Canyon River (film)

Canyon River
Directed by Harmon Jones
Produced by Richard Heermance
Screenplay by Daniel B. Ullman
Starring George Montgomery
Marcia Henderson
Peter Graves
Music by Marlin Skiles
Cinematography Ellsworth Fredericks
Edited by George White
Production
company
Scott R. Dunlap Productions
Distributed by Allied Artists Pictures
Release date
  • August 5, 1956 (1956-08-05)
Running time
80 minutes
Country  United States
Language English

Canyon River is a 1956 Allied Artists American Western film in CinemaScope and Color by De Luxe directed by Harmon Jones. It stars George Montgomery as the head of a cattle drive.[1]

Plot summary

A cattleman (George Montgomery actor) goes south to pick up breeding stock that he can cross-breed to withstand his Wyoming ranch's winter's, but his foreman (Peter Graves) is in cahoots with a crooked businessman from the ranch's hometown in Wyoming. They plan to buy up ranchland in that area, do away with the cattleman (George Montgomery) and steal his herd he's driving in from Oregon or elsewhere. Near the end of the movie and before they reach a planned 'stampede to steal the cattle', Montgomery likes Graves and offers him a share of his 6,000 acre ranch and also some cattle. Graves decides this would be a great deal and tries to call off the 'crooked deal' he made with the crooked investor and his hired guns, but the cattle do stampede andyway and Graves is critically injured trying to stop them. In the end Montgomery maintains his cattle and ranch ownership. So the 'good guy' wins. On the trail drive, there had been a shortage of 'meat' to feed the crew, because the boss Montgomery wouldn't kill a beef from his herd. The crew was about to mutiny, until a 'deer' was killed and steaks were served.

Cast

References

  1. Wallmann, Jeffrey M. (1999). The Western: Parables of the American Dream. Texas Tech University Press. p. 132. ISBN 978-0-89672-423-5.
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