Menu
Garden of Evil Poster

Garden of Evil

Takes you beyond the land of the Black Sand!
1954 | 100m | English

(4245 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 1 (history)

Details

A trio of American adventurers marooned in rural Mexico are recruited by a beautiful woman to rescue her husband from Apaches.
Release Date: Jul 09, 1954
Director: Henry Hathaway
Writer: William Tunberg, Frank Fenton, Fred Freiberger
Genres: Western
Keywords apache nation, gold mine
Production Companies 20th Century Fox
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

No trailers or extras available.

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Gary Cooper Hooker
Susan Hayward Leah Fuller
Richard Widmark Fiske
Hugh Marlowe John Fuller
Cameron Mitchell Luke Daly
Rita Moreno Cantina Singer
Víctor Manuel Mendoza Vicente Madariaga
Antonio Bribiesca Bartender / Guitar Player at Puerto Miguel (uncredited)
Manuel Dondé Cantina Waiter (uncredited)
Arturo Soto Rangel Priest (uncredited)
Salvador Terroba Victim (uncredited)
Fernando Wagner Steamboat Captain (uncredited)
Name Job
William Tunberg Story
Lyle R. Wheeler Art Direction
Helen Turpin Hairstylist
Nicolás de la Rosa Sound
Bob Weatherford Sound Editor
Charles LeMaire Wardrobe Master
Rose Steinberg Script Supervisor
Frank Fenton Screenplay
James B. Clark Editor
Edward Fitzgerald Art Direction
Pablo Galván Set Decoration
Stanley Hough Assistant Director
Roger Heman Sr. Sound
Ray Kellogg Special Effects
Lyman Hallowell Assistant Editor
Chema Hernández Animal Wrangler
Henry Hathaway Director
Fred Freiberger Story
Bernard Herrmann Original Music Composer
Milton Krasner Director of Photography
Jorge Stahl Jr. Director of Photography
Travilla Costume Design
Ben Nye Makeup Artist
Name Title
Saul Wurtzel Associate Producer
Charles Brackett Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 11 16 8
2024 5 14 22 9
2024 6 11 17 6
2024 7 14 30 7
2024 8 11 18 7
2024 9 8 12 6
2024 10 12 22 6
2024 11 9 16 5
2024 12 10 19 5
2025 1 8 15 6
2025 2 8 12 2
2025 3 4 9 1
2025 4 2 3 1
2025 5 1 3 1
2025 6 1 2 1
2025 7 1 3 0
2025 8 1 2 0
2025 9 1 2 1
2025 10 1 1 1

Trending Position


No trending metrics available.

Return to Top

Reviews

John Chard
5.0

Big credentials, indifferent result. It's gold rush time and en route to California, Hooker (Gary Cooper), Fiske (Richard Widmark) and Luke Daly (Cameron Mitchell) stop over in a small Mexican village. Here the three men hook up with Vicente Madariaga (Victor Manuel Mendoza) and are lured by a ... desperate Leah Fuller (Susan Hayward) to go rescue her husband John (Hugh Marlowe), who is trapped in a gold mine up in the mountains. Mountains where hostile Indians lay in wait, but the Apache are not the only thing to be worried about, the other is themselves. With that cast, Henry Hathaway directing, Bernard Herrmann scoring and CinemaScope inspired location work coming from a volcano region in Mexico, you would think that Garden Of Evil would be far more well known than it actually is. That it isn't comes as no surprise once viewing it myself. Hathaway's film has real good intentions, it wants to be a brooding parable about the effects of greed, a character examination as men are forced to question their motives. Yet the film is muddled and winds up being bogged down by its eagerness to be profound. That it looks fabulous is a bonus of course, yet with this story the locale seems badly at odds in the narrative. This is more Aztec adventure than Western, I kept expecting one of Harryhausen's skeletons or a Valley Of Gwangi dinosaur to home into view, not Apache Indians, who quite frankly are miscast up there in them thar hills. Herrmann's score is terrific, truly, but it's in the wrong movie. It would be more at home in some science fiction blockbuster, or at least in some Jason & The Argonauts type sword and sandal piece. It has its good points, notably the cast who give compelling performances and some shots are to die for - with the final shot in the film one of the finest there is. But this is a wasted opportunity and proof positive that putting fine technical ingredients together can't compensate for an over ambitious and plodding script. 5/10

May 16, 2024
Wuchak
7.0

***Unique 50’s Western takes place in coastal Mexico and the volcanic interior*** A desperate woman (Susan Hayward) hires three gringos and a Mexican to help save her husband (Hugh Marlowe) trapped in a gold mine several days away in the volcanic jungles of Mexico. The men she enlists are played ... by Gary Cooper, Richard Widmark, Cameron Mitchell and Víctor Manuel Mendoza. Rita Moreno has a memorable bit part singing a song at a saloon. "Garden of Evil” (1954) is an unusual 50’s Western in that it takes place completely in former Aztecan areas of Mexico. The sceneries of the coast, jungles, deserts and (authentic) volcanic zones are magnificent and augmented by Bernard Herrmann’s score, which was his only one for a feature-length Western. The movie was remade as “Find a Place to Die” 24 years later, one of the few truly worthwhile Spaghetti Westerns due to its somber tone and quality characters rather than caricatures typical of Italo Westerns. This is basically a trail movie (the Western version of a road movie) in that a lot of the story consists of a small group traveling the imposing wilderness, similar to “The Train Robbers” (1973), but with jungle footage. The film runs 1 hour, 40 minutes, and was shot in Mexico as follows: The “colonial town" of Tepatzlan; the jungle areas alongside the Los Concheros River near Acapulco; Parícutin Mountain, which was surrounded by black volcanic sands; and the village of Guanajuato; meanwhile interior scenes were shot at Churubusco Studios in Mexico City. GRADE: B

Jun 23, 2021
Geronimo1967
6.0

Susan Hayward always was a little better at playing the feistier characters, and with her "Leah" role here, she certainly has a good try. She manages to convince three disparate men to travel with her from Mexico to a cave deep inside Apache territory to rescue her gold-mining husband who is trapped ... there. "Hooker" (Gary Cooper), "Fiske" (Richard Widmark) and "Fuller" (Hugh Marlow) have the uneasiest of truces between them at the best of times, but off they all go on some set-piece escapades to deliver the man. Hayward does plenty of smouldering here, but the rest of the story is pretty devoid of much action. There isn't much chemistry going on as each try to outmanoeuvre the other, stay alive and hopefully reap the $2,000 reward money she has promised them (which she quite possibly hasn't even got!). It does look good, plenty of grand outdoor cinematography, some lovely sunsets etc., but the title of this western is probably the most intriguing thing about it. Pity, had the direction been a bit tighter and more inspired, this could have been much better. Watchable, though, just not memorable.

Mar 28, 2022
Geronimo1967
6.0

Susan Hayward always was a little better at playing the feistier characters, and with her "Leah" role here, she certainly has a good try. She manages to convince three disparate men to travel with her from Mexico to a cave deep inside Apache territory to rescue her gold-mining husband who is trapped ... there. "Hooker" (Gary Cooper), "Fiske" (Richard Widmark) and "Fuller" (Hugh Marlow) have the uneasiest of truces between them at the best of times, but off they all go on some set-piece escapades to deliver the man. Hayward does plenty of smouldering here, but the rest of the story is pretty devoid of much action. There isn't much chemistry going on as each try to outmanoeuvre the other, stay alive and hopefully reap the $2,000 reward money she has promised them (which she quite possibly hasn't even got!). It does look good, plenty of grand outdoor cinematography, some lovely sunsets etc., but the title of this western is probably the most intriguing thing about it. Pity, had the direction been a bit tighter and more inspired, this could have been much better. Watchable, though, just not memorable.

Apr 04, 2022