Thunder Over the Plains


1h 22m 1953
Thunder Over the Plains

Brief Synopsis

An Army captain risks his own freedom to prove a rebel leader innocent.

Film Details

Also Known As
Come On, Texas, Raids of the Southwest
Genre
Western
Release Date
Dec 12, 1953
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.
Distribution Company
Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.
Country
United States
Location
Calabasas--Warner Ranch, California, United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 22m
Sound
Mono (RCA Sound System)
Color
Color (Warnercolor)
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1

Synopsis

In 1869, the war-impoverished people of Texas are being swindled by carpetbaggers from the North, and a member of the U.S. Army of Occupation sent to keep the peace, Capt. David Porter, who was reared in Texas, has been assigned to police a cotton auction. H. I. Standish, a corrupt tax assessor, has raised the farmers' taxes impossibly high and caused foreclosures. Despite the townspeople's suspicion and coldness toward him and his wife Norah, Porter feels that he should remain stationed there, so that his position is not filled by someone unsympathetic to the Texans' plight. Although his sympathies lie with the angry farmers, Porter carries out his duties, but then refuses to escort Standish and Balfour, the buyer with whom Standish is in cahoots, to deliver the cotton. On the way to the railhead, where the cotton is to be shipped north, Balfour's wagon train is raided by Ben Westman and his gang of outlaw Texans, who are fighting the unjust system. After burning the cotton, which Balfour bought at a rock-bottom price, the gang forces Standish and Balfour to return to town, shoeless and in their underwear. After they complain to Porter's superior officer, Lt. Col. Chandler, Porter is held responsible for his inability to stop Westman's recurring attacks. Later, for reward money offered by Balfour, a townsman, Henley, reveals Westman's hideout, and Porter is sent to arrest the gang with Capt. Bill Hodges, a cocky, trigger-happy, West Point officer who has been recently assigned to Texas with Army reinforcements. When Hodges preempts Porter's orders by attacking before the rest of the soldiers are in place, one man is unnecessarily killed and the rest of the gang escapes. Back at the fort, Hodges strikes up a friendship with Norah, who is homesick for the friends and civilization she left in the East, but then tries to force himself on her. Porter comes home in time to rescue Norah, but the men's professional relationship is now completely severed. Meanwhile, Henley, fearing Westman's retaliation, wants to get out of town and tries to collect the reward money from Balfour. Balfour kills Henley as Standish watches, then gets Westman blamed for the murder. Although Porter tries to make Chandler see that recent events are more complicated than they seem, Chandler orders him to bring in Westman. Using a cotton shipment as bait, Porter lures Westman into a trap and forces his surrender, but guessing that Westman did not commit murder, promises him a fair trial. However, Chandler has received orders from headquarters to hang Westman immediately under martial law. Porter begs for time to prove Westman's innocence. When Westman's men take Standish as hostage in exchange for Westman's release, Chandler moves up the time of the hanging, pending the return of Standish. Believing that Standish knows the truth about Henley's death, Porter sneaks out to talk to him and the gang, but his exit from town dressed as a civilian is seen and reported to Chandler by Balfour's men. Believing that Porter is in league with the gang, Chandler sends Hodges with some other soldiers to arrest them all. In the attack, Standish is killed after telling Porter about a written confession he left in his office, and Porter and Westman's men are captured. However, many of them, including Porter, manage to escape the soldiers, with the help of men in town. Porter sneaks to Standish's office and after he finds the papers clearing Westman of murder, Balfour and his henchmen show up. Porter is wounded in the ensuing fight, but shoots Balfour and his men, and manages to get to the hanging with the confession in time to save Westman. During the following months, the Army is pulled out of Texas and the government returned to the Texans. A year later, Texas is re-admitted into the Union, and Westman and his men are pardoned.

Film Details

Also Known As
Come On, Texas, Raids of the Southwest
Genre
Western
Release Date
Dec 12, 1953
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.
Distribution Company
Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.
Country
United States
Location
Calabasas--Warner Ranch, California, United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 22m
Sound
Mono (RCA Sound System)
Color
Color (Warnercolor)
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
1.37 : 1

Articles

Thunder Over the Plains -


Handsome leading man Randolph Scott enjoyed a varied career but after WW2 appeared almost exclusively in westerns, playing more or less the same laconic, moral character in as many as four 'A' attractions per year. The less he changed, the more popular he became. A full six features between 1951 and 1954 were directed by André de Toth, a talented Hungarian émigré known for tense dramas with strong character conflicts. Thunder Over the Plains (1953) sends Scott's Union Captain on a peacekeeping mission to Texas, where he finds dishonest carpetbaggers Elisha Cook Jr. and Hugh Sanders taking advantage of hard times after the Confederate defeat. Sympathizing with the 'occupied' Texans, Scott refuses to compound the injustice by arresting the Robin Hood-like Texan resistance leader, Charles McGraw. But Scott's trigger-happy fellow officer Lex Barker goes on the offensive, framing McGraw for a murder and making moves on Scott's pretty wife, Phyllis Kirk. Scott is compelled to defy his orders, reach for his guns and save McGraw from a hanging. Critics thought the show was better than average, although none noted its marked anti- Washington political stance. In an unexpectedly refreshing casting switch, handsome former Tarzan Lex Barker is the treacherous wife-stealer, while the coarse-voiced tough guy Charles McGraw gets to play a noble rebel patriot. Randolph Scott's straight-arrow western persona eventually earned him a classic joke in Mel Brooks' Blazing Saddles (1973), where just the mention of the star's name inspires an admiring, worshipful response from a crowd of townspeople: "Oooooh... Randolph Scott!

By Glenn Erickson
Thunder Over The Plains -

Thunder Over the Plains -

Handsome leading man Randolph Scott enjoyed a varied career but after WW2 appeared almost exclusively in westerns, playing more or less the same laconic, moral character in as many as four 'A' attractions per year. The less he changed, the more popular he became. A full six features between 1951 and 1954 were directed by André de Toth, a talented Hungarian émigré known for tense dramas with strong character conflicts. Thunder Over the Plains (1953) sends Scott's Union Captain on a peacekeeping mission to Texas, where he finds dishonest carpetbaggers Elisha Cook Jr. and Hugh Sanders taking advantage of hard times after the Confederate defeat. Sympathizing with the 'occupied' Texans, Scott refuses to compound the injustice by arresting the Robin Hood-like Texan resistance leader, Charles McGraw. But Scott's trigger-happy fellow officer Lex Barker goes on the offensive, framing McGraw for a murder and making moves on Scott's pretty wife, Phyllis Kirk. Scott is compelled to defy his orders, reach for his guns and save McGraw from a hanging. Critics thought the show was better than average, although none noted its marked anti- Washington political stance. In an unexpectedly refreshing casting switch, handsome former Tarzan Lex Barker is the treacherous wife-stealer, while the coarse-voiced tough guy Charles McGraw gets to play a noble rebel patriot. Randolph Scott's straight-arrow western persona eventually earned him a classic joke in Mel Brooks' Blazing Saddles (1973), where just the mention of the star's name inspires an admiring, worshipful response from a crowd of townspeople: "Oooooh... Randolph Scott! By Glenn Erickson

TCM Remembers Andre de Toth


Andre De Toth, the director and writer behind such memorable genre films as Pitfall (1948), a film noir, The Indian Fighter (1955), a Western, Play Dirty (1968), a war thriller, and arguably the best 3-D movie ever made, House of Wax (1953), died on October 27 of an aneurysm in his Burbank home. He was believed to be 89, although biographical references to his birth year vary from 1910 to 1913.

Born in Mako, Hungary to the son of a civil engineer, De Toth showed an early artistic bent, having his first exhibit of paintings and sculpture at age 14 and seeing his first play produced at age 18. After obtaining his law degree from the University of Budapest, he began acting, writing and working as a cameraman for cinematographer Istvan Eiben. In 1939, he went to England, where he worked as a second unit director for Alexander Korda on The Thief of Bagdad and other films. De Toth immigrated to Hollywood in the early '40s, and worked with Korda on The Jungle Book (1942) and several other films.

He made his Hollywood directing debut with the 1943 feature, Passport to Suez, a propaganda thriller about the Nazis wanting to bomb the Suez Canal.

Impressed with his ability, Harry Cohn, head of Columbia Pictures, put the director under contract for one film and the result, None Shall Escape (1944), launched his Hollywood career. This tense, sensitive drama about a Nazi officer made to examine his actions was fascinating in its structure: Set after the war's end, the film centers around the trial of a Nazi butcher, Wilhelm Grimm (Alexander Knox), in Poland and makes excellent use of flashbacks illustrating the prosecution's testimony to form the bulk of the film. In a way, the film predicted the Nuremberg Trials after the war.

de Toth earned considerable critical acclaim with the taut, intense noir thriller Pitfall (1948) which he co-wrote. Starring Dick Powell, Lizabeth Scott and Raymond Burr, this story of a bored insurance salesman who embarks on an affair because he feels stifled in his picture-perfect home (a devoted wife, son, nice house, successful career, etc.) was striking as one of the first films to examine the American dream gone sour. De Toth followed that with a shared Oscar nomination with William Bowers for Best Original Motion Picture Story for The Gunfighter (1950), a haunting character study of a killer (Gregory Peck) trying to live down his past.

His biggest commercial hit came with House of Wax (1953), the movie that launched Vincent Price's horror film career and is still regarded as the best of all three-dimensional films to be released during that period. Unlike other directors who seemed to be dabbling with a new technique, De Toth emphasized character and plot over the special effects: Price was a sculptor rebuilding his wax figure collection (destroyed by fire) by making statues out of his murder victims. The one-eyed de Toth was an odd choice to helm a 3-D film as he could not experience the stereoscopic process, having lost an eye in his youth, but he persevered and it was the most successful 3-D film of its day.

De Toth followed that hit with some fine films: Crime Wave (1954), a hostage thriller that boasts some fine performances by Sterling Hayden and Gene Nelson and excellent location shooting on the streets of Los Angeles; The Indian Fighter (1955) an exciting Kirk Douglas vehicle about a wagon master leading his train through rough territory that won accolades for depicting the Native Americans with more depth than contemporary directors; and Day of the Outlaw (1959), the stark, stylish, low budget western about an outlaw (Burl Ives) and his gang taking over taking a small town and matching wits with one of its citizens (Robert Ryan). For many, this film best articulated many of the recurring themes in De Toth's work that would be evaluated only decades later by film scholars: survival, betrayal, the capacity for evil and complexities of human relationships.

In the early sixties film work became increasingly scarce for De Toth and he found himself relegated to directing for television: Maverick, 77 Sunset Strip and The Westerner. Tired of the limitations he was finding in Hollywood, De Toth headed to Europe in the '60s, where he found work as an uncredited consultant and location scout on David Lean's extravagant Lawrence of Arabia (1962). He directed a few films abroad, the best of which was the World War II action film Play Dirty (1968), starring Michael Caine, and then he more or less retired from active filmmaking. It was not until recently that De Toth began to receive critical recognition for his entertaining body of work. The last few years have seen several retrospectives and he enjoyed a renewed popularity at film festivals from Scotland to San Francisco. His contributions to film were recognized with the 1995 life achievement prize by the Los Angeles Film Critics Association and the publication of his autobiography, Fragments: Portraits From the Inside, as well as an interview book, De Toth on De Toth, by Anthony Slide. De Toth was married for a time to Veronica Lake (1944-1952) with whom he had two children. He is survived by his wife, Ann Green.

by Michael T. Toole

TCM Remembers Andre de Toth

Andre De Toth, the director and writer behind such memorable genre films as Pitfall (1948), a film noir, The Indian Fighter (1955), a Western, Play Dirty (1968), a war thriller, and arguably the best 3-D movie ever made, House of Wax (1953), died on October 27 of an aneurysm in his Burbank home. He was believed to be 89, although biographical references to his birth year vary from 1910 to 1913. Born in Mako, Hungary to the son of a civil engineer, De Toth showed an early artistic bent, having his first exhibit of paintings and sculpture at age 14 and seeing his first play produced at age 18. After obtaining his law degree from the University of Budapest, he began acting, writing and working as a cameraman for cinematographer Istvan Eiben. In 1939, he went to England, where he worked as a second unit director for Alexander Korda on The Thief of Bagdad and other films. De Toth immigrated to Hollywood in the early '40s, and worked with Korda on The Jungle Book (1942) and several other films. He made his Hollywood directing debut with the 1943 feature, Passport to Suez, a propaganda thriller about the Nazis wanting to bomb the Suez Canal. Impressed with his ability, Harry Cohn, head of Columbia Pictures, put the director under contract for one film and the result, None Shall Escape (1944), launched his Hollywood career. This tense, sensitive drama about a Nazi officer made to examine his actions was fascinating in its structure: Set after the war's end, the film centers around the trial of a Nazi butcher, Wilhelm Grimm (Alexander Knox), in Poland and makes excellent use of flashbacks illustrating the prosecution's testimony to form the bulk of the film. In a way, the film predicted the Nuremberg Trials after the war. de Toth earned considerable critical acclaim with the taut, intense noir thriller Pitfall (1948) which he co-wrote. Starring Dick Powell, Lizabeth Scott and Raymond Burr, this story of a bored insurance salesman who embarks on an affair because he feels stifled in his picture-perfect home (a devoted wife, son, nice house, successful career, etc.) was striking as one of the first films to examine the American dream gone sour. De Toth followed that with a shared Oscar nomination with William Bowers for Best Original Motion Picture Story for The Gunfighter (1950), a haunting character study of a killer (Gregory Peck) trying to live down his past. His biggest commercial hit came with House of Wax (1953), the movie that launched Vincent Price's horror film career and is still regarded as the best of all three-dimensional films to be released during that period. Unlike other directors who seemed to be dabbling with a new technique, De Toth emphasized character and plot over the special effects: Price was a sculptor rebuilding his wax figure collection (destroyed by fire) by making statues out of his murder victims. The one-eyed de Toth was an odd choice to helm a 3-D film as he could not experience the stereoscopic process, having lost an eye in his youth, but he persevered and it was the most successful 3-D film of its day. De Toth followed that hit with some fine films: Crime Wave (1954), a hostage thriller that boasts some fine performances by Sterling Hayden and Gene Nelson and excellent location shooting on the streets of Los Angeles; The Indian Fighter (1955) an exciting Kirk Douglas vehicle about a wagon master leading his train through rough territory that won accolades for depicting the Native Americans with more depth than contemporary directors; and Day of the Outlaw (1959), the stark, stylish, low budget western about an outlaw (Burl Ives) and his gang taking over taking a small town and matching wits with one of its citizens (Robert Ryan). For many, this film best articulated many of the recurring themes in De Toth's work that would be evaluated only decades later by film scholars: survival, betrayal, the capacity for evil and complexities of human relationships. In the early sixties film work became increasingly scarce for De Toth and he found himself relegated to directing for television: Maverick, 77 Sunset Strip and The Westerner. Tired of the limitations he was finding in Hollywood, De Toth headed to Europe in the '60s, where he found work as an uncredited consultant and location scout on David Lean's extravagant Lawrence of Arabia (1962). He directed a few films abroad, the best of which was the World War II action film Play Dirty (1968), starring Michael Caine, and then he more or less retired from active filmmaking. It was not until recently that De Toth began to receive critical recognition for his entertaining body of work. The last few years have seen several retrospectives and he enjoyed a renewed popularity at film festivals from Scotland to San Francisco. His contributions to film were recognized with the 1995 life achievement prize by the Los Angeles Film Critics Association and the publication of his autobiography, Fragments: Portraits From the Inside, as well as an interview book, De Toth on De Toth, by Anthony Slide. De Toth was married for a time to Veronica Lake (1944-1952) with whom he had two children. He is survived by his wife, Ann Green. by Michael T. Toole

Quotes

Trivia

Notes

Working titles of the film were Come On, Texas and Raids of the Southwest. The story opens with voice-over narration describing the condition of Texas after the Civil War. According to a July 1952 Hollywood Reporter news item, production of the film was delayed due to a fire on the Warner Bros. studio lot on July 9, 1952, which resulted in the destruction of many outdoor sets. Although his appearance in the film has not been confirmed, a September 1952 Hollywood Reporter news item adds Richard Lightner to the cast. Portions of the film were shot at the Warner Bros. ranch in Calabasas, CA, according to a September 1952 Hollywood Reporter news item.