Duel at Diablo (1966)

Duel at Diablo (1966)
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Frontier scout Jess Remsberg (James Garner) is crossing the desert when he spots a dead army scout and group of Apaches pursuing someone -- it turns out to be a white woman, Ellen Grange (Bibi Andersson); he gets her away from them and returns her to her home and her husband Willard (Dennis Weaver), who seems much more upset that the horse she was riding when she left is dead than he is glad that she is back. Ellen was kidnapped by the Apaches two years before and rescued a year after that, and had fled a town where her husband and everyone else had treated her as an outcast since her return. Apart from preventing her from being raped by some drunken townsmen, however, Remsberg barely has time to worry over what goes on between them, as he has a mission of his own -- tracking down the men who murdered his wife, a Comanche woman. A key clue is in the hands of the town marshal in Fort Conchos and to get there he has to scout for a cavalry unit bringing horses, ammunition, and fresh recruits to the fort, with Grange and his wife -- and the infant son she had by the Indian chieftain who took her as his squaw -- going along, with ex-buffalo soldier-turned-horse wrangler Toler (Sidney Poitier). Their party ends up under siege by Chata (John Hoyt), the Apache Indian chief and grandfather to Ellen Grange's baby, who has jumped the reservation; he wants his grandson back, and the ammunition the troop was carrying, and also intends on killing Ellen for inadvertently causing the death of his son. They all end up trapped in a box canyon while Remsberg tries to survive to get help from Fort Conchos. If this all sounds complicated, it's not, especially as told by director Nelson, in a straightforward, unpretentious, brisk, and decidedly violent fashion that anticipates his own Soldier Blue, made four years later. Every plot element links up neatly in this script, which quite effectively recalls (and weaves together) elements of the book and the movie Hondo as well as any number of revenge westerns of the 1960's. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi

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Starring:
James GarnerSidney Poitier, (more)
Director(s):
Ralph Nelson
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Duel at Diablo

Frontier scout Jess Remsberg (James Garner) is crossing the desert when he spots a dead army scout and group of Apaches pursuing someone -- it turns out to be a white woman, Ellen Grange (Bibi Andersson); he gets her away from them and returns her to her home and her husband Willard (Dennis Weaver), who seems much more upset that the horse she was riding when she left is dead than he is glad that she is back. Ellen was kidnapped by the Apaches two years before and rescued a year after that, and had fled a town where her husband and everyone else had treated her as an outcast since her return. Apart from preventing her from being raped by some drunken townsmen, however, Remsberg barely has time to worry over what goes on between them, as he has a mission of his own -- tracking down the men who murdered his wife, a Comanche woman. A key clue is in the hands of the town marshal in Fort Conchos and to get there he has to scout for a cavalry unit bringing horses, ammunition, and fresh recruits to the fort, with Grange and his wife -- and the infant son she had by the Indian chieftain who took her as his squaw -- going along, with ex-buffalo soldier-turned-horse wrangler Toler (Sidney Poitier). Their party ends up under siege by Chata (John Hoyt), the Apache Indian chief and grandfather to Ellen Grange's baby, who has jumped the reservation; he wants his grandson back, and the ammunition the troop was carrying, and also intends on killing Ellen for inadvertently causing the death of his son. They all end up trapped in a box canyon while Remsberg tries to survive to get help from Fort Conchos. If this all sounds complicated, it's not, especially as told by director Nelson, in a straightforward, unpretentious, brisk, and decidedly violent fashion that anticipates his own Soldier Blue, made four years later. Every plot element links up neatly in this script, which quite effectively recalls (and weaves together) elements of the book and the movie Hondo as well as any number of revenge westerns of the 1960's. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
104 mins

Complete Cast of Duel at Diablo


Director(s):
Ralph Nelson
Writer(s):
Michel M. GrilikhesMarvin H. Albert
Producer(s):
Fred EngelRalph Nelson
Categories:
Westerns
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    Victor C.

    Very good fight scenes with James Garner, good horsemanship too even with Sidney Portier. The plot is pretty good, with everything very plausibly presented. You won't see stuntwork like this by any major star in one of today's movies. Dennis Weaver and Bibi Anderssen are in this too. Be on the lookout for the director's cameo as the Colonel of the calvery towards the end of the movie. This is the first movie to feature a Black man starring in a Western and Sidney really takes the bull by the horns as a bronc buster, so look out for his real horsemanship on film. Native Americans are portrayed very barbarically here, showing them scalping, and torturing several characters to slow and gruesome deaths.

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    James C.

    What I found most dissapointing is the format that this disc was in. I don't understand why I should have black bars on all four sides on a widescreen tv. Its either a letterbox with bars on top and bottom or 4:3 with bars on sides not both. I dropped the film one star for that alone. As to content the flim was a 2 or 3 stars the most.

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    Edythe P.

    James Garner & Sidney Poitier are excellent in this movie - and very young! Not a bad plot, no swearing, but plenty of gruesome torture by the Indians and enough fighting, riding, shooting and bronco busting to keep even the men interested.

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