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Rocky Mountain Poster

Rocky Mountain

Gun-violence echoes across the Dangerland of the West!
1950 | 83m | English

(1439 votes)

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Popularity: 1 (history)

Details

A Confederate troop, led by Captain Lafe Barstow, is prowling the far ranges of California and Nevada in a last desperate attempt to build up an army in the West for the faltering Confederacy. Because the patrol saves a stagecoach, with Johanna Carterr as one of the passengers, from an Indian attack, and is marooned on a rocky mountain, it fails in its mission but the honor of the Old South is upheld.
Release Date: Nov 11, 1950
Director: William Keighley
Writer: Winston Miller, Alan Le May
Genres: Adventure, Western
Keywords mission, nevada, stagecoach, american civil war, indian uprising
Production Companies Warner Bros. Pictures
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Aug 03, 2024 (Update)
Entered: Apr 20, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Errol Flynn Capt. Lafe Barstow
Patrice Wymore Johanna Carter
Scott Forbes Lt. Rickey (USA)
Guinn "Big Boy" Williams Pap Dennison (CSA)
Dickie Jones Jim 'Buck' Wheat
Howard Petrie Cole Smith / California Beal
Slim Pickens Plank (CSA)
Chubby Johnson Gil Craigie - Stage Driver
Robert "Buzz" Henry Kip Waterson (CSA)
Sheb Wooley Kay Rawlins
Peter Coe Pierre Duchesne (CSA)
Rush Williams Jonas Weatherby (CSA)
Yakima Canutt Trooper Ryan (USA) (uncredited)
Steve Dunhill Sgt. Ash (USA) (uncredited)
Alex Sharp Barnes (uncredited)
Marianne Stone Stage Passenger (uncredited)
Name Job
William Keighley Director
Winston Miller Screenplay
Rudi Fehr Editor
Max Steiner Original Music Composer
Bob Herron Stunts
Ted D. McCord Director of Photography
Henry Vilardo Makeup Artist
Alan Le May Screenplay, Story
Stanley Fleischer Art Direction
L.S. Edwards Set Decoration
Marjorie Best Costume Design
Gordon Bau Makeup Artist
Harlan W. Phillips Makeup Artist
Myrl Stoltz Hairstylist
Frank Mattison Assistant Director
Stanley Jones Sound
Murray Cutter Orchestrator
Howard Hohler Script Supervisor
Name Title
William Jacobs Producer
Organization Category Person
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Popularity History


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Reviews

John Chard
8.0

There never was any other way. We just put it off awhile. Rocky Mountain is directed by William Keighley and written by Winston Miller and Alan Le May. It stars Errol Flynn, Patrice Wymore, Scott Forbes, Guinn Williams, Dick Jones, Howard Petrie and Slim Pickens. Music is by Max Steiner and cinem ... atography by Ted McCord. Tell you what's funny, I was all set to write the prologue to this film as an opener to the review. Taken from a marker that sits at the foot of the actual Rocky Mountain (AKA: Ghost Mountain), it tells us of the noble fact that forms the basis of the story - whist also telling us of the outcome! Couple this with a narration device by our Errol, then you have two rather annoying things that stop this from being high echelon Western film making. As it is, it's a great film regardless. Plot has Flynn leading a small group of Confederates into California to hopefully curry favour from Cole Smith (Petrie). Smith has a considerable army of outlaws that the Southern Confederates could use in the hope of staving off defeat to the Union forces. Fate, circumstance and matters of honour are set to play their hands. It was to be Errol Flynn's last Western venture, the last of his work in a genre he was not particularly fond of. How strange to find then that it's actually his best Western film performance. Paired with a director clearly able to tap into something more than being a flirtatious good looking hero, Flynn gives Captain Lafe Barstow a dignified elegance, becoming a leader of men of some considerable substance - and crucially he has screenwriters and producers willing to give us a sombre story. Filmed out in New Mexico, the surrounds magnificent, it's brilliant how Keighley and McCord cloak the story in a claustrophobic aura. There's a sense of strife as a constant, even as heroic posturing asks us to thump the chest and shout rah rah rah. Flynn's men are a great bunch, lovable tough boy rogues each with their own fallible core, while the mystery element of Cole Smith's involvement in proceedings, and that of the looming Indian War, keeps the narrative interesting. Wymore would soon become the next in line of Flynn's wives, but there's no hint of it here, the production team writing the characters apart in strong and believable fashion. Wymore's performance is merely ok, but it's not a token job and with so much machismo about it speaks volumes that Wymore and her character are welcome and crucial to the story's soul. Comic relief is kept to an absolute minimum, rightly so, the only jovial sightings here are that when the canine of the piece is in flight, where Steiner steps away from moody Civil War flavours for a bit of jolification. It is however with the ending where the film could have died on its own sword or thrive, having asked us to invest greatly in Barstow's own - Magnificent Seven - Wild Bunch - The Professionals etc, we need to care about the outcome, to feel it. And we do. The action excites, the stunts and speedy set plays hold court, then the heroism and chest pushed out bravery of it all pays us off - capped off by a character order that tingles the senses as Steiner gives us a "Dixie" lament. This may not have the bluster of Flynn's other more well known Westerns, and certainly it's not one to be picking up if one is after a mood lifter. It is however a must for those who believe those critics who even today still write of him being a plastic actor, because given the right director, the right material on the page, then Flynn had substance in his locker. It's also one for Western fans to seek out who want more than just your hooray glossy frontage. 8/10

May 16, 2024