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A Thunder of Drums

A Thunder of Drums

1961Movie⏱️ 1h 37mApproved
DramaWestern
6
IMDB Rating
1,114 votes

The trials and tribulations of bitter veteran Captain Maddocks and argumentative rookie Lieutenant McQuade at a cavalry desert outpost.

Director
Joseph M. Newman
Writers
N/A
Stars
Richard Boone, George Hamilton, Luana Patten
Release Date
November 14, 1961
Language
English
Country
United States
🎯 1
Nominations
💬 27
Reviews
📽️ View on IMDB

🎭 Top Cast

Richard Boone
Richard Boone
as Capt. Stephen Maddocks
George Hamilton
George Hamilton
as Lt. Curtis McQuade
Luana Patten
Luana Patten
as Tracey Hamilton
Arthur O'Connell
Arthur O'Connell
as Sgt. Karl Rodermill
Charles Bronson
Charles Bronson
as Trooper Hanna
Richard Chamberlain
Richard Chamberlain
as Lt. Porter
James Douglas
James Douglas
as Lt. Thomas Gresham
Tammy Marihugh
Tammy Marihugh
as Laurie Detweiler
Carole Wells
Carole Wells
as Camden Yates
Duane Eddy
Duane Eddy
as Trooper Eddy

🎬 Technical Specs

Aspect Ratio
2.35 : 1
Filming Location
Old Tucson - 201 S. Kinney Road, Tucson, Arizona, USA
Production
Robert J. Enders Productions

🏷️ Keywords

apache territoryapache indianarizona territoryarizona desertnew mexico territory

🎯 Categories

Classical WesternDramaWestern

⭐ Featured Review

A Thunder of Drums
by mhrabovsky69122009-07-07
8/10

"This is a very good and mostly forgotten western that made the rounds in 1961. In 1960 MGM paired Luana Patten and a young George Hamilton in the feature film with Robert Mitchum, "Home from the Hill"....figuring on cashing in on the teenage and young adult crowd director Joseph Newman paired them again in this top notch western. Story concerns a desolate, poorly supplied western fort somewhere in the southwest trying to fend off Indian attacks on unsuspecting settlers...The post is ran by Captain Maddocks (Richard Boone), a crusty, worn out, cantankerous old bird whose military care..."

💡 Did You Know?

A Thunder of Drums is notable for the involvement of James Warner Bellah, a controversial author who made a name for himself by writing a series of pulp magazine stories about the U.S. Cavalry. Famed director John Ford took early notice of Bellah, adapting many of his cavalry stories printed in The Saturday Evening Post for his informal "Cavalry Trilogy": Fort Apache (1948), She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (1949), Rio Grande (1950), and later Sergeant Rutledge (1960). Bellah, an unrepentant misanthrope once described by his own son as "a fascist, a racist, and a world-class bigot," saw Native Americans as the "red beast in the night." In most of his films adapted from Bellah stories, Ford countered this contemptuous viewpoint by granting Indians a sense of dignity and humanity. In Fort Apache, for example, the Indians are not the villainous, mysterious "Other," but the victims of government-sanctioned scoundrels. Despite their racial disagreements, Ford and Bellah agreed on one thing: the valor and pride of the military. The cavalry was basically honorable and uncomplicated by psychological neuroses or social bugaboos.

📖 Synopsis

The trials and tribulations of bitter veteran Captain Maddocks and argumentative rookie Lieutenant McQuade at a cavalry desert outpost.