Fort Courageous
Fort Courageous
PG-13 | 01 May 1965 (USA)
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In this western, a cavalry sergeant is wrongly court-martialed. To reclaim his good name, he takes over a patrol that just lost its leader in an Indian attack. He leads the regiment to Fort Courageous, but is appalled to discover that the Indians attacked and massacred all but one of its inhabitants. The hardy little group must now fight the renegades on their own. The ex-sergeant plans a brilliant strategy that culminates in winning the Indian's respect. They leave the fort alone and peace is restored.

Reviews
CheerupSilver

Very Cool!!!

GazerRise

Fantastic!

Arianna Moses

Let me be very fair here, this is not the best movie in my opinion. But, this movie is fun, it has purpose and is very enjoyable to watch.

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Francene Odetta

It's simply great fun, a winsome film and an occasionally over-the-top luxury fantasy that never flags.

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FightingWesterner

On his way to the military prison on Alcatraz, wrongly convicted soldier Fred Beir and his transport are attacked by marauding Indians. Barely making it to the fort, Beir and the rest of his men find it the site of a massacre and themselves surrounded.One of the last of the old-fashioned studio B-westerns, this is a stark, grim affair, with some nasty bits of violence and torture, a weird preoccupation with sexual assault(!) and a mean performance by Donald "Red" Barry as the fort's commanding officer and lone survivor.However, it drops the ball in the end, with a hastily tacked-on romance and a conclusion that's abrupt, painfully unrealistic and patently bizarre. Clocking in at a slim seventy-two minutes, there's really no excuse in the world for it to end so abruptly and so unsatisfactory!Still, it's worth watching for the most part. There's some nice black-and-white photography and a grittiness that anticipates the wave of spaghetti westerns and their American counterparts that flooded US theaters the following year and pretty much ended the need for these kind of cheaply made westerns.

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zardoz-13

Veteran B-movie helmer Lesley Selander knew a thing or two about directing low-budget westerns, but it looks like Twentieth Century Fox must have tampered with this 72-minute opus. This predictable but old-fashioned cavalry versus the Indians epic concerns an army patrol ordered to take a prisoner, Sergeant Anthony Lucas (Fred Beir of "Convict Stage"), to Fort Courageous where he will then be escorted to Fort Alcatraz to serve a ten-year stretch for raping a woman who was secretly a tramp. No, "Voodoo Island" scenarist Richard Landau doesn't resolve the issue of our hero's moral dilemma. Indeed, the woman who cried rape did because the sergeant refused her offer of sex. Another officer assures the sergeant that whatever charms the woman had to offer were not worth a decade behind bars. Anyway, a wrongly-accused cavalryman is clapped in chains and has to cross a hostile desert. Essentially, the filmmakers provide no closure about Lucas' rape sentence. The film doesn't clear him at the end. Consequently, our tarnished hero never gets his due despite the acts of heroism that he performs in transit to Fort Courageous.Inevitably, our heroes enouncter a mother and daughter along the way, and the daughter appears to have been raped by the Indians. No, Selander doesn't depict the act of rape. The Indians throw her to the ground, surround her, and she screams in horror. It might have added a dimension of complication if we knew that the daughter had not been raped,except in her mind. She could have been a counterpart to the tramp that the sergeant encountered. Nevertheless, whatever the redskins did to the girl is the equivalent of rape in the mother's eyes as well as the daughter's eyes. The Indians attack the cavalry patrol and mortally wound the captain in charge. Sergeant Lucas takes over command. Our heroes plod through the desert with the son of an Indian chieftain as their hostage and drink themselves dry before they reach the eponymous fort.Little do they know that virtually everybody in "Fort Courageous" died in the first scene. More than half-way through the Indian attack on the fort, Selander and Landau cut to the main credits and put it up with the patrol scheduled to deliver Lucas. Lucas' old pal, Indian scout Joe (Harry Lauter of "The Satan Bug"), tries to give him a chance to escape to Mexico, but Lucas amounts to the epitome of virtue. He refuses to run away. Mind you, we never see the woman that destroyed his life. Captain Howard (Don 'Red' Barry of "Shalako") is the sole survivor of the massacre. Left for dead, he manages to open the forts and then behaves like a martinet. He wants Lucas put back in chains and hangs out the Indian chieftain's son (Michael Carr of "War Party") to bake in the sun. Of course, Sergeant Lucas refuses to tolerate this brutal, inhuman behavior, and cuts down the poor Native American, only to face Howard's wrath. When Howard tries to cut a deal with the Indians under a flag of truce with the son as his hostage, things backfire. The chief's son escapes and Howard barely eludes death, largely as a result of Lucas' intervention.Unfortunately, "Fort Courageous" leaves a lot of questions unanswered. At the last minute, the mother of the daughter who was raped by the Indians decides to commit herself to Lucas and they share a screen kiss. Selander and Landau put our heroes and heroines between a rock and a hard place and then out of the blue, the movie concludes with a surprise ending that says something about the admiration that the Native Americans had for their opponents. Real Indians would have wiped them out. Harry Lauter has an unsavory death scene. He is run through with a wooden stake and the stake is set afire. The Indians leave him out in the open in front of the fort hoping that somebody will try to save the scout. Unless you enjoy old westerns, with a mite more violence than usual and some mature themes, "Fort Courageous" with its "Sergeant Rutledge" subplot isn't for you.

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bsmith5552

"Fort Courageous" was a largely forgotten "B" plus western until ti's recent release on DVD. It was ably directed by veteran "B" movie director Lesley Selander and has no major stars. Most of the players are recognizable character actors.The film opens with the fort of the title under the command of Donald Barry, being besieged by Indians. We are left to believe that the occupants of the fort will not survive. Cut to the desert. Prisoner Fred Beir is being escorted to the fort for transportation to a federal prison for a rape which he did not commit. Along the way the group rescues a woman (Hanna Landy) and her daughter (Cheryl MacDonald) from the Indians. The boozy doctor (Walter Reed) does what he can between gulps of whiskey.The Indians attack the group and run off most of their horses. The commanding officer is wounded forcing Sgt. Lucas (Beir) to take command. Led by scout Joe (Harry Lauter) the group starts out across the desert largely on foot. They are attacked by the Indians but manage to capture the son of the Indian Chief.Finall. they reach the forth and find it littered with bodies. The commander (Barry) and a couple of soldiers has survived the earlier attack. Barry has gone slightly mad and is resentful of being forced to retire after 25 years. A romance develops between Lucas and the woman rescued on the trail.Several Indian raid follow as they try to rescue the son of their chief. Gradually, the soldiers are being killed off. When all seems lost, the Indians group for a final attack.....or do they?I must apologize for not naming more of the actors involved. IMDb didn't list most of the characters with the roles that they played. Many of the supporting players were unknown to me so I was unable to match them up with their roles. The Captain and the sea-faring sergeant are examples.Donald Barry was better known as Don "Red" Barry from his years at Republic Pictures where he played Red Ryder in a 1940 serial. The name "Red" stuck. His performance as the mad major is excellent and his death scene is one of the highlights of the film. Fred Beir in probably his only starring role, was good as the hero. Harry Lauter appeared in many westerns both of the "A" and "B" variety, on both sides of the law. Walter Reed was a member of Director John Ford's stock company and you'll see him in many of Ford's films. Hanna Landy complete with thick accent is totally out of place as the romantic lead.Shot back to back with "The Convict Stage" (1965) with largely the same cast.

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cockerspaniels3

The male leads were basically fine but the women and the Indians, such poor acting! I own 250 Westerns and this is likely the worst one. Enjoy Cavalry vs Indians and not filmed this way anymore. A weakness to buy this one. If viewed, make it a midnighter.The ending comes up sudden and most unsatisfactory and silly.Anyways, always good to see more Westerns released. Guess never a Western not worthy for a watch, even if need be a midnighter.Rated it a 4. Struggled to say a 5 but that ending and poor acting! Worse if not a Western.A recent release "White Feather" was much better and very acceptable.

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