The Apaches are murdering whites, rustling cattle and robbing stages, or so the good folks of living near the reservation think.
They ask for help. Instead of a cavalry troop, they get Rex Moffett (Lloyd Bridges), an expert in Indian affairs.
He suspects someone else might be committing the crimes and making it look like the Apaches.
Meanwhile, as hatred toward Indians grows, half-breed Anne LeBeau (Joan Taylor) finds life more uncomfortable in the white world.
She also worries about the impact the growing hostilities will have on her college educated brother Armand (Lance Fuller), who keeps growing more cynical and more distant.
Could he be involved in the wrong-doing that has the whites in town thinking of launching a raid on the Indian reservation?
This marked Roger Corman’s second Western and features a spirited opening — our heroine has just been called a dirty squaw and is engaged in a knife fight with a hot-headed young man.
It also benefits from the focus on the relationship between Anne LeBeau and her college-educated brother Armand, who seems to be losing his touch with reality and answers her questions with half-truths and riddles.
But the film winds up playing out as a so-so, who-done-it with a script that sometimes borders on the ridiculous. Corman’s first Western, “Five Guns West,” was released earlier the same year.
Joan Taylor made her film debut in 1949’s “Fighting Man of the Plains” and most of her feature films were Westerns. She would later have a recurring role as Chuck Connor’s romantic interest in the hit TV series “Rifleman.”
Directed by:
Roger Corman
Cast:
Lloyd Bridges … Rex Moffett
Joan Taylor … Anne LeBeau
Lance Fuller … Armand LeBeau
Morgan Jones … Macy
Paul Birch … Sheriff
Lou Place … Carrom
Paul Dubov … Ben Hunter
Jonathan Haze … Tom Chandler
Gene Marlowe … Chief White Star
Dick Miller … Tall Tree
Chester Conklin … Dick Mooney
Jean Howell … Mrs. Chandler
Runtime: 83 min.
Memorable lines:
Armand LeBeau, to his sister, on their status as half-breeds: “To our white brothers, we’re less than the cattle that graze their fields. To our red relatives, we’re outcasts.”
Carrom: “Don’t let that gal’s beauty blind you.”
Rex Moffett: “Yeah, she sure is a pretty one, isn’t she?”
Carrom: “So’s a diamond-backed rattler.”
Moffett to Anne LeBeau: “How can you be so bitter and so pretty at the same time?”
Anne, to her brother, Armand: “What did White Star mean when he said grandfather wants to speak to you?”
Armand: “I really don’t know. I must have a tribal spanking coming to me.”
Macy: “I’ve been thinking, LeBeau, we could be walking into a mess of lead.”
Armand: “Stop thinking, Macy. You haven’t the tools for that kind of work. We’re marked men and you know it. Whether we ride tomorrow or not, we’ve had our day. And it’s rapidly coming to a close.”
Armand to Anne: “You sound so moral. You must like this world of half red, half white. I do not.”