HD · HDR
Indian Uprising
Overlook Pick

Indian Uprising

The End of the Mighty Apache Nation!
65
User Score10 ratings
TMDB 6.516+19521h 12mEnglish
Western

Synopsis

It's 1885 in Arizona and an Army Captain has dispersed his troops to keep the whites off of Government land thereby keeping the peace with the Apaches. But there are those in Tucson that want the miners back looking for gold and they put pressure on officials in Washington. Soon a new commander arrives, the troops are recalled, and the miners go after gold. Whites then kill a miner with an arrow so they can attack the Indians hoping the troops wipe them out when they retaliate.

Director
Ray NazarroFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Edward Small Productions1 production companies
Release
January 2, 1952Released
Box Office

Top Cast

8 of 16
George Montgomery
George Montgomery
Capt. Chase McCloud
Audrey Long
Audrey Long
Norma Clemson
Carl Benton Reid
Carl Benton Reid
John Clemson
Eugene Iglesias
Eugene Iglesias
Sgt. Ramirez
John Baer
John Baer
Lt. Whitley
Joe Sawyer
Joe Sawyer
Sgt. Maj. Phineas T. Keogh
Paul Campbell
Paul Campbell
Signal Man
Robert Foster Dover
Tubai

Trailers & Photos

No media available

Reviews

From TMDB users
John Chard
May 12, 2017

Sure he trusts us. About as far as I can throw a buffalo. Out of Columbia Pictures, Indian Uprising is directed by Ray Nazarro, written by Richard Schayer & Kenneth Gamet and stars George Montgomery, Audrey Long, Robert Shayne, Carl Benton Reid, Miguel Inclan & Eugene Iglesias. It's shot on location at Iverson Ranch, Chatsworth in California and Sedona in Arizona (Ellis W. Carter on photography). Arizona 1885 and Captain Chase McCloud (Montgomery) is desperately trying to keep the peace with the Geronimo (Inclan) led Apache. But the residents of Tuscon don't want peace, there's gold out on the Apache reservation, which is now deemed as sole Apache territory. So when a new commander comes to the base and McCloud is relieved of charge, the treaty is easily broken by the corrupt townsfolk who use underhand methods. Can McCloud avert all out war and restore peace with the now mistrusting Geronimo?. Considering its low budget restrictions and a largely unknown cast, Indian Uprising is far better than it has right to be. Sure the story is nothing out the ordinary, and definitely the "lone white man trying to keep peace" theme has been done considerably better than this. But the pace is brisk, the scenery pleasant and there's enough action spread out during the 75 minutes to keep the Western fan happy. Thesp wise it's stock performances for stock characters, tho Montgomery does fit the part well physically. While a waterside fisticuff sequence is a particular highlight. Shot in something boldly called Super Cine Color, the print of the film sadly isn't up to much. Cloudy colour flits in and out and spotting too is a reoccurring issue. It's unlikely that anyone loves this film enough to re-master it. Still the print issues aren't major enough to stop one from enjoying the film. Quickly forgotten once over, Indian Rising is, however, an enjoyable enough Oater to spend a part of the afternoon with. 6/10

More Like This

Browse all