Menu
Fort Apache Poster

Fort Apache

John Ford's Masterpiece of the Frontier!
1948 | 125m | English

(20953 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 2 (history)

Details

Owen Thursday sees his new posting to the desolate Fort Apache as a chance to claim the military honour which he believes is rightfully his. Arrogant, obsessed with military form and ultimately self-destructive, he attempts to destroy the Apache chief Cochise after luring him across the border from Mexico, against the advice of his subordinates.
Release Date: Jun 14, 1948
Director: John Ford
Writer: James Warner Bellah, Frank S. Nugent
Genres: Western
Keywords captain, apache nation, slaughter, colonel, black and white, military, tortured to death, american civil war, 19th century
Production Companies RKO Radio Pictures
Box Office Revenue: $3,000,000
Budget: $2,500,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
John Wayne Capt. Kirby York
Henry Fonda Lt. Col. Owen Thursday
Shirley Temple Philadelphia Thursday
Pedro Armendáriz Sgt. Beaufort
Ward Bond Sgt. Maj. Michael O'Rourke
George O’Brien Capt. Sam Collingwood
Victor McLaglen Sgt. Festus Mulcahy
Anna Lee Mrs. Emily Collingwood
Irene Rich Mrs. Mary O'Rourke
Dick Foran Sgt. Quincannon
Guy Kibbee Capt. Dr. Wilkens
Grant Withers Silas Meacham
Jack Pennick Sgt. Daniel Schattuck
Ray Hyke Lt. Gates
Movita Guadalupe
Miguel Inclán Cochise
Mary Gordon Ma (barmaid)
Philip Kieffer Cavalryman
Mae Marsh Mrs. Gates
Hank Worden Southern Recruit
John Agar 2nd Lt. Michael Shannon O'Rourke
Abdullah Abbas Officer at Dance (uncredited)
Danny Borzage Recruit With Mustache / Accordionist at Serenade (uncredited)
Cliff Clark Stage Driver (uncredited)
Jane Crowley Officer's Wife (uncredited)
Frank Ferguson Newspaperman (uncredited)
Francis Ford Fen - Stage Guard (uncredited)
William Forrest Reporter (uncredited)
Fred Graham Cavalryman (uncredited)
Frank McGrath Cpl. Derice (uncredited)
Clyde McLeod Officer at Dance (uncredited)
Russell Meeker Officer at Dance (uncredited)
Al Murphy Orchestra Leader (uncredited)
John Rice Officer at Dance (uncredited)
Phil Schumacher Soldier (uncredited)
Allen D. Sewall Officer at Dance (uncredited)
Mickey Simpson NCO at Dance (uncredited)
Leslie Sketchley Officer at Dance (uncredited)
Brick Sullivan Officer at Dance (uncredited)
Harry Tenbrook Tom O'Feeney (uncredited)
Archie Twitchell Reporter (uncredited)
Eleanore Vogel Officer's Wife (uncredited)
Name Job
John Ford Director
Dave Koehler Special Effects
Fred Graham Stunts
Frank McGrath Stunts
Terry Wilson Stunts
James Basevi Art Direction
Jack Colconda Property Master
Joseph Kish Set Dresser
Frank Parmenter Second Assistant Director
Frank Baker Stunts
Ted Mapes Stunts
Bob Rose Stunts
Jack Williams Stunts
James Warner Bellah Story
Jack Murray Editor
Joseph I. Kane Sound
Frank S. Nugent Screenplay
Archie Stout Director of Photography
Frank Webster Sound
Lowell J. Farrell Assistant Director
Lucien Cailliet Conductor, Music Arranger
Fred Carson Stunts
Emile LaVigne Makeup Artist
Ann Peck Costume Design
Daniel Hays Special Effects
John Epper Stunts
Gil Perkins Stunts
Barlow Simpson Stunts
Eddie Fitzgerald Camera Operator
Walt La Rue Stunts
Danny Sands Stunts
Richard Hageman Original Music Composer
William H. Clothier Cinematography
Cliff Lyons Second Unit Director, Stunts
Jack Pennick Assistant Director
Richard Farnsworth Stunts
John Hudkins Stunts
Ben Johnson Stunts
Name Title
Merian C. Cooper Producer
John Ford Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Academy Awards Best Picture N/A Nominated
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 23 41 14
2024 5 29 52 18
2024 6 19 35 13
2024 7 19 36 12
2024 8 19 36 10
2024 9 13 23 10
2024 10 17 37 7
2024 11 14 30 9
2024 12 14 21 7
2025 1 14 22 8
2025 2 10 16 3
2025 3 5 16 1
2025 4 2 4 1
2025 5 2 4 1
2025 6 1 3 1
2025 7 1 2 1
2025 8 2 3 1
2025 9 3 3 2
2025 10 2 3 2

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 2 442 548

Return to Top

Reviews

John Chard
9.0

Any questions? Fort Apache is the first film of what came to be known as John Ford's US Cavalry trilogy. Just like the other two, She Wore A Yellow Ribbon & Rio Grande, this is also based on a short story by James Warner Bellah. Originally intended to be shot in colour, it was however filmed in b ... lack and white with Ford still making spectacular use of the Monument Valley location. The story primarily deals with opposite factions within the same army. On one hand is Lt. Col. Owen Thursday (Henry Fonda), stiffly rigid in his beliefs, a stickler for the rules and pig ignorant and hostile towards the Indians he has been sent to control. On the other hand is Captain. Kirby York (John Wayne), more relaxed towards those under his command, he's also knowledgeable about, and respectful towards, the Indian race. Thursday is also something of a chauvinist and a snob, he is determined to stop a burgeoning union between his daughter Philadelphia (Shirley Temple) and Lieutenant O'Rourke (John Agar), with O'Rourke's homely family seen as too low for his daughter. All of this is played out in a far out military outpost, something else that Thursday also resents - that he was sent here instead of some place where a chance of glory was imminent. Ford's film is also intriguing in its view of army life for the women at the post. As the men go about their military chores, the women have to remain lady-like even in the face of stupidity and ignorance. And Ford also occupies much of the piece with military etiquette, rank and file and social standing. This is also one of his most overtly sympathetic movies as regards the Indians. Here it's the Apache, led by the wise and stoic Cochise, they are not painted as villains, instead they are victims of trouble stirred by vile Indian agent Meacham (Grant Wthers). It's this thread that leads us to the fabulous last thirty minutes of the film. Ford's action sequences are a given, highly impressive as always, but it's his parting shot that leaves the greatest indelible mark. The myths of the West and the need for heroes is given close scrutiny by the master director - food for thought as the close caption booms out of the screen. Fort Apache takes its lead from George Armstrong Custer's folly, and covers it with intelligence, wit and panoramic delights. 8.5/10

May 16, 2024
Geronimo1967
7.0

Certainly, I think, the best of the John Ford US cavalry trilogies this one. Henry Fonda is cracking as the honourable, but out of his depth, by-the-book colonel sent to run a ramshackle army post just as the Apache are on the rise again. He replaces the far more practically experienced John Wayne a ... nd soon it all gets a bit sticky. John Agar and Shirley Temple provide an amiable romantic sub-plot as the very green lieutenant son of the Sergeant Major (Ward Bond) and the daughter of the Colonel who fall in love - despite the disapproval of (for different reasons) both sets of parents. The photography is, as usual, quite stunning - George O'Brien; Pedro Armedáris, Dick Foran and the inimitable Victor McLaglen all contribute hugely (and frequently humorously) to a tight little, and occasionally quite thought-provoking, Frank Nugent screenplay and the Admiral maintains a decent degree of jeopardy - between the two, on-form, leads and between them and the Apache - until the very, gallant, end. It's held up remarkably well, nodding subtly - but distinctly - to the appalling way the native American tribes were treated during the pioneering, expansion of the United States.

Jul 09, 2022