- Indian
- (uncredited)
Gloria Talbott
- Indian Girl
- (uncredited)
William Wilkerson
- Indian Bodyguard
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Gold miner ford smith (wayne morris) has hit it big, so he and new traveling friend mary (virginia grey) are heading back to town. But three camel drivers are chasing after them, hoping to steal the treasure away from smith. The military really did experiment using camels to get around, but camels weren't much use once the railroads were built. An interesting tale! Keep an eye out for george tobias... in addition to playing abner on bewitched, he was the character actor in so many other films, sometimes with an accent. It's pretty short, at 71 minutes. Filmed at olancha and alabama hills, near lone pine. Which is where there's an awesome western movie museum. Hopefully, they still show rare, zane gray films on the weekends. The film is pretty good! Ford and mary start out as strangers, but fall in love along the way. If they can just get away from the bandits. Film directed by george blair. Story by kenneth perkins. Sadly, morris died so young at 45. Was a military hero during world war II.
"In 1856 Jefferson Davis, Secretary of War, organised the American Camel Corps of the United States Army, which mapped the southern route across the plains and deserts from Texas to California. The building of the trans-continental railroad ended the usefulness of the Camel Corps, and the animals were sold to private enterprise or escaped into the south-western desert where camels were still seen by lonely prospectors more than a decade later."
Quite what filmic significance that opening statement has to how Desert Pursuit pans out is anybody's guess, but it's there and clearly the pic was meant to be more thematically telling than the odd ball piece it is.
Out of Monogram, it's directed by George Blair and adapted to screenplay by W. Scott Darling from the novel written by Kenneth Perkins. It stars Wayne Morris and Virginia Grey, William Sickner photographs it out of Death Valley and the Sierra Mountains, and music is by Edward J. Kay. Plot pitches Morris and Grey on a journey through the desert trying to avoid three Arabian men who are up to no good. There's gold, camels, a burgeoning romance, oh and it's Christmas time as well, handy since there is three not so wise men on the scene and Grey's character is called Mary...
It's actually a harmless movie, a decent time waster. The musical score blends Oater strains with Arabian flavours, the locations gorgeous, while Morris and Grey are a likable coupling. There's the odd dummy flung about the place, the fist fights scarcely believable, and you know how this is ultimately going to end, but it's a fun enough dromedary ride regardless. 6/10
Quite what filmic significance that opening statement has to how Desert Pursuit pans out is anybody's guess, but it's there and clearly the pic was meant to be more thematically telling than the odd ball piece it is.
Out of Monogram, it's directed by George Blair and adapted to screenplay by W. Scott Darling from the novel written by Kenneth Perkins. It stars Wayne Morris and Virginia Grey, William Sickner photographs it out of Death Valley and the Sierra Mountains, and music is by Edward J. Kay. Plot pitches Morris and Grey on a journey through the desert trying to avoid three Arabian men who are up to no good. There's gold, camels, a burgeoning romance, oh and it's Christmas time as well, handy since there is three not so wise men on the scene and Grey's character is called Mary...
It's actually a harmless movie, a decent time waster. The musical score blends Oater strains with Arabian flavours, the locations gorgeous, while Morris and Grey are a likable coupling. There's the odd dummy flung about the place, the fist fights scarcely believable, and you know how this is ultimately going to end, but it's a fun enough dromedary ride regardless. 6/10
Camels in western will be used later, in 1954, by Ray Nazarro's SOUTHWEST PASSAGE, starring Rod Cameron, a very unusual topic and always interesting to watch. This western may be rather ambitious for a George Blair, who usually showed us a tepid work for Republic Pictures, the most prestigious of Poverty Row companies. This movie is helped by Wayne Morris presence. Yes, yes, yes, I am surprised by the quality of this George Blair's western, as I would have been with for instance Philip Ford, Blair's fellow colleague director at Republic Pictures, both directors representing the bottom of the barrel in terms of grade Z quality. Here, that looks like a Jo Kane's film, or at best Ray Nazzaro. A good little surprise.
Wayne Morris and Virginia Grey star in Desert Pursuit which was mostly shot in
desert country in Southern California. He's a prospector who struck it rich. she's
a fired faro dealer and they travel together as man and wife for conveince sake
and to observe the proprieties.
Some Arabs who have imported camels are threatening to take Wayne's gold. The three are Anthony Caruso, George Tobias, and John Doucette. The bulk of the film is taken up with their pursuit with animals more adapted to the desert than horses.
Clearly these are not camels that Jefferson Davis imported when he hoped to start a camel corps. Still they are hardy desert animals. Our Arab villains are a scurvy trio as ever assembled.
Nice location shooting in the desert and a no frills story with a cast that delivers.
Some Arabs who have imported camels are threatening to take Wayne's gold. The three are Anthony Caruso, George Tobias, and John Doucette. The bulk of the film is taken up with their pursuit with animals more adapted to the desert than horses.
Clearly these are not camels that Jefferson Davis imported when he hoped to start a camel corps. Still they are hardy desert animals. Our Arab villains are a scurvy trio as ever assembled.
Nice location shooting in the desert and a no frills story with a cast that delivers.
Did you know
- TriviaThe talent behind Desert Pursuit (1952) is a portrait of postwar Hollywood in transition. Ex-studio contractees Virginia Grey and Wayne Morris spent the 1950s scrambling for work, finding most of it on television. Former Navy Air ace Morris is credited as an associate producer on the film as well. Best remembered for his late-career performance in Stanley Kubrick's Les Sentiers de la gloire (1957), Morris found himself in diminishing parts and died unexpectedly seven years later, at age 45. Director George Blair enjoyed a prolific career in B-pictures for outfits like Monogram and Republic, but after Desert Pursuit he almost immediately turned to episodic TV work. His last feature film was the quirky exploitation shocker Magie noire (1960).
- GoofsThe US Camel Corps imported dromedary camels from the Middle-East. This movie uses bactrian camels from Mongolia.
- ConnectionsReferenced in La caravane du désert (1954)
Details
- Runtime1 hour 11 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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