Fort Dobbs (film)
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

''Fort Dobbs'' is a 1958 American Western film, the first of three directed by Gordon Douglas to star Clint Walker. The other two were: ''
Yellowstone Kelly ''Yellowstone Kelly'' is a 1959 American Western film based upon a novel by Heck Allen (using his pen name Clay Fisher, which shows in the film credits) with a screenplay by Burt Kennedy starring Clint Walker as Luther Sage "Yellowstone" Kelly, ...
'' in 1959 and ''
Gold of the Seven Saints ''Gold of the Seven Saints'' is a 1961 American Western film adaptation of a 1957 Steve Frazee novel titled ''Desert Guns''. Released by Warner Brothers, the 88-minute film starred Clint Walker, Roger Moore, Letícia Román, Robert Middleton, an ...
'' in 1961. Released by Warner Brothers and based on a screenplay by George W. George and Burt Kennedy, the film runs for 93 minutes with black-and-white photography provided by William H. Clothier. It was intended to capitalize on Walker's success in the '' Cheyenne'' TV series, but box office returns were modest.


Plot

Gar Davis has to get out of Largo in a hurry because a man he threatened to kill has been found dead. He comes across a man in
Comanche The Comanche or Nʉmʉnʉʉ ( com, Nʉmʉnʉʉ, "the people") are a Native American tribe from the Southern Plains of the present-day United States. Comanche people today belong to the federally recognized Comanche Nation, headquartered in La ...
territory killed by an arrow. Gar trades jackets with the dead man and then shoves the corpse over a cliff, hoping the posse pursuing him will think he's the one who is dead. Trying to steal a horse, Gar's face is grazed by a bullet shot by young Chad Grey, whose mother Celia tends to the stranger's wound. Indians attack the house. Gar helps fend them off, after which he and the Greys take off on horseback toward the safety of Fort Dobbs. On the trail, an outlaw called Clett kills a Comanche who's about to bushwhack Gar, saving his life. Gar doesn't trust him, though, because Clett is carrying rifles that he could be selling to the Indians rather than to buyers in Santa Fe. Clett tries to take advantage of Celia, but even though Gar comes to her aid, Celia no longer trusts him because she's found the jacket Gar stole. It belonged to her husband, so Celia is now convinced that Gar murdered him, making her a widow. Gar successfully escorts Celia and Chad to the fort and then rides away so he won't be arrested. Celia and Chad enter the fort, but all of the soldiers are dead. Gar turns around when he hears Comanche war cries and helps the citizens of Largo who are fleeing toward the fort for protection. A sheriff appreciates Gar's help fighting the Indians, but lets him know he must place Gar under arrest. Gar claims he killed the Largo man in self-defense after an argument. Permitted to ride to Santa Fe to get help, Gar ends up killing Clett for the rifles, bringing them back to save the fort and to win the widow's trust.


Cast

* Clint Walker as Gar Davis * Virginia Mayo as Celia Grey * Brian Keith as Clett * Richard Eyer as Chad Grey * Russ Conway as the Sheriff * Michael Dante as Billings


Production

Parts of the film were shot in Duck Creek, Aspen Mirror Lake, Paria, Kanab Canyon, Cave Lakes Canyon, Kanab movie fort, Colorado River, Mat Martin Wash, and Professor Valley in Utah.


Reception


Critical response

Howard Thompson of '' The New York Times'' gave the film a mixed review, writing, "As for the plot, written by Burt Kennedy and George W. George, Mr. Walker plays a murder fugitive who rescues a widow and her small son from some Comanches and finally clears his name by leading a stockade defense against a mass attack. For the first two-thirds of this Martin Rackin production almost nothing happens, as the hero, Miss Mayo and young Richard Eyer drag across the prairie. The picture drags right along with it. Gordon Douglas, its director, has given the climax a neat turn or two. And toward the end, a couple of nice sideline performances click into place—namely, Brian Keith, as a renegade, and Russ Conway, as a sheriff. Miss Mayo also perks up considerably at the homestretch, minus her initial Southern accent. What happened, honey chile?"Thompson, Howard
'' The New York Times'', film review, "Western and 'Lafayette Escadrille' Open", April 19, 1958. Accessed: June 23, 2013.


See also

* List of American films of 1958


References


External links

* * * * * via TBS {{Gordon Douglas 1958 films 1958 Western (genre) films American Western (genre) films American black-and-white films Films directed by Gordon Douglas Films scored by Max Steiner Films shot in Utah Warner Bros. films 1950s English-language films 1950s American films