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The River's Edge

It was kill ... or be killed ... all the way down to The River's Edge.
1957 | 87m | English

(1475 votes)

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Popularity: 3 (history)

Details

A murderous thief on the run with stolen loot forces a poor rancher to guide him across the desert into Mexico. Accompanying them is the rancher's wife, who happens to be the killer's former girlfriend.
Release Date: Apr 11, 1957
Director: Allan Dwan
Writer: Harold Jacob Smith, James Leicester
Genres: Adventure, Crime
Keywords new mexico, ex-lover, ranch, hit-and-run, stolen money, on the run, con, husband and wife
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.

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Full Credits

Name Character
Ray Milland Nardo Denning
Anthony Quinn Ben Cameron
Debra Paget Meg Cameron
Harry Carey, Jr. Chet
Chubby Johnson Whiskers
Byron Foulger Floyd Barry (as Byron K. Foulger)
Tom McKee U.S. Border Patrol Captain
Frank Gerstle Harry Castleton
Lee Morgan Sheriff Lee (uncredited)
Name Job
Allan Dwan Director
Van Nest Polglase Production Design
Bobby Troup Songs
Louis Forbes Music, Songs
Harold Jacob Smith Screenplay, Story
James Leicester Screenplay, Editor
Gwen Wakeling Costume Design
Alma Johnson Hairstylist
Bernard Freericks Sound
Harry M. Leonard Sound
Lee Zavitz Special Effects
Harold Lipstein Director of Photography
Henry Spitz Assistant Director
Nacio Real Assistant Director
O.C. Harriman Production Assistant
Pauline Miller Script Supervisor
Name Title
Benedict Bogeaus Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 6 10 4
2024 5 6 12 3
2024 6 4 9 2
2024 7 5 10 2
2024 8 5 13 2
2024 9 3 6 1
2024 10 5 16 1
2024 11 3 6 1
2024 12 2 6 1
2025 1 4 9 2
2025 2 3 6 1
2025 3 2 4 1
2025 4 1 1 1
2025 5 1 2 1
2025 6 1 1 1
2025 7 0 0 0
2025 8 0 2 0
2025 9 3 4 2
2025 10 3 4 2

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Reviews

John Chard
8.0

I'm just a farmer, Denning, I don't know what the word "impeccable" means. If it means what it sounds like, uh, congratulations. The River's Edge is directed by Allan Dwan and adapted to screenplay by James Leicester from the story "The Highest Mountain" written by Harold Jacob Smith. It stars ... Ray Milland, Anthony Quinn and Debra Paget. A CinemaScope production with colour by De Luxe, music is by Louis Forbes and cinematography by Harold Lipstein. Ben Cameron (Quinn) and his wife Meg (Paget) are struggling to make their New Mexico ranch function as a happy working home. Enter shifty Nardo Denning (Milland), who has a past with Meg and has ulterior motives for suddenly appearing on the scene… "You know, if you were on a desert island with that guy and there was nothing but rocks, pretty soon he would have all the rocks moved to his side of the beach" Falling somewhere in the void between Noir and Western, The River's Edge is a delightfully sly and compact thriller that also boasts gorgeous location photography and splendidly garish colour compositions. It was kill or be killed all the way down to The River's Edge! Narratively it's a straight case of two men and one girl who wind up on the lam, with the foxy gal bouncing back and forth between the two men's affections like a ping-pong ball on legs. All three characters are flawed, their means and motivations deliberately scratchy, it makes for a near kinky noir love triangle, with dialogue that's often cynical or deliberately obtuse. The two guys are polar opposites, Denning is a spiv like manipulator, a dastard, Cameron is muscular but sincere, while Meg, with her shock of red hair scorching the landscape, has a murky past and is either confused or playing the cards close to her chest? Something is going to have to give... In the mix is violence, potent violence at that, a suitcase full of cash and the perils of the terrain that the trio traverse. It's with the latter where Dwan and Lipstein come to the fore, the Scope photography and framing of characters amongst the Mexican locales (Cuernavaca, Morelos), really belies the B budget afforded the production. Were it not for some cheap looking studio interior shots-the remarkable recovery of one character after an accident-and a twist in the ending that should have gone the other way, this would be better thought of than just being considered a B movie culter. Neon pinks and grubby greens mingle with shady grey characters for a whole bunch of fun. 7.5/10 Fox's Region 1 DVD features a very decent print and a detailed commentary track by noir aficionados James Ursini and Alain Silver.

May 16, 2024