Status

Released

original language

English

Budget

$ 0

Revenue

$ 0

Top Billed Cast

Claire Trevor

Miss Mary McCloud

John Wayne

Bob Seton

Walter Pidgeon

William 'Will' Cantrell

Roy Rogers

Fletcher 'Fletch' McCloud

George 'Gabby' Hayes

Andrew 'Doc' Grunch

Porter Hall

Angus McCloud

Marjorie Main

Mrs. Cantrell / Mrs. Adams

Raymond Walburn

Judge Buckner

Joe Sawyer

Bushropp

Helen MacKellar

Mrs. Hale

J. Farrell MacDonald

Dave

Trevor Bardette

Mr. Hale

Ernie Adams

Townsman

Richard Alexander

Phil - Guerrilla Guarding Seton

Earl Askam

Guerrilla

Hank Bell

Townsman

Ray Bennett

Guerrilla

Stanley Blystone

Tough

Ed Brady

Juror

Al Bridge

Slave Trader

Roy Bucko

Brawler

Nora Bush

Townswoman

Budd Buster

Townsman

Yakima Canutt

Townsman on Balcony

Bob Card

Townsman

Horace B. Carpenter

Townsman

Burr Caruth

Minister

Noble 'Kid' Chissell

Guerrilla

Edmund Cobb

Juror #3

Tex Cooper

Townsman

Harry Cording

Angry Townsman in Bank

Bobby Crandall

Child

Marvin Davis

Child

Art Dillard

Guerrilla

John Dilson

Town Leader

Edward Earle

Town Leader

Betty Farrington

Townswoman

Robert Ferrero

Child

Joseph Forte

Townsman

Mildred Gover

Ellie - Mary's Maid

Herman Hack

Townsman

Frank Hagney

Tough Yankee #2

Al Haskell

Townsman

Edward Hearn

Jury Foreman

Howard Hickman

Southerner Orating for Votes

Lloyd Ingraham

Townsman

Jack Kirk

Guerrilla

Ethan Laidlaw

Guerrilla

Mike Lally

Townsman

Tom London

Messenger

Walter Long

Townsman

Jack Low

Juror #2

Herbert MacGregor

Child

Cactus Mack

Townsman

Nelson McDowell

Farmer

Joe McGuinn

Guerrilla

John Merton

Cantrell Man

Jack Montgomery

Guerrilla

Dolly Nardon

Child

Lawrence Osman

Child

Russell Palmer

Child

Harvard Peck

Child

Dick Rich

Dental Patient #1

Lee Riggin

Child

Jack Rockwell

Assassin of Angus McCloud

Clinton Rosemond

Tom - McClouds' Servant

Tom Smith

Posse Rider

Harry Strang

Man About to Withdraw Money from Bank

Glenn Strange

Tough Yankee #1

Bob Sáenz

Guerrilla

Hal Taliaferro

Angry Townsman in Bank

Al Taylor

Guerrilla

Ferris Taylor

Banker

Ernest Tobey

Child

Ethel Wales

Townswoman

Cecil Weston

Townswoman

Henry Wills

Guerrilla

Harry Woods

Man in Fight with Seton

Bob Woodward

Yankee

Michael Miller

Child

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Movie Reviews

A review by John Chard

Written by John Chard on 2020-04-26

On to Kansas we go. Loosely based around a true story, Dark Command sees John Wayne play Bob Seton, an uneducated cowboy from Texas who wins around the people of Lawrence, Kansas to become their town Marshall just prior to the outbreak of the civil war. This angers the previously respectful town teacher, Will Cantrell (Walter Pidgeon), who after being beaten on the vote by Seton, forms guerrilla groups to raid, pillage and gun run around the Kansas countryside. Seton, now ensconced in the ways of the law, sets about crushing Cantrell and his unfeeling raiders, but there is also another matter at hand. Both men have deep affection for the same woman, Mary McCloud (Claire Trevor appearing with Wayne again after Stagecoach the previous year), so things are just that little bit more spicy between them as things start to come to a head. Directed by Raoul Walsh and adapted from the novel by W.R. Burnett ("Little Caesar" & "High Sierra"), the picture also contains fine support from Roy Rogers, Gabby Hayes and features a pleasing score from Victor Young. Though historically dubious, Dark Command is no less enjoyable for being a creaky distortion of the "Quantrill's Raiders" (Re: Cantrell} period in history. Those after a history lesson would be well advised to source from elsewhere in that respect. Catching John Wayne just as he was about to become the towering presence he was, the film also serves as notice to a time when stunts and character interplay were precious commodities. Walsh, ever the sharp eye for action, delivers some wonderful sequences here, horses and carts are a thundering, even careering over cliffs at one point. Whilst the final raid on Lawrence is a blood pumping feast for the eyes. But it's with the feel of the film that it ultimately succeeds as a period piece of note. The mood is dark as the civil War looms, slave trading and gun running sit distastefully with dubious politics, and then the war, with Cantrell and his raiders taking their spoils of war leaving a particularly nasty taste in the mouth. All of which is moodily cloaked in a Raoul Walsh inspired sheen. A tip top production all round, and a fine cast on form makes Dark Command a must see for Republic Studios enthusiasts. See it if you can. 7/10