Status
Released
original language
English
Budget
$ 0
Revenue
$ 0
Miss Mary McCloud
Bob Seton
William 'Will' Cantrell
Fletcher 'Fletch' McCloud
Andrew 'Doc' Grunch
Angus McCloud
Mrs. Cantrell / Mrs. Adams
Judge Buckner
Bushropp
Mrs. Hale
Dave
Mr. Hale
Townsman
Phil - Guerrilla Guarding Seton
Guerrilla
Townsman
Guerrilla
Tough
Juror
Slave Trader
Brawler
Townswoman
Townsman
Townsman on Balcony
Townsman
Townsman
Minister
Guerrilla
Juror #3
Townsman
Angry Townsman in Bank
Child
Child
Guerrilla
Town Leader
Town Leader
Townswoman
Child
Townsman
Ellie - Mary's Maid
Townsman
Tough Yankee #2
Townsman
Jury Foreman
Southerner Orating for Votes
Townsman
Guerrilla
Guerrilla
Townsman
Messenger
Townsman
Juror #2
Child
Townsman
Farmer
Guerrilla
Cantrell Man
Guerrilla
Child
Child
Child
Child
Dental Patient #1
Child
Assassin of Angus McCloud
Tom - McClouds' Servant
Posse Rider
Man About to Withdraw Money from Bank
Tough Yankee #1
Guerrilla
Angry Townsman in Bank
Guerrilla
Banker
Child
Townswoman
Townswoman
Guerrilla
Man in Fight with Seton
Yankee
Child
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