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Southwest Passage Poster

Southwest Passage

A Thousand Miles of Roaring EXCITEMENT!
1954 | 75m | English

(498 votes)

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Popularity: 1 (history)

Details

Director Ray Nazarro's 1954 western, originally filmed in 3-D, stars John Ireland and Joanne Dru as fugitive bank robbers who hide out by joining a government expedition bound for California.
Release Date: Apr 01, 1954
Director: Ray Nazarro
Writer: Harry Essex, Daniel Mainwaring
Genres: Western
Keywords apache nation, posse
Production Companies Edward Small Productions
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Aug 03, 2024
Entered: Apr 24, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Rod Cameron Edward Fitzpatrick Beale
John Ireland Clint McDonald
Joanne Dru Lilly
Darryl Hickman Jeb
Guinn "Big Boy" Williams Tall Tale
John Dehner Matt Carroll
Douglas Fowley Toad Ellis
Morris Ankrum Dr. Stanton
Stuart Randall Lt. Owens
Mark Hanna Hi Jolly
Stanley Andrews Constable Bartlett
Kenneth MacDonald Sheriff Morgan
Hank Patterson Barstow
Name Job
Ray Nazarro Director
Harry Essex Screenplay, Idea
Daniel Mainwaring Screenplay
Arthur Lange Original Music Composer
Emil Newman Original Music Composer
Sam Leavitt Director of Photography
Grant Whytock Editor
Frank Paul Sylos Art Direction
Alfred Kegerris Set Decoration
Name Title
Edward Small Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 5 12 2
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2024 6 8 32 3
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Reviews

John Chard
5.0

Camel Caravan! Southwest Passage (AKA: Camels West) is directed by Ray Nazarro and written by Harry Essex and Geoffrey Homes. It stars Rod Cameron, John Ireland, Joanne Dru, John Dehner and Guin Williams. Music is by Emil Newman and Arthur Lang and the Pathe Color photography is by Sam Leavitt. ... A robber and hid girl join a Camel Caravan to escape their pursuers. Originally filmed in 3-D, one might be surprised to find that as fanciful as the premise to this seems, it's very much grounded in facts. Edward Fitzgerald Beale (1822 - 1893) the character played by Cameron is a most fascinating person whose real life work is far more interesting than the film is! Further reading on the subject is recommended. This is all very routine as a group of various ethnicities and walks of life trek across the desert with camels in tow to test their usage for the U.S. Cavalry. Ireland (posing as a doctor) and Dru (gorgeous but looking like she just wandered in off of a Estée Lauder advertisement) are hiding out. So they are on the bluff which keeps the "will they get caught" factor simmering away. Naturally a rapscallion fellow (Dehner) figures things out and wants a share of the couple's stolen goods. To further complicate matters and up the peril quota, the water is running low. Add in the fact we are in Apache country and you get the drift of where the picture is heading. Cast make things watchable at least, while the location scenery out of Kanab, Utah, is a treat for the eyes. It all builds to a frantic finale, which is well staged and high on rapid gun fire, but once the "too tidy" resolution is reached it's a Western that quickly fades from memory. 5/10

May 16, 2024