Apache Territory

1958 "FLAMING ARROWS VS. HOME-MADE BOMBS"
5.7| 1h11m| NR| en
Details

Logan Cates sets out to rescue a white woman captured by Apache Indians and prevent a war. On the way he is joined by a few civilians and a small band of soldiers at a water hole. They are ambushed and laid siege to by Apache. As their food and water supplies dwindle a storm arrives which enables Cates to put an escape plan into action.

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2hotFeature one of my absolute favorites!
SnoReptilePlenty Memorable, crazy movie
FrogGlace In other words,this film is a surreal ride.
Wyatt There's no way I can possibly love it entirely but I just think its ridiculously bad, but enjoyable at the same time.
zardoz-13 Rory Calhoun appears competent as well as convincing in "Six Gun Law" director Ray Nazarro's western "Apache Territory" with Barbara Bates, John Dehner, and Leo Gordon. Incidentally, "Apache Territory" is an adaptation of best selling western writer Louis L'Amour's novel "Last Stand at Papogo Wells." Earlier, in 1957, Calhoun starred his first L'Amour adaptation entitled "Utah Blaine. Calhoun and his partner Victor M. Orsatti produced this rugged but formulaic oater. If the John Wayne classic "Stagecoach" focused on an odd array of characters cramped within the confines of a stagecoach crossing through Indian infested terrain, "Apache Territory" isn't much different. In this Columbia Pictures release, everything takes place in the desert. We never see the standard-issue replica of a western town with false-fronted buildings. Instead, Nazarro stages all the action in the desert, with a little help from a sound stage. Logan Cates (Rory Calhoun of "Red Showdown") is riding for Yuma when he spots Apaches about to ambush some settlers. He uses his rifle to alert the horsemen about the presence of the redskins. Afterward, Cates discovers a teenage girl, Junie Hatchett (Carolyn Craig) bound by the Indians and left abandoned in a thicket. He cuts her bonds and takes her with him. Along the way, he encounters a young man, Lonnie Foreman (Thomas Pittman), who was one of the three men he warned about the Apaches. Cates and these two take up residence at a water hole, only to find another man who is seeking refuge there. Belong a detachment of U.S. Cavalry thunders into the enclosure, and finally an older-looking gentleman, Grant Kimbrough (John Dehner of "The Left-Handed Gun), arrives with a woman on horseback with him. Logan Cates is surprised to see Jennifer Fair (Barbara Bates of "Cheaper By The Dozen") because they were once in a relationship. Eventually, Cates asserts control over everybody in the dead end canyon because he knows more about fighting Indians than anybody. Similarly, when Grant objects to all of Logan's plans, Jennifer has to rethink her options. The Apaches keep them pinned down until a sandstorm strikes and Cates and company can attack the Indians with home-made explosives. "Apache Territory" boasts some arid scenery and a couple of good performances.
classicsoncall Well it doesn't get any more Cowboys and Indians than this now, does it? Rory Calhoun shifts gears only slightly from his Bill Longley persona in 'The Texan' TV series to head up a group of stranded travelers and Cavalry soldiers to take on the Apaches in this quick paced Western. The standard clichéd characters are all here, like a love interest (Barbara Bates) for the hero, an Apache hating Indian (Frank DeKova), and a know it all Army sergeant (Leo Gordon) who knows better than itinerant drifter Logan Cates (Calhoun) how to get out of the fix they're in. Who would you bet on? This is actually pretty entertaining in it's own way. Often the romance angle gets in the way of these stories, but this one's OK, in fact there are two of them. The one involving Lonnie Foreman (Tom Pittman) and Junie Hatchett (Carolyn Craig) is actually kind of sweet if you go in for that sort of stuff. As for Logan, he had some trouble figuring out what his drifting was all about by the end of the picture, so that ride off into the sunset was to be expected.The film had a couple of unexpected pluses if you've watched a lot of Westerns and think you've seen it all. How about soldier Graves getting shot by an Apache fire arrow? That was a first for me, as well as that creepy gila monster staring down Logan in the Apache camp. The picture produced a few minutes of interesting tension with that scene even if it went nowhere, but it was cool enough to mention.The payoff was a clever concoction as well, as Logan had those canteens rigged with gunpowder and pebbles to take out most of the renegades. I thought for sure we'd get a look at the villain Churupati since he was mentioned more than once, but that was not to be. When it was all over, I just had to ask one rhetorical question - what ever happened to the rest of those soldiers?
bkoganbing In a very tightly constructed and entertaining B Western that he produced as well as starred in, Rory Calhoun collects a motley crew of people to stand off hostile Apaches in Apache Territory. The title speaks for itself, but it begs the question as to what all these people were doing there?Circumstance bring Calhoun together with a former flame and her new fiancé, Barbara Bates and John Dehner, a young girl played by Carolyn Craig whom Calhoun rescues on the trail, Tom Pittman an amiable young drifting cowboy, Indian prospector Frank DeKova and a patrol of cavalry who are led by a sergeant from the adjutant general's office with no field experience in Frank DeSales. DeSales gladly cedes leadership to Calhoun who knows far more about Indian fighting than he does.DeSales has some malcontents among his troops, a homesick Myron Healey and a former sergeant in Leo Gordon who thinks he ought to be running things. I think you can see all the inherent conflicts and in the 70 minute running time they're all brought out.Actually Calhoun does have a plan to get them all out and it depends on the weather. The trick is to see how many of them survive. What it is you'll have to see Apache Territory for.If you didn't recognize it, Apache Territory is yet another reworking of John Ford's The Lost Patrol which was remade into Sahara and remade again as Last Of The Comanches. The last stand theme is enduringly popular and Columbia Pictures sure got a lot of use out of it.Two tragedies were in this cast. Both Tom Pittman and Carolyn Craig died way too young and too violently. Pittman in a car crash after this film was completed and Craig several years later by gunshot. In John Mitchum's book Them Ornery Mitchum Boys about he and brother Bob he became friends with Pittman and described him as a nice kid and promising young actor. Pittman was missing for several days before police found the car he had been driving at the bottom of a ravine with Pittman's body. Apache Territory is a good classic B western the kind that sadly Hollywood does not turn out any more.
Chase_Witherspoon Sometimes tense B-western stars brawny silent-type Rory Calhoun as a drifter who holds up with an assortment of characters (most reluctant to heed his sage advice) at a waterhole after Apache raids kill a number of their companions. After first rescuing an orphaned young woman (Craig) and wounded young pioneer (Pittman), he's joined by old flame (Bates) and her cowardly fiancé (Dehner), a quartet of Confederate soldiers and a wily gold-prospecting Indian (DeKova) a tribal enemy of the Apaches. As food and water become scarce, tensions within the group cause hysteria and various characters lose their cool leading to fatally poor decisions as cabin fever spreads.Calhoun gets good support from Bates as his scorned former lover, while Myron Healey has a reasonable role as an initially resilient Confederate, who succumbs to panic at the thought of never seeing his family again. Leo Gordon is imposing as the principal agitator among the group, spurred on by greed and selfish motivations to survive at any expense.It's economical and typical of Columbia Pictures westerns at the time, with director Nazarro keeping the melodrama to a minimum and the tension palpable. Apache sympathisers might be offended, with the tribe depicted simply as marauding scalpers, while Craig's nubile wife-to-be would surely irk the feminists as she fusses over domestic duties trying to impress Pittman and clumsily convince him to take her as his wife and mother to his future progeny. But despite the chauvinism, I still found the movie a reasonably taut, formula western worthy of a 70 minute pause while channel surfing.