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The Charge at Feather River Poster

The Charge at Feather River

New 3D Thrill-History From Warner Bros. ...Makers of 'House of Wax'!
1953 | 95m | English

(786 votes)

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Popularity: 1.0 (history)

Director: Gordon Douglas
Writer: James R. Webb
Staring:
Details

A frontier scout leads prisoners on a death mission to save a railroad and rescue two women.
Release Date: Jul 11, 1953
Director: Gordon Douglas
Writer: James R. Webb
Genres: Western
Keywords native american, cavalry
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
Guy Madison Miles Archer
Frank Lovejoy Sgt. Charlie Baker
Helen Westcott Anne McKeever
Vera Miles Jennie McKeever
Dick Wesson Pvt. Cullen
Onslow Stevens Grover Johnson
Steve Brodie Pvt. Ryan
Ron Hagerthy Johnny McKeever
Fay Roope Lt. Col. Kilrain
Neville Brand Pvt. Morgan
James Brown Pvt. Connors
Joe Bassett Quartermaster Sergeant
Name Job
Gordon Douglas Director
Max Steiner Original Music Composer
Bob Herron Stunts
James R. Webb Screenplay
J. Peverell Marley Director of Photography
Folmar Blangsted Editor
Stanley Fleischer Art Direction
Marjorie Best Costume Design
Pat Clark Still Photographer
Name Title
David Weisbart Producer
Organization Category Person
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Reviews

John Chard
8.0

No brass button soldiers here. The Charge at Feather River is directed by Gordon Douglas and written by James R. Webb. It stars Guy Madison, Frank Lovejoy, Helen Westcott, Vera Miles, Dick Wesson, Onslow Stevens, Steve Brodie, Neville Brand and James Brown. Filmed in Natural Vision-3-Dimension a ... nd WarnerColor, music is by Max Steiner and cinematography by J. Peverell Marley. The Guardhouse Brigade. Wonderful. It’s the sort of Western you watched as a kid and it made you fall in love with the genre. It has it all, the standard Cowboys versus Indians action to keep the youngsters amused, and quality characterisations for the knowing adults to acknowledge. Plot would become very familiar over the years, where a bunch of reprobates, here they are the bad boys of the army guardhouse, are trained up and sent on a suicide mission. The mission here is to rescue two white sisters who were captured by the Cheyenne years ago. The group dynamic positively bubbles with tension as men who fought on opposite sides of the Civil War are tasked with performing as one force. There’s also a heated rivalry between two men because of a woman, and naturally there’s some looses cannons in the group. Things further pick up when the two ladies are rescued and the group has to try and make it back to the fort with the whole Cheyenne tribe on their tail. The elder sister is grateful to be rescued, the younger one not so much since she has converted to the Cheyenne way and is set to marry Chief Thunder Hawk. Thus the group dynamic goes up a couple of more notches on the stove as the younger sister does all she can to sabotage the mission, while the elder frets about how society will treat her once her past comes to light, and of course there’s an attraction between her and the alpha male. Yet the romantic thread is superbly written, really mature and never cloying. There’s some requisite humour that works very well, the action is very well staged by the wily Douglas and Madison makes for a good leader of men. While having Brand and Brodie in support playing ornery dudes is perfect casting. It’s a very satisfying Oater, it’s not hard to see why it was a big hit at the box office. Oh for sure the 3-D gimmick would have been a big draw, especially since there’s plenty of scenes made for 3-D nirvana in the picture. However, this is strong enough to stand on its own 2-D feet, a throwback to a great decade of Westerns. It also has a Steiner musical score and Marley’s super photography around the California locations. Think what would happen if you mixed The Searchers and Major Dundee together and you get an idea of the type of film on offer. Recommended to Western buffs. 8/10

May 16, 2024