IMDb RATING
6.1/10
535
YOUR RATING
A former Civil War solider bent on killing the man whose surrender got his brother killed, later finds out a rancher wants that same man and his blind brother killed.A former Civil War solider bent on killing the man whose surrender got his brother killed, later finds out a rancher wants that same man and his blind brother killed.A former Civil War solider bent on killing the man whose surrender got his brother killed, later finds out a rancher wants that same man and his blind brother killed.
Iron Eyes Cody
- Brave Bear
- (as Iron Eyes)
Bryan 'Slim' Hightower
- Hankey
- (as Bryan Hightower)
Phil Rawlins
- Les
- (as David Rawlins)
Wes Hudman
- Stranger
- (as Wesley Hudman)
Lee Phelps
- Bartender
- (uncredited)
Duke York
- Joe Doniger, Soldier
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
It's just after the Civil War and Ben Shelby arrives looking for Johnny Tallon whom he plans to kill. Shelby was the only survivor of a battle due to the cowardice of Tallon. Thinking Tallon dead, another man who lost a brother at the same battle arrives to kill Tallon's blind brother. Tallon arrives to find Shelby and his brother fleeing. Then they are attacked by Indians and Shelby and Tallon must now fight together postponing the inevitable showdown.
Fort Defiance is an enjoyable western, due to the good performances, direction, cinematography and a tense, yet quiet atmosphere, and exciting blazing action as Shelby and the Tallons square off against vengeful white men and their Native American neighbors. Loved Dane Clark's witty comeback and his fast guns. Ben Johnson is excellent as always, but I reckon Peter Graves steals the scene as a blind man. The first half is slightly plodding, but picks up when the villainous Ned Parker and his gunnies turn up. It's then uphill all the way.
Fort Defiance is an enjoyable western, due to the good performances, direction, cinematography and a tense, yet quiet atmosphere, and exciting blazing action as Shelby and the Tallons square off against vengeful white men and their Native American neighbors. Loved Dane Clark's witty comeback and his fast guns. Ben Johnson is excellent as always, but I reckon Peter Graves steals the scene as a blind man. The first half is slightly plodding, but picks up when the villainous Ned Parker and his gunnies turn up. It's then uphill all the way.
Fort Defiance is directed by John Rawlins and written by Louis Lantz. It stars Dane Clark, Ben Johnson, Peter Graves and Tracey Roberts. Music is by Paul Sawtell and cinematography by Stanley Cortez.
Plot has Clark as sharp shooting Johnny Tallon, a feared man he may be, but after a dreadful incident in the Civil War he is a wanted man. Upon returning to the family ranch where his blind brother Ned (Graves) resides, he finds one of his pursuers, Ben Shelby (Johnson), has befriended Ned and become more of a brother to Ned than Johnny ever was. With the Indians on the warpath and saloon impresario Dave Parker (Craig Woods) out to kill of the Tallon family, something's got to give...
There's a degree of complexity on show with the writing here, where the family strife and fall out from the Civil War makes for an always interesting viewing. Also refreshing to find that Graves' blind character is not a heart string tugging token, it's a meaty portrayal by Graves, the character not trying to garner sympathy. There's a richness to the key characterisations in general, ensuring that at least when the story treads familiar Westerns pathways (Indian attacks shoehorned in - Roberts' token saloon gal love interest) all outcomes are anticipated with interest.
The location landscapes are gorgeous, which renders the use of Cinecolor as being annoying. The pronounced reds and blues detracting from the natural beauty of the surroundings, though thankfully the print shown on TCM-HD is of a decent quality. The action sequences are only competently staged, but there's enough gun shots and stunt working bodily thunder to perk up the pic, while acting across the board is on the good side of good.
Strong plotting and super scenery help to keep this one above average and thus worth seeking out by Westerns lovers. 6.5/10
Plot has Clark as sharp shooting Johnny Tallon, a feared man he may be, but after a dreadful incident in the Civil War he is a wanted man. Upon returning to the family ranch where his blind brother Ned (Graves) resides, he finds one of his pursuers, Ben Shelby (Johnson), has befriended Ned and become more of a brother to Ned than Johnny ever was. With the Indians on the warpath and saloon impresario Dave Parker (Craig Woods) out to kill of the Tallon family, something's got to give...
There's a degree of complexity on show with the writing here, where the family strife and fall out from the Civil War makes for an always interesting viewing. Also refreshing to find that Graves' blind character is not a heart string tugging token, it's a meaty portrayal by Graves, the character not trying to garner sympathy. There's a richness to the key characterisations in general, ensuring that at least when the story treads familiar Westerns pathways (Indian attacks shoehorned in - Roberts' token saloon gal love interest) all outcomes are anticipated with interest.
The location landscapes are gorgeous, which renders the use of Cinecolor as being annoying. The pronounced reds and blues detracting from the natural beauty of the surroundings, though thankfully the print shown on TCM-HD is of a decent quality. The action sequences are only competently staged, but there's enough gun shots and stunt working bodily thunder to perk up the pic, while acting across the board is on the good side of good.
Strong plotting and super scenery help to keep this one above average and thus worth seeking out by Westerns lovers. 6.5/10
For a fitfully simple b-western, FORT DEFIANCE has the most complicated case of post Civil War revenge, twofold: first there's Ben Johnson, who becomes a ranch-hand working for blind, extremely trustworthy Peter Graves, and secretly wants to kill Peter's older brother for backing out of one of the last battles... and then an entire posse wants both brothers dead...
Enter first-billed Dan Clark, extremely anticipated through expository dialogue, thirty-five minutes in, as his brother and new best friend are cornered by Indians in a cornering canyon, led by legendary faker Iron Eyes Cody...
There would be far more suspense along with anticipating tribal drums if the low-budget use of day-for-night... filming darkly in daylight masquerade a brightly moonlit night... wasn't so obvious... but the introduction of heart-of-gold-hooker Tracey Roberts, who even blind Peter Graves knows is pretty and genuine, adds some needed dimension: but what matters most takes place in the third act, after sunrise...
When Dane Clark, usually a kind of poor man's George Raft, really stands out, playing the heck out of the villainous yet faithfully-dependable scoundrel in what's an 11th hour crash-course of the ambiguous gunfighter persona... making you forget that most of the film's buildup didn't have him around at all.
Enter first-billed Dan Clark, extremely anticipated through expository dialogue, thirty-five minutes in, as his brother and new best friend are cornered by Indians in a cornering canyon, led by legendary faker Iron Eyes Cody...
There would be far more suspense along with anticipating tribal drums if the low-budget use of day-for-night... filming darkly in daylight masquerade a brightly moonlit night... wasn't so obvious... but the introduction of heart-of-gold-hooker Tracey Roberts, who even blind Peter Graves knows is pretty and genuine, adds some needed dimension: but what matters most takes place in the third act, after sunrise...
When Dane Clark, usually a kind of poor man's George Raft, really stands out, playing the heck out of the villainous yet faithfully-dependable scoundrel in what's an 11th hour crash-course of the ambiguous gunfighter persona... making you forget that most of the film's buildup didn't have him around at all.
Nice guy, Ned Tallon, now blind, is waiting for older brother, Johnny, to come home from the war and help get the ranch back on its feet. A newly arrived stranger, Ben Shelby, reports that Johnny deserted his outfit, costing many men their lives, then became a bank robber and was killed. When the desertion story gets out, relatives of several men who died want brother Ned buried, too. Ben steps in to save Ned by helping him skedaddle to Navajo territory -- but the Navajo have just been told that its Reservation Time, and they're none to pleased. ...now guess who shows up!
Pretty good yarn. Fair amount of action. Rugged Arizona scenery. A good Ben Johnson role. Interesting to see Peter Graves in one of his earliest films.
Pretty good yarn. Fair amount of action. Rugged Arizona scenery. A good Ben Johnson role. Interesting to see Peter Graves in one of his earliest films.
If you can get past Brooklyn born Dane Clark as a two gun Arizona outlaw, this is an entertaining picture. Ben Johnson plays a man bent on revenge who softens to his intended victim's family, and Peter Graves is very good as the brother of the man Johnson wants to kill. This may be the best Cinecolor film made, as the color, although brash, doesn't waver as many others do. For me, Clark was the weak point; although he does well the script doesn't make him very believable, waving his two guns all over the place and never missing his target. It's also hard to believe he could last more than thirty seconds in a fistfight with Johnson. The secondary cast is quite good, with Goerge Cleveland as a hot headed but understanding uncle, and Ralph Sanford as a cantankerous stage driver. It's certainly worth a ninety minute view time, if you have popcorn and a drink.
Did you know
- TriviaThe rifles used were Winchester Model 1892 in 44-40 caliber. The Civil War ended in 1865 so the Winchester 1892 was not invented yet.
- Quotes
[Speaking over Hankey's body]
Johnny Tallon: Hankey was a good man. He didn't have any feelings about anything. All he had was loyalty.
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 22m(82 min)
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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