In 1759, in Pennsylvania's Allegheny Valley, local settlers and Indian fighters try to persuade the British authorities to ban the trading of alcohol and arms with the marauding Indians.In 1759, in Pennsylvania's Allegheny Valley, local settlers and Indian fighters try to persuade the British authorities to ban the trading of alcohol and arms with the marauding Indians.In 1759, in Pennsylvania's Allegheny Valley, local settlers and Indian fighters try to persuade the British authorities to ban the trading of alcohol and arms with the marauding Indians.
- One of Jim's Black Boys
- (uncredited)
- Settler at McDowell's Mill
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
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- TriviaFor the role of Capt. Swanson actor George Sanders replaced Sir Cedric Hardwicke due to Hardwicke's other commitments.
- GoofsThe shooting demonstration done in court was described as taking place at twenty paces. Twenty paces is equal to approximately 60 feet; the shots fired in the film were at approximately 20 feet.
- Quotes
The Professor: Men, we've fought and won. But in winning we have lost something. In defending one law, we've come to despise all law. And if you go on like this, we'll destroy the very thing we fight for.
- Crazy creditsOpening credits prologue:
This is a tale, laid in the Allegheny Mountains, of Jim Smith and his black boys, loyal subjects of His Majesty King George III - and their fight against the Delaware Indians in the year 1759.
- Alternate versionsAlso available in a computer colorized version.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Maude: Maude Meets the Duke (1974)
- SoundtracksYankee Doodle
(uncredited)
Music traditional - English origin (ca. 1755)
Arranged by Anthony Collins
Sung by the men at MacDougall's tavern
Reprised by the men after the trial
Variations in the score throughout
This is an entertaining film with noisy action, battles, romance and comedy . After the hit of Stagecoach, RKO hurriedly put their new hero cowboy , The Duke John Wayne, and his partenaire Claire Trevor in another Western, but this time resulted to be a lesser effort. Pretty good man and support cast accompany the brave and stuborn protagonists. Not a bad movie, but not memorable, either, however, being entertaining enough . Wayne gives a nice acting as the frontiersman who clashes with a British commander in order to stop his injustice. His leading lady Claire Trevor provides a silly acting and overacting, at times, as the obstinate sweetheart chasing Wayne here and there. And notorious secondaries appearing, such as : George Sanders as British military commander, Brian Donlevy as the villain seller, Wilfrid Lawson, John Hamilton, Moroni Oldsen, Roger Barrat, Ian Wolfe, Eddie Quillan and a thin Chill Wills. It packs an atmospheric cinematography in black and white by Nicholas Musuraka, a bit later on, to become one of the best Film Noir cameramen as well as John Alton, John Seitz or Sol Polito. Furthermore, it delivers a thrilling and evocative musical score. The motion picture, lavishly produced by RKO/Pandro S. Berman, was regular but professionally directed by William A Seiter 1890-1964. He was a fine craftsman who diected films of all kinds of genres as drama, thriller , musical, Western, romantic comedy, such as : In person, Stowaway, Dimples, Room service, The moon's our home, Susannah of the Mounties, It is a date , Nice girl?, You were never lovelier, Lady takes a chance, Destroyer, Little giant, I will be yours, Up in the Central Park, One touch of Venus, Borderline, Make haste to live. Rating : 6/10. Decent, passable and acceptable, though very inferior to Stagecoach . Also available on horrible colorized version.
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Details
Box office
- Budget
- $696,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 21 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1