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Lust for Gold

Ruthless Fortune Seekers Who Will Stop at Nothing...
1949 | 90m | English

(1826 votes)

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Popularity: 0.7 (history)

Details

A man determined to track down the fabled Arizona gold mine known as The Lost Dutchman has an affair with a married treasure hunter, whose pursuit of the mine has lead her to double-cross her husband.
Release Date: Jun 10, 1949
Director: George Marshall, S. Sylvan Simon
Writer: Ted Sherdeman, Barry Storm, Richard English
Genres: Action, Drama, Western
Keywords gold mine, western noir
Production Companies Columbia Pictures
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Aug 03, 2024
Entered: Apr 20, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Ida Lupino Julia Thomas
Glenn Ford Jacob 'Dutch' Walz
Gig Young Pete Thomas
William Prince Barry Storm
Edgar Buchanan Wiser
Will Geer Deputy Ray Covin
Paul Ford Sheriff Lynn Early
Jay Silverheels Walter
Percy Helton Barber
Elspeth Dudgeon Martha Bannister
Karolyn Grimes Young Martha
Paul E. Burns Bill Bates
Billy Gray Boy
Arthur Hunnicutt Ludi
Myrna Dell Lucille
Hayden Rorke Floyd Buckley
Eddy Waller Coroner
Virginia Farmer Claims Office Clerk
Maudie Prickett Townswoman
John Doucette Man in Barber Shop
Hank Bell Townsman (uncredited)
Chris Willow Bird Townsman (uncredited)
Nora Bush Townswoman (uncredited)
Antonio Moreno Ramon Peralta (uncredited)
Suzanne Ridgway Saloon Girl (uncredited)
Lucile Sewall Townswoman (uncredited)
Dorothy Vernon Townswoman (uncredited)
Eddy Waller Coroner (uncredited)
Will Wright Parsons (uncredited)
Name Job
George Marshall Director
Jock Mahoney Stunts
Kermit Maynard Stunts
S. Sylvan Simon Director
George Duning Original Music Composer
Jean Louis Costume Design
David Sharpe Stunt Double
Ted Sherdeman Screenplay
Barry Storm Novel
Archie Stout Director of Photography
Carl Anderson Art Direction
Earl McEvoy Assistant Director
Lodge Cunningham Sound Engineer
Richard English Screenplay
Gene Havlick Editor
Sidney Clifford Set Decoration
Bill Neff Gaffer
Clay Campbell Makeup Artist
Gil Perkins Stunts
Name Title
S. Sylvan Simon Producer
Earl McEvoy Associate Producer
Organization Category Person
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Popularity History


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Reviews

John Chard
8.0

The Lost Dutchman Gold Mine and Satan's private art gallery. Lust for Gold is directed by S. Sylvan Simon and adapted for the screen by Richard English & Ted Sherdeman from the novel Thunder God's Gold written by Barry Storm. It stars Ida Lupino, Glenn Ford, Gig Young and William Prince. Music is ... by George Duning and cinematography by Archie Stout. Superstition Mountains, home to the Lost Dutchman Gold Mine, and home to many deaths because of it... Is it a mythical legend or is it fact? What we do know is that the story of The Lost Dutchman Gold Mind, apparently located somewhere in the Superstition Mountains, East of Phoenix, Arizona, is one hell of a story and makes for an entertaining and interestingly structured Western flavoured movie. Hell! The film even has a tricky little back story that saw author Barry Storm, who was portrayed in the film by William Prince, sue the makers for misrepresentation of his character. Even citing Communism as being what he claimed were some underhand tactics. Further reading on this subject can be found on the internet and it's most interesting stuff. Also noteworthy is that director S. Sylvan Simon (I Love Trouble) was originally only producing the movie, direction was to be by George Marshall (Destry Rides Again/How The West Was Won), but the two of them clashed considerably so Simon took on directing duties as well. What should be said from the outset is that first time viewers would be well advised to read up on the legend of the Lost Dutchman Mine first. This will help considerably to enjoy the film more. This is because the picture covers three different time periods in history, with the beginning and end taking place in present day (1949 that is), and the centre bulk of the story set in 1880 as Dutchy Waltz (Ford) finds the gold and promptly finds hassle (the whole town) and treachery (Lupino's sultry femme fatale Julia Thomas) comes as part of the deal. The third point in history comes by way of an explanation as to the Apache Indian origins of the gold. None of it is confusing, but the flow of the film is inevitably stop-start, and with Prince's character (Barry Storm is related to Dutchy Waltz) providing a one note narration, film isn't as "great" as it should be. However, there is a lot of "great" things "in" Lust for Gold. Cast are mostly ace, with Lupino a dominating presence and Ford doing a nice line as, well, a sympathetic bastard! In secondary support you get a roll call of actors who have earned their spurs in the Western genre. Edgar Buchanan (Devil's Doorway), Will Geer (Broken Arrow), Arthur Hunnicut (The Big Sky) and Jay Silverheels (The Lone Ranger TV series and films). As fun and intriguing as the story is, and it is both, the best thing about the film is undoubtedly the location shooting by Archie Stout (Fort Apache). Originally shot in Sepia tones, the DVD release of the film is in crisp black and white (the Region 2 DVD offers a quality print), where the Superrstition Mountains make for an imposing presence throughout the tale, the beauty and hazards of the rock formations are expertly realised by Stout's photography. Although one can imagine Marshall would have stitched the story together better, and possibly got more mileage out of Gig Young's hapless husband character, Simon doesn't scrimp on the action sequences. There's plenty of fisticuffs within, plus a pulse raising Apache attack sequence. He also proves competent at honing a sweaty stand-off section, where the thirst becomes unbearable under the burning sun. This is a precursor to a genuinely eye opening turn of events before we zip back to the present day. It's then when you most likely will feel like I did, bitten by a yearning to get back to the old West in the company of gold hungry varmints and duplicitous females. 7.5/10

May 16, 2024