James Craig and Guy Madison are friends and West Point classmates who find themselves serving opposite armies during the Civil War. And they wind up back near Monrovia, the Georgia mansion owned by family of another old friend.
As Maj. Clay Clayburn, Craig is in charge of a small Confederate unit assigned the task of interrupting the Union supply line serving Gen. Sherman on his march to Atlanta.
Specifically, he’s asked to take 20 men and four cannon to the top of Devil Mountain through the network of caves and passages inside.
From atop the mountain, he and his cannoneers can blow the Union railroad to smithereens.
Madison is Maj. Will Denning, and he’s in charge of making sure the supplies get through. And that will mean finding some way to blast those Rebels off the mountain.
Caught in the middle is Southern belle Kathy Summers, who finds herself hosting the Union soldiers in her empty shell of a mansion while trying to sneak information about the Yankees to Clayburn and his men.
She might be married to an officer named Summers, but it’s Clayburn she loves and hopes to spend the future with.
Better than average Civil War film if only for its subject matter. Craig and his men are basically sent on a suicide mission — a unique suicide misson — to slow the Union advance.
Such a mission suits Craig’s character just fine. He’s been flirting with death, not caring if he survives the war because his lady love is married to another man. He attitude changes once he’s reunited with Payton’s character, Kathy.
One of the more poignant scenes occurs when a Union sergeant, looking for Kathy so he can show her a photograph of his children, interrupts her flashing signals to the Confederate troops atop the mountain.
In the struggle that ensues, Kathy’s uncle is killed, the sergeant badly wounded. He pleads for help. She peers upon him coldy, until spying that photograph of his children. Then she starts tearing bandages.
In real life, it was Madison, not Craig, who apparently caught Payton’s eye. They were allegedly having an affair while filming this movie, though she was married to another actor. Payton died at 39 from liver and heart failure, after a number of run-ins with the law, including a prostitution charge.
Directed by:
William Menzies
Cast:
James Craig … Maj. Clay Clayburn
Barbara Payton … Kathy Summers
Guy Madison … Maj. Will Denning
Barton MacLane … Sgt. Mac McCardle
Robert Osterloh … Sgt. Harper
Tom Fadden … Purdy
Robert Easton … Jerry
Louis Jean Heydt … Col. House
Craig Stevens … Col. Braxton Summers
Taylor Holmes … (Uncle) Albert Monroe
Lewis Martin .. Gen. Johnston
Runtime: 87 min.
Memorable lines:
Clay Clayburn: “The world is a rich prize, but you’ve got to go out and grab your share. It doesn’t just come to you, sitting at home.”
Clay Clayburn: “General, if I could get cannon on top of Devil’s Mountain, I could fight there til doomsday.”
Purdy, after the Rebels find their contact, a Confederate spy, hanged: “Do we go on, major?”
Clayburn: “No, Purdy, we’re going back to Gen. Johnston. And I’ll let you tell him we saw a dead man and got scared. It was just too discouraging.”
Purdy: “I guess we’re going on, major.”
Clayburn: “It all boils down to 10 lives for a week’s delay. How does it strike you, Mike?”
Mike: “Just think, 10 men holding up Sherman’s whole army for a week. Sounds like a right fair bargain to me.”