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Devil's Doorway Poster

Devil's Doorway

M.G.M. presents a Great Drama of Flaming Frontiers !
1950 | 84m | English

(2189 votes)

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Popularity: 2 (history)

Director: Anthony Mann
Writer: Guy Trosper
Staring:
Details

A Native American Civil War hero returns home to fight for his people.
Release Date: Sep 15, 1950
Director: Anthony Mann
Writer: Guy Trosper
Genres: Western
Keywords sheep, native american, frontier justice, medal of honor
Production Companies Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Aug 03, 2024
Entered: Apr 20, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Robert Taylor Lance Poole
Louis Calhern Verne Coolan
Paula Raymond Orrie Masters
Marshall Thompson Rod MacDougall
James Mitchell Red Rock
Edgar Buchanan Zeke Carmody
Rhys Williams Scotty MacDougall
Spring Byington Mrs. Masters
James Millican Ike Stapleton
Bruce Cowling Lt. Grimes
Fritz Leiber Mr. Poole
Harry Antrim Dr. C.O. MacQuillan
Chief John Big Tree Thundercloud
Tom Fadden Bob, the Big Horn Saloon Bartender
Henry Marco Jimmy
Name Job
Anthony Mann Director
John Alton Director of Photography
Cedric Gibbons Art Direction
Guy Trosper Writer
Daniele Amfitheatrof Original Music Composer
Leonid Vasian Art Direction
Conrad A. Nervig Editor
Name Title
Nicholas Nayfack Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 5 8 2
2024 5 7 11 3
2024 6 7 13 3
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2025 8 0 1 0
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Reviews

John Chard
10.0

The law says an Indian ain't got no more rights than a dog. Devil's Doorway is directed by Anthony Mann. It stars Robert Taylor as Lance Poole, a Shoshone Indian who returns home to Medicine-Bow from the American Civil War after a three year stint, and a veteran of three major conflicts. Awarded ... the Congressional Medal of Honor he rightfully expects to be able to retire to a peaceful life back on the family land. However, all his hopes and dreams are shattered by bigotry and greed as new laws are ushered in to deprive the Native Indians land rights. Biting and cutting, Devil's Doorway is a Civil Rights Western that, boldly for its time, looks at the injustices done to Native Americans. Very much grim in texture, it's no surprise to see Anthony Mann at the helm for this material. Mann of course would go on to become a Western genre darling for his run of "Adult Westerns" he would do with James Stewart. Prior to this Mann had showed himself to have a keen eye for tough pieces with dark themes in a few well regarded film noir movies. So this was right up his street, in fact a glance at his output shows him to be something of a master when it comes to showing minority groups sympathetically. MGM were nervous tho, unsure as if taking the Western in this direction was the way to go, they pulled it from release in 1949. But after the impact that Delmer Daves' similar themed Broken Arrow made the following year, they ushered it out and the film promptly got lost amongst the plaudits for the James Stewart starrer. That's a shame because this is fit to sit alongside the best work Mann has done. Filmed in black & white, the film has beautiful landscapes that belie the bleak road the movie ultimately turns down. Shot on location at Aspen and Grand Junction in Colorado (the talented John Alton on cinematography), the film also manages to rise above its obvious eyebrow raising piece of casting. Robert Taylor always had his critics, hell I'm sometimes one of them, but here as he is cast against type as a Shoshone Indian, he gives the character conviction and a stoic nobility that really makes it work. Some of his scenes with the beautiful Paula Raymond (playing his lawyer Orrie Masters) are a lesson in maximum impact garnered from emotional restraint. You will be aware of the fluctuating skin pigmentation he has throughout the movie, but honestly look into his eyes and feel the confliction and loyalty and you really will not care. Scripted by Guy Trosper (Birdman of Alcatraz), the screenplay is unflinching in showing how badly the Native Americans were treated. Throw that in with Alton's other gift, that of the dusty barren land shot, and you got a very film noir feel to the movie. Something which not only is unique, but something that also showed a shift in the Hollywood Oater. We now get brains to match the action and aesthetics of the Western movie. Not that this is found wanting for action, Mann doesn't short change here either, with a dynamite led offensive purely adrenaline pumping. A fine fine movie, an important movie in fact. One that is in desperate need of more exposure. Still awaiting a widespread home format disc release, I quote Orrie Masters from the movie..."It would be too bad if we ever forget".... that applies to both the theme of the piece and the actual movie itself. 9/10

May 16, 2024