Dark Command

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Dark Command

1940 movie poster
Directed by Raoul Walsh
Produced by Sol C. Siegel
Written by screenplay by
Jan Fortune
F. Hugh Herbert
Lionel Houser
Grover Jones
from the novel by
W.R. Burnett
Starring Claire Trevor
John Wayne
Walter Pidgeon
Roy Rogers
George "Gabby" Hayes
Porter Hall
Marjorie Main
Music by Victor Young
Cinematography Jack A. Marta
Distributed by Republic Pictures
Release date(s) April 15, 1940
Running time 94 min
Country Flag of the United States United States
Language English
Budget approx. $750,000[1]
Allmovie profile
IMDb profile

Dark Command is a 1940 western film loosely based on Quantrill's Raiders in the American Civil War. Directed by Raoul Walsh from the novel by W.R. Burnett, the film features Claire Trevor, John Wayne and Walter Pidgeon. Dark Command is the only film in which western icons John Wayne and Roy Rogers appear together, and was the first film Wayne and Raoul Walsh made together since Wayne's first leading role in the widescreen western The Big Trail a decade before.

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[edit] Plot summary

Mary McCloud (Claire Trevor) marries a seemingly peaceful Kansas schoolteacher William Cantrell (Walter Pidgeon), before finding out that he harbors a dark secret. He is actually an outlaw leader who attacks both sides in the Civil War for his own profit. After capturing a wagon loaded with Confederate uniforms, he decides to pass himself off as a Confederate officer. Her naive, idealistic brother Fletcher (Roy Rogers) joins what he believes is a Rebel guerrilla force. Meanwhile, Cantrell's stern, but loved mother (Marjorie Main) refuses to accept any of her son's ill-gotten loot.

A former suitor of Mary's, Union supporter Bob Seton (John Wayne), is captured by Cantrell and scheduled for execution. After being rescued by a disillusioned Fletcher McCloud, Seton and Mary Cantrell race to the town of Lawrence (site of an actual infamous Quantrill-led massacre) to warn the residents of an impending attack by Cantrell's gang.

[edit] Cast

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Notes for Dark Command (1940). tcm.com. Retrieved on 2007-11-10.

[edit] External links